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ReviewOpen Access

Pharmacological treatment of organophosphorus insecticide poisoning: the old and the (possible) new

Author Affiliations
Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, Aquamarine Power (United Kingdom), University of Edinburgh, Sylhet MAG Osmani Medical College
Published InBritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Year2015
Citations182

Abstract

Despite being a major clinical and public health problem across the developing world, responsible for at least 5 million deaths over the last three decades, the clinical care of patients with organophosphorus (OP) insecticide poisoning has little improved over the last six decades. We are still using the same two antidotes - atropine and oximes - that first came into clinical use in the late 1950s. Clinical research in South Asia has shown how improved regimens of atropine can prevent deaths. However, we are still unsure about which patients are most likely to benefit from the use of oximes. Supplemental antidotes, such as magnesium, clonidine and sodium bicarbonate, have all been proposed and studied in small trials without production of…
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