Intentional Chloralose Poisoning in a Low-Resource Setting: Epidemiology and Short-Term Outcomes from a Tunisian emergency department
- Authors
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hela ben turkia
regional hospital of Ben Arous
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Ibtissem Ben Taher
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Amira Bekir
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Raja Fadhel
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hanene ghazali
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Sami Souissi
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- Keywords:
- Acute poisoning, ICU admission, clinical predictors, toxicological predictors, scoring systems, biomarkers, Poisoning, prognosis
- Abstract
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Abstract:
Background: Intentional self-poisoning with chloralose remains an issue in low- and middle-income countries, where α-chloralose rodenticides are easily accessible. Data from frontline emergency departments are limited.
Objective: To describe the epidemiological, clinical, management, and short-term outcome profile of intentional chloralose poisoning in a polyvalent emergency department,
Methods: We conducted a prospective descriptive study in the emergency department of regional hospital in Tunisia from January 2018 to December 2022. All patients aged ≥18 years with intentional ingestion of an α-chloralose, confirmed by history and/or toxicological analysis, were included. Sociodemographic data, clinical features, investigations, treatment, disposition, and outcomes were collected, and suicidal intent was assessed using the Suicide Intent Scale (SIS).
Results:
Inclusion of 35 patients, among 1812 poisoning cases over the study period. The mean age was 28 ± 11 years and 71.4% were women. Forty percent had a psychiatric history, and interpersonal conflict was the most frequent precipitating factor (68.5%). The median time to presentation was 2.5 hours. On admission, 48.6% had a Glasgow Coma Scale score <13 and 28.6% had a score ≤8; tremors and seizures occurred in 57.1% and 5.7% of patients, respectively. Orotracheal intubation was required in 57.1% of cases, 57,1% were transferred to intensive care, and no deaths occurred during emergency department stay. The median SIS score was 7 (range 0–22), with 71.3% of patients exhibiting moderate-to-high suicidal intent.
Conclusion: Intentional chloralose poisoning in this setting predominantly affects young women with psychiatric vulnerability and presents with severe but reversible neurological toxicity, frequently requiring organ support but associated with excellent short-term survival under supportive care.
- References
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- Published
- 30-06-2026
- Section
- Prospective study
- License
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