Salicylate Poisoning - Toxicology

Acute toxicity = vomiting, tachypnea, tinnitus, diaphoresis, and lethargy. This may progress to seizures, hypoglycemia, hyperthermia, coma, and pulmonary edema. Blood gas usually reveals a mixed respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis.

Chronic toxicity = delirium, dehydration, and tachypnea. Cerebral and pulmonary edema occurs more frequently than with acute toxicity. Severe poisoning occurs at lower salicylate concentrations, and the mortality rate is higher than in acute poisoning.      

Decontamination
Urine Alkalinization

By Dr. Kathryn Watson @Kat_Watson

#Salicylate #Toxicity #Toxicology #Pharmacology #Diagnosis #Management #Aspirin
Dr. Gerald Diaz @GeraldMD · 2 years ago
Board Certified Internal Medicine Hospitalist, GrepMed Editor in Chief πŸ‡΅πŸ‡­ πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ - Sign up for an account to like, bookmark and upload images to contribute to our community platform. Follow us on IG: https://www.instagram.com/grepmed/ | Twitter: https://twitter.com/grepmeded/
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