
@article{ref1,
title="Rodenticide ingestion is an important cause of acute hepatotoxicity in Tamil Nadu, southern India",
journal="Indian journal of gastroenterology",
year="2021",
author="Govindarajan, Ramkumar and Ramamoorthy, Ganesan and Shanmugam, Revathy Marimuthu and Bavanandam, Sumathi and Murugesan, Manimaran and Shanmugam, Chitra and Arumugam, Aravind and Chellamuthu, Vaishnavi Priyaa and Venkatraj, Rajalakshmi Kandasamy and Sampathkumar, Kavitha and Rejoice, Poppy and Kumar, Kandasamy Alias and Adamali, Shafique and Mariappan, Kannan and Rathnavel, Ramani and Manivasagam, Vijai Shankar Chidambara and Velusamy, Arulselvan and Arumugam, Senthilvadivu and Elikkottil, Thasneem Taj and Dev, Anand Vimal and Sen, Mousumi and Palaniappan, Alagammai and Dorairaj, Allwin James and Kedarisetty, Chandan Kumar and Venkataraman, Jayanthi and Karthikeyan, Mugilan and Somasundaram, Aravindh and Ramakrishnan, Arulraj and Madesh, Vijaya Prakash and Varghese, Joy and Anupa, Dheeraj Kumar and Leelakrishnan, Venkatakrishnan and Swaminathan, Mukundan and Kantamaneni, Ravindra and Dhus, Jeyaraj Ubal and Murugan, Natarajan and Natarajan, Kartik and Selvi, Caroline and Saithanyamurthi, Hemamala V. and Nadaraj, Ambily and Jeyaseelan, Lakshmanan and Eapen, Chundamannil Eapen",
volume="ePub",
number="ePub",
pages="ePub-ePub",
abstract="BACKGROUND AND AIM: Though rodenticidal hepatotoxicity is reported from India, there is no systematic study to assess its magnitude. This study aimed to assess exposure to rodenticide as a risk factor for acute hepatotoxicity in Tamil Nadu, India. <br><br>METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed acute hepatotoxicity caused by ingestion of hepatotoxin or potentially hepatotoxic drug overdose across 15 hospitals in 6 districts of Tamil Nadu from 1 January 2019 to 30 June 2019. Study exclusion criteria were idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury and chronic liver diseases. <br><br>RESULTS: Of the 702 patients, 685 gave history of consuming rodenticide; hepatotoxicity in the other patients resulted from paracetamol overdose (n=10) and due to other drugs (n=7); 97% patients had a suicidal intent. Of 671 patients with complete data, ratio of number of patients with hepatotoxicity due to rodenticide to paracetamol overdose was 450:6 (i.e. 75:1). The 451 rodenticidal hepatotoxicity patients (255 males, 75% were 15-34 years old) underwent conservative management (n=396), plasma exchange (n=54) and plasma exchange followed by liver transplant (n=1); 159 patients (35%) had poor outcome (131 died, 28 discharged in moribund state). Based on our observations, we estimate a case burden of 1584 rodenticidal hepatotoxicity patients (95% CI: 265-6119) with poor outcome in 554 patients in Tamil Nadu from January 2019 to June 2019. Population attributable risk for rodenticide as cause of hepatotoxicity was 22.7%. <br><br>CONCLUSION: Rodenticide ingestion was an important cause of acute hepatotoxicity in Tamil Nadu. Most patients were young and one-third had poor outcome. Public health interventions are needed to address this.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0254-8860",
doi="10.1007/s12664-021-01178-4",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12664-021-01178-4"
}