herbicides
Table of Contents
herbicides
see also toxicology
Glyphosate (Roundup, Zero):
introduction:
- glyphosate is the most widely used general purpose herbicide in the world & is a common household product
- retail sale volumes exceed the volume of the next 6 leading herbicides combined
- marketed since 1974
- a broad spectrum, non-selective systemic herbicide, initially absorbed through the leaves facilitated by a surfactant component.
- it inhibits amino acid metabolism in the shikimic acid pathway which exists in plants and microorganisms but not in animals.
- commercial Roundup concentrate is 41% glyphosate and 15% polyoxyethleneamine (POEA), a surfactant
- ready to use concentrations are usually 0.36-10% glyphosate
- poisoning epidemiology in Victoria:
- Vic. Poisons Info Centre logged 1235 calls over 5 yrs from 1998-2002, representing 0.91% of all calls, of these 521 were systemic oral exposures in humans
human pharmocology in oral poisonings:
- bioavailability 30-36%
- not appreciably metabolised & is predominantly excreted by urine
- tissue concentration is maximal in kidneys
- lethality:
- whilst it has minimal toxicity in humans, large doses may be fatal, thought to result from uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and/or direct cardiotoxicity due to either glyphosate or the POEA, with main reported mechanisms of death being intractable hypotension, renal failure & resp. complications (non-cardiogenic pulm. oedema & aspiration).
- there is only a loose dose-response relationship:
- mean fatal ingestions were 330ml of concentrate with lowest being 85ml
- doses of 1000ml of concentrate have only resulted in mild toxicity
- risk factors for lethality:
- large doses
- age of patient
- suicidal intent
clinical features of toxicity:
- attributable to POEA:
- GIT pain, vomiting with aspiration
- pulmonary oedema
- impaired consciousness
- haemolysis
- attributable to glyphosate:
- corrosive GIT effects with likely nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea & possibly GIT bleeding
- possible direct renal toxicity
- metabolic acidosis
- CNS depression
- poor prognostic signs:
- abdominal pain
- hypotension
- resp. distress
- renal failure
- metabolic acidosis
- hyperkalaemia
Mx of acute oral poisoning by glyphosate:
- ABC's as per usual
- eye & skin contamination generally do not produce systemic symptoms and require irrigation & symptomatic Rx
- activated charcoal may adsorb the surfactant component and should be considered in those who present early and who have a protected airway
- IV access, U&E, FBE
- IV fluids if hypotensive
- if poor prognostic signs are present:
- early invasive monitoring & haemodynamic support
- maintenance of euvolaemia
- consider haemodialysis which may improve acidosis, hyperkalaemia & renal failure but does not remove glyphosate
- there is no point in atropine, pralidoxine or in serum glyphosate levels
- disposition:
- all patients with more than mild GIT symptoms should be admitted for monitoring for at least 12hrs as there is a possibility of late development of serious complications.
references:
- Glyphosate herbicide formulation: A potentially lethal ingestion. Stella, Ryan. EMA 2004:16 p235-9
herbicides.txt · Last modified: 2011/08/25 11:19 by 127.0.0.1