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Comparative Study
Effect of aggressive haemoperfusion on the clinical course of patients with paraquat poisoning.
- K Suzuki, N Takasu, T Okabe, S Ishimatsu, A Ueda, S Tanaka, A Fukuda, S Arita, and A Kohama.
- Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Kawasaki Medical School, Kurashiki, Japan.
- Hum Exp Toxicol. 1993 Jul 1;12(4):323-7.
AbstractThe effect of aggressive haemoperfusion; i.e. haemoperfusion of 10 h or more during the first 24 h after ingestion, on the clinical course of paraquat poisoning was studied. Among 40 patients admitted within 15 h after ingestion of paraquat with an SIPP of less than 100 (h x micrograms ml-1), 21 received aggressive haemoperfusion and 19 received conventional haemoperfusion; i.e. haemoperfusion of less than 10 h during the same period. Survival rates of patients with severity between an SIPP of 100 and Proudfoot's curve in the two groups were compared by the log-rank test. Aggressive haemoperfusion did not improve the outcome but did improve the survival rates; that is, the number of patients surviving at particular points in time (P < 0.05). The length of haemoperfusion for the aggressive haemoperfusion group was longer than that for the conventional group on the first day (P < 0.001), but the difference was insignificant during the following two days. Neither the time from ingestion to haemoperfusion, urine volume from the first to third day, nor initial plasma-paraquat concentrations and SIPP were significant between groups. These findings imply that aggressive haemoperfusion reduces the severity of paraquat poisoning and elongates survival time. We, therefore, propose that the efficacy of more aggressive haemoperfusion, such as the 'continuous haemoperfusion' proposed by Okonek et al., should be further studied.
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