AHealthyMe
-
Login Registration Sample personal Change Profile Log Out
Search AHealthyMe!  
Personalize AHealthyMe! -Sign up for our Newsletter!

Women's HealthMen's HealthHelath After 60Children's HealthPregnancyFitness & NutritionAlternative HealthLifestyle & WellnessWork & HealthIlls & ConditionsDental HealthSelf-Care CentersMedical LibraryCool ToolsMultimediaEn Español-

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts

You are here: Home > Ills & Conditions > Poisoning: Symptoms and Prevention


Poisoning: Symptoms and Prevention 


Related topics:
•  Self Care & First Aid
By Peter Jaret
CONSUMER HEALTH INTERACTIVE

Below:
 • What are the signs of poisoning?
 • What to do
 • How to prevent poisoning


Being prepared ahead of time for a poisoning emergency can save valuable minutes when a person's health -- or life -- is at stake. Look up the phone number of your local poison control center and place it alongside other important numbers everywhere you keep such a list: home, work, wallet, and/or cell phone. The people at 911 can send over an ambulance, but the poison control people are usually the ones who will know what treatment is needed. If possible, have the poison container with you. That way, medical experts can identify the specific chemical involved, enabling them to provide the best medical advice. If the person has swallowed prescription medicines, have the bottle or tube handy as well.

Common poisonous household substances include antifreeze, fuel, herbicides, insecticides, mothballs, oven cleaner, furniture polish, paint remover, paint thinner, pesticides, solvents, tobacco, turpentine, and cleaning products such as dishwashing detergent.

Hundreds of common garden plants are also poisonous, including castor bean, foxglove, jimsonweed, oleander, poison hemlock, and water hemlock. If someone has eaten a plant that might be poisonous, tell the poison control center what it is. If you don't know, try to describe it as thoroughly as possible, including the color and type of leaves or berries it has.

What are the signs of poisoning?

Sometimes you don't know for sure that a child or adult has swallowed poison. If you notice any of these signs or symptoms and suspect poisoning may be the cause, call 911 immediately:

Severe throat pain
Burning on the lips or mouth
Unusual drooling or strange odor on the breath
Unexplained severe nausea or vomiting
Difficulty breathing

What to do

If you or someone with you has swallowed something that may be poisonous, call the poison control center at 1-800-222-1222 or 911 immediately. Encourage the person to spit out any of the substance left in his or her mouth.

Important: Do not encourage a person who has ingested poison to vomit unless specifically advised to do so by a medical expert. Vomiting can cause further injury by exposing the throat and mouth to a toxic substance. Specifically, do not have the person vomit if he or she has a burning sensation in the mouth or throat. Vomiting can be particularly dangerous if the person has swallowed a strong acid such as a toilet bowl cleaner, a strong alkali such as a drain or oven cleaner, or a petroleum product such as gasoline, or kerosene.

If medical experts recommend that you induce vomiting, they will tell you the best way to do it. When vomiting begins, keep the head lower than the chest. That will prevent vomited material from getting into the lungs.

A special note of caution: Do not keep syrup of ipecac in the house. In the past, this substance was used to induce vomiting. But in 2003, the American Academy of Pediatrics reversed a longstanding recommendation and advised parents to get rid of it. The reason: The potential misuse of ipecac poses a greater danger than any benefit it might provide.

If the eye is affected, flush it under a running faucet. Don't worry about finding sterile water. Any source of clean water will do. The most important thing is to flush out the chemical. Tilt the head so that the affected eye is below the other eye -- this will help you avoid washing chemicals into the other eye. Another option: Fill a sink or dishpan with water and immerse the face. Have the victim open and close the eyelids underwater, moving the eye around to make sure water reaches every part. You may want to change the water several times.

How to prevent poisoning

Children aged 6 and under are most at risk for poisoning in the home. In fact, more than a million cases of poisoning involving children in this age group were reported to poison control centers in 2006. The most effective way to prevent accidental poisonings is to poison-proof your house. Here's how:

Keep all drugs, medications, household cleaning products, and cosmetics out of a child's reach. Don't assume that any medicine or cleaner is safe, and be aware that dishwasher detergent is especially dangerous. It's in most homes and accessible to young children who can get under a sink. Even vitamins and aspirin can be dangerous and sometimes deadly if taken by a child. In fact, iron pills or vitamin supplements with iron are one of the most serious causes of poisonings in children under 5 years old.
Make sure your medications have childproof safety caps.
Put safety latches on all cabinets and drawers that contain dangerous substances or objects.
Keep medications in their own marked bottles. Don't mix them.
Never tell your children that medicine is candy.
Never put harmful substances in unmarked containers.
Get rid of all chemicals that you no longer need, such as old cans of paint and liquid cleaner, once you're done with your project. Most communities have collection centers or regular "toxic round-ups" that allow you to dispose of potentially dangerous substances safely.
Post the local poison control center's telephone number beside every telephone in the house. If you carry a cell phone, add it to your directory of saved numbers. Carry a slip of paper with emergency numbers in your purse or wallet.

-- Peter Jaret is a contributing editor for Health magazine and a winner of the American Medical Association's award for medical reporting.



References


Handbook of First Aid and Emergency Care, American Medical Association, 2000, pp. 225-227.

American College of Emergency Physicians, First Aid Manual, 2001, pp. 183-189.

The American Red Cross First Aid &Safety Handbook, 1992, pp. 163-168.

National Capital Poison Center, Washington, D.C., www.poison.org/actFast/firstAid.asp

Household Products. Minnesota Poison Control System.

Poisonous Plants. Texas State Department of Health and the National Safety Council.

Don't Treat Poisoning With Syrup of Ipecac Says AAP. AAP News Release. November 3, 2003. http://www.aap.org/advocacy/archives/novpoison.htm

National SAFE KIDS Campaign. Poisoning fact sheet. 2004. http://www.safekids.org/tips/tips_poison.html

Preventing Poisonings in the Home. American Association of Poison Control Centers, Inc. http://www.aapcc.org/ppwbrochure.htm

Reviewed by Michael Potter, MD, an attending physician and associate clinical professor at the University of California, San Francisco. He is board-certified in family practice.

Mayo Clinic. Poisoning: First Aid. January 2008. http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/first-aid-poisoning/FA00029

Bronstein, AC et al. 2006 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers' National Poison Data System (NPDS). Clinical Toxicology. December 2007. 45:815-917. http://www.aapcc.org/archive/Annual%20Reports/06Report/2006%20Annual%20Report%20Final.pdf



Reviewed by Michael Potter, MD, an attending physician and associate clinical professor at the University of California, San Francisco. He is board-certified in family practice.


Our reviewers are members of Consumer Health Interactive's medical advisory board.
To learn more about our writers and editors, click here.

First published September 17, 2004
Last updated July 22, 2008
Copyright © 2004 Consumer Health Interactive


or find more on:

Back to top of page