Title: Problem-Based Learning Activity: Occupational Herbicide Poisoning Case Study
1Paraquat Toxicity and Treatment
2Paraquat
Paraquat is very toxic to the skin and mucous
membranes (inside of mouth, nose, eyes).
Particles are considered too large for
respiratory absorption, but once paraquat in the
system (through broken skin or mucous membranes)
it migrates to the lungs because of its oxygen
seeking properties. If ingested it is very
lethal, survival rates are generally poor.
Skin dryness, cracks erythema (redness) blistering ulcerations
Nails discoloration splitting nails loss of nails
Respiratory cough nosebleeds sore throat
Eyes conjunctivitis (irritation) ulceration, scarring, blindness
Ingestion pulmonary fibrosis multi-system organ failure, specifically respiratory failure kidney failure
3Toxicology
- Ingestion- life threatening effects on GI,
kidney, liver and heart - LD50 3-5mg/kg or 10-15ml in 20 solution
- Most lethal in lungs but toxicity from
inhalation rare - Mechanism generation of free radicals with
oxidative damage to lung tissue - Pulmonary fibrosis w/in 7-10 day causes death
4Source Richards, Kerry Penn State University
Extension Service
5LD50
Lethal Dose Amount of chemical it takes to kill
50 of an experimental population
6Source Richards, Kerry Penn State University
Extension Service
7Source Richards, Kerry Penn State University
Extension Service
8Adverse effects of Exposure
- GI mucous membrane swelling, edema, ulcerations
- Renal proximal renal tubule damage reversible
- Cardiac focal necrosis myocardium
- Cerebral edema and brain damage
- Smoking paraquat contaminated marijuana
pyrolyzed to non toxic dipyridyl
9Toxicology (Skin)
- Local skin damage ? contact dermatitis
- Prolonged contact ? blisters, abrasion,
ulcerations, finger nail changes - Slow absorption via intact skin
- Abraded or eroded skin absorption efficient
10Treatment of Contact Dermatitis from Paraquat
- Upon contact, flush the skin with copious amounts
of water - Mild skin reactions are usually self limiting as
long as there is no more contact - More severe reaction should be treated by a
dermatologist
11Factors Leading to Illness Event
- What the product used for its intended purpose?
- Is it registered?
- Is it registered for use on wheat alfalfa?
- Is it restricted?
- What the product used correctly?
- What factors could have lead the worker not to
take action to mitigate the effects?