CONCOMITANT INGESTION OF ETHYLENE GLYCOL AND ETHANOL: A DIAGNOSIS TRAP?

Ethylene glycol is one of the most toxic alcohols; it may be accidentally or intentionally consumed as a substitute for ethanol or related to suicidal attempts. Ingestion of ethylene glycol causes a severe metabolic acidosis with increased anion and osmotic gap due to its toxic metabolites, leading...

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Published inRevista română de pediatrie Vol. 64; no. 3; pp. 282 - 284
Main Authors Frasinariu, Otilia-Elena, Rugina, Aniela, Jitareanu, Cristina, Russu, Radu, Nistor, Nicolai, Streanga, Violeta
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amaltea Medical Publishing House 30.09.2015
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Summary:Ethylene glycol is one of the most toxic alcohols; it may be accidentally or intentionally consumed as a substitute for ethanol or related to suicidal attempts. Ingestion of ethylene glycol causes a severe metabolic acidosis with increased anion and osmotic gap due to its toxic metabolites, leading to a clinical picture of central nervous system depression, cardiovascular and renal impairment. A 16-year-old boy was admitted with clinical and biological signs of ethylene glycol poisoning after simultaneous ingestion of antifreeze and ethanol. The patient had mild anion gap metabolic acidosis only at the debut, rapidly corrected with one dose of sodium bicarbonate; further evaluation did not reveal acidosis, even if the subsequent evolution included acute renal failure requiring hemodialysis. Due to the absence of a positive history and of a persistent metabolic acidosis, the diagnosis of ethylene glycol poisoning was delayed until it was confirmed by serum toxicological test. Conclusions: concomitant ingestion of ethanol may mask the symptoms of ethylene glycol poisoning; the absence of persistent metabolic acidosis does not rule out the diagnosis.
ISSN:1454-0398
2069-6175
DOI:10.37897/RJP.2015.3.9