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Journal Article

Citation

Love JN, Sikka N. J. Emerg. Med. 2004; 26(3): 309-314.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine, Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC 20057, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jemermed.2003.11.015

PMID

15028329

Abstract

The common use and wide availability of beta-adrenergic blocking agents make them frequent ingestants for small children. Yet, there are no clear guidelines in the literature to direct the care of the toddler with the history of ingesting 1-2 tablets. With 40 years of extensive clinical experience, not one documented case of death or serious cardiovascular morbidity as a direct result of a beta-blocker exposure is to be found in an English language review for children under 6 years of age. As with children on chronic beta-blocker therapy, several cases of symptomatic hypoglycemia associated with a single acute propranolol exposure suggest a vulnerability to this complication. Though the risk to the toddler exposed to 1-2 tablets appears to be extremely small, several factors mitigate the actual risk to the child and the need for triage to a health care facility.


Language: en

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