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Journal Article

Citation

Jayasinghe SS, Pathirana KD. PLoS One 2012; 7(5): e37987.

Affiliation

Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ruhuna, Karapitiya, Galle, Sri Lanka.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Public Library of Science)

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0037987

PMID

22655091

Abstract

Autonomic dysfunction after chronic low level exposure to organophosphorus (OP) pesticides has been consistently reported in the literature, but not following a single acute overdose. In order to study autonomic function after an acute OP overdose, sixty-six overdose patients were compared to 70 matched controls. Assessment of autonomic function was done by heart rate response to standing, deep breathing (HR-DB) and Valsalva manoeuvre; blood pressure (BP) response to standing and sustained hand grip; amplitude and latency of sympathetic skin response (SSR); pupil size and post-void urine volume. The patients were assessed one and six weeks after the exposure. The number of patients who showed abnormal autonomic function compared to standard cut-off values did not show statistically significantly difference from that of controls by Chi-Square test. When compared to the controls at one week the only significant differences consistent with autonomic dysfunction were change of diastolic BP 3 min after standing, HR-DB, SSR-Amplitude, SSR-Latency, post-void urine volume and size of the pupil. At 6 weeks significant recovery of autonomic function was observed and only HR-DB was decreased to a minor degree, -5 beats/min [95%CI 2-8]. This study provides good evidence for the lack of long term autonomic dysfunction following acute exposure to OP pesticides.


Language: en

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