Cases reported "Mercury Poisoning"

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1/47. Mercury intoxication presenting with hypertension and tachycardia.

    An 11 year old girl presented with hypertension and tachycardia. Excess urinary catecholamine excretion suggested phaeochromocytoma but imaging studies failed to demonstrate a tumour. Other symptoms included insomnia and weight loss, and she was found to have a raised concentration of mercury in blood and urine. Mercury intoxication should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hypertension with tachycardia even in patients presenting without the skin lesions typical of mercury intoxication and without a history of exposure.
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2/47. Perimortem fixation of the gastric and duodenal mucosa: a diagnostic indication for oral poisoning.

    Two cases of fatal oral poisoning are presented. In the first case, a 40-year-old man died due to a lethal dose of mercury (blood concentration 113.8 microg/ml) and in the second, a 34-year-old man died of chloralhydrate overdose with a lethal blood concentration of trichloroethanol (52 microg/ml), the active metabolite of chloralhydrate. In both cases gross examination and histology showed an unusually well preserved gastrointestinal mucosa in addition to unspecific signs of intoxication. The two cases demonstrate that the phenomenon of perimortal fixation is a useful indication for the forensic pathologist and should direct the suspicion to oral poisoning. The detection of fixation facilitates toxicology screening by indicating that the relevant substance must have the capability to precipitate proteins.
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3/47. Mercury intoxication and arterial hypertension: report of two patients and review of the literature.

    Two children in the same household with symptomatic arterial hypertension simulating pheochromocytoma were found to be intoxicated with elemental mercury. The first child was a 4-year-old boy who presented with new-onset seizures, rash, and painful extremities, who was found to have a blood pressure of 171/123 mm Hg. An extensive investigation ensued. Elevated catecholamines were demonstrated in plasma and urine; studies did not confirm pheochromocytoma. Mercury levels were elevated. These findings prompted an evaluation of the family. A foster sister had similar findings of rash and hypertension. Both had been exposed to elemental mercury in the home. The family was temporarily relocated and chelation therapy was started. A medline search for mercury intoxication with hypertension found 6 reports of patients ranging from 11 months to 17 years old. All patients showed symptoms of acrodynia. Because of the clinical presentation and the finding of elevated catecholamines, most of the patients were first studied for possible pheochromocytoma. Subsequently, elevated levels of mercury were found. Three children had contact with elemental mercury from a broken thermometer, 2 had played with metallic mercury and 1 had poorly protected occupational exposure. All responded to chelation therapy. Severe systemic arterial hypertension in infants and children is usually secondary to an underlying disease process. The most frequent causes of hypertension in this group include renal parenchymal disease, obstructive uropathy, and chronic pyelonephritis associated with reflux and renal artery stenosis. Less frequent causes include adrenal tumors, pheochromocytomas, neurofibromas, and a number of familial forms of hypertension. Other causes include therapeutic and recreational drugs, notably sympathomimetics and cocaine, and rarely, heavy metals. In children with severe hypertension and elevated catecholamines, the physician should consider mercury intoxication as well as pheochromocytoma. The health hazards of heavy metals need to be reinforced to the medical profession and the general public.
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4/47. Mercury intoxication from skin ointment containing mercuric ammonium chloride.

    OBJECTIVE: A one-year follow-up was performed of a 21-year-old man with a 16-year history of diabetes mellitus type I, who had been using ointment containing 10% mercuric ammonium chloride (hydrargyrum amidochloratum; HgNH(2)Cl) for eczema for approximately 3 weeks. Tiredness, fasciculations on the extremities and poor control of diabetes appeared after the end of the ointment treatment. nephrotic syndrome and hypertension were diagnosed 1 month later. Two months after the ointment application the patient was very weak with tremors of the hands, almost unable to walk, and had lost 20 kg of body weight. He had severe neurasthenic symptoms and his behaviour suggested acute psychosis. methods: Internal, neurological and neuropsychological examinations were performed. Mercury in urine was determined by flameless atomic absorption spectrometry. RESULTS: The urine mercury level on admission was 252.0 microg/l. He was treated with Dimaval, sodium (2,3)-dimercaptopropane(-1)-sulphonate capsules for 12 days (total dose 6.3 g). The highest urine mercury excretion during antidote treatment was 2336.0 microg/24 h. The patient had proteinuria of up to 11.10 g/24 h, and renal biopsy revealed diffuse membranous glomerulonephritis of the 1st stage without apparent diabetic nephropathy. Similarly, neuropathy did not have typical signs of diabetic neuropathy. His clinical condition started to improve during the first 2 weeks. Further follow-up has shown slow normalisation of renal functions. After 1 year, proteinuria decreased to 0.62 g/24 h and body weight normalised. Neuropsychological and electromyographic findings became almost normal. CONCLUSION: Severe intoxication developed after a short period of ointment application. Most signs of damage disappeared in the course of 1 year, except mild proteinuria and neuropathy. The evolution was favourable and confirmed the primary role of mercury intoxication in the severe deterioration of the clinical status of the patient.
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5/47. Mercury vapor inhalation from Chinese red (Cinnabar).

    INTRODUCTION: Acute inhalation of mercury fumes or vapors is a rare but frequently fatal cause of acute lung injury. This report describes a rare cause of mercury inhalation from Chinese red. CASE REPORT: An 87-year-old male inhaled the vapors from heating Chinese red (Cinnabar, mercury sulphide) intended to treat his foot ulceration. He subsequently developed acute lung injury (progressive dyspnea and acute respiratory failure) that was treated with mechanical ventilation. DMPS (2,3-Dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid) and penicillamine were used as chelating agents, and methylprednisolone pulse therapy was used to treat his pulmonary disease. Despite being extubated once, the patient eventually died from profound hypoxemia. CONCLUSION: A rare case of mercury intoxication was due to inappropriate use of an alternative medicine, Chinese red. This case serves as a reminder of the toxicity of the noxious gas from this substance and the importance of being familiar with alternative medicines.
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6/47. Subcutaneous metallic mercury injection of the hand.

    Poisoning by subcutaneous metallic mercury is rare and usually accidental. Although it does not carry the same risks as mercury-vapour intoxication, it may still cause destructive early and late local reactions. Two deaths resulting from subcutaneous mercury injection have been reported in the literature. We present a case of accidental subcutaneous injection of mercury in the hand and discuss its management with a review of the literature.
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7/47. A patient with postoperative mercury contamination of the peritoneum.

    CASE REPORT: Peritoneal exposure to mercury has been rarely reported and long-term consequences of this type of exposure have not been documented. We report the clinical course of a patient who has survived almost eight years with a massive intraperitoneal load of mercury. She has suffered formication, pruritis, fatigue, irritiability, insomnia, alopecia, dizziness, a gait disturbance, loss of balance and multiple falls, abdominal pain, choking, and headaches. Two courses of chelation with dimercaptosuccinic acid using the standard protocol were undertaken, resulting in increased daily excretion, but without demonstrable objective or subjective benefit or lasting effect. She had multiple medical problems before the mercury intoxication, which complicates the attribution of all her problems to mercury intoxication. It is of particular interest that the patient survived and did not suffer any marked cognitive deterioration. She died in 2002 shortly after being diagnosed with lung cancer and declaring that she would fight it. Phasing out of mercury-weighted tubes is recommended.
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8/47. Acute mercury intoxication with lichenoid drug eruption followed by mercury contact allergy and development of antinuclear antibodies.

    A 31-year-old black man was examined for evaluation of a suspected occupational disease. Three years earlier he had been suffering from acute mercury intoxication during work in a mercury recycling factory. skin symptoms then had been a lichenoid drug eruption, patchy alopecia and stomatitis, which had all disappeared rapidly after systemic glucocorticosteroid treatment. The examination revealed positive patch test reactions to metallic mercury and inorganic mercury compounds, an elevated titre of serum antinuclear antibodies and normal IgE levels. The induction of antinuclear antibodies by mercury has been shown in animal experiments. It can be hypothesized that this patient, who may have had an increased individual susceptibility, became allergic to mercury by the mercury intoxication.
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9/47. Mercury intoxication resulting from school barometers in three unrelated adolescents.

    Three adolescents with severe hypertension due to mercury intoxication are presented. Two of them had skin rash, signs and symptoms of central nervous system involvement, peripheral neuropathy and mild-to-moderate proteinuria in addition to hypertension. All three patients had a history of exposure to mercury, the source being broken barometers taken from school laboratories 2-4 months previously. urine and blood mercury levels were consistent with mercury intoxication. The patients were treated with chelation therapy. One of them died; the others recovered over a period of 1-4 months. CONCLUSION: mercury intoxication should be considered in any child with signs and symptoms of hypertension, skin rash, peripheral neuropathy and behavioural changes. The parents and school administrators, as well as paediatricians, should be aware of the potential risks of mercury and should be encouraged to avoid mercury-containing devices in schools and households.
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10/47. Mercury intoxication: it still exists.

    A3-year-old boy presented to the Hospital for Sick Children with systemic symptoms and oropharyngeal and peripheral extremity changes suggestive of Kawasaki disease. He was found to have severe hypertension. Investigation for a catecholamine-secreting tumor was negative. Toxins were considered when the patient's 20-month-old brother presented with similar symptoms, and the boys were subsequently diagnosed with elemental mercury poisoning. We review the literature on mercury intoxication and discuss the historical context, clinical syndrome (acrodynia), treatment, and radiologic findings of this unusual diagnosis.
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