Displaying publications 21 - 40 of 237 in total

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  1. Amarasingham RD, Lee H
    Med J Malaya, 1969 Mar;23(3):220-7.
    PMID: 4240079
    Matched MeSH terms: Acids/poisoning; Alkalies/poisoning; Barbiturates/poisoning; Insecticides/poisoning; Poisoning*; Arsenic Poisoning
  2. Low QJ, Lee KT, Lim TH, Siaw C, Cheo SW, Tan NE, et al.
    Med J Malaysia, 2020 07;75(4):442-444.
    PMID: 32724013
    There are increasing reports of methanol poisoning (MP) incidence worldwide. In Malaysia, the largest first methanol poisoning was reported in Selangor in 2013 with a total of 41 patients and cluster of cases been reported from the country since then. Often MP involved adulterated alcohol containing more than the legal permissible concentration of methanol. Methanol is rapidly absorbed and metabolised into formic acid which causes variable symptoms of the central nervous system such as blindness, seizure, coma and gastrointestinal disturbances. Mortality could reach up to 83% as reported using the coma state, pH and pCO2 level in the worst-case scenario.
    Matched MeSH terms: Methanol/poisoning*; Poisoning/physiopathology*; Poisoning/therapy*
  3. Pinakini KS, Kumar TS
    J Clin Forensic Med, 2006 Jul;13(5):274-6.
    PMID: 16442830
    Poisoning is one of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in developing countries like India. Anticholinesterase compounds like organophosphates (OP) and carbamates account for the majority of these poisoning cases because of their easy availability and agricultural use. Carbamates are as popular as OPs as insecticides that often go undiagnosed. A fatal case of carbofuran poisoning is presented where serial cholinesterase estimation played a major role in the diagnosis of the same. The pertinent medical literature on carbofuran poisoning is reviewed. The establishment of poison information center in each state is needed for proper diagnosis and management of poisoning cases.
    Matched MeSH terms: Carbofuran/poisoning*; Cholinesterase Inhibitors/poisoning*; Poisoning/blood; Poisoning/diagnosis; Poisoning/drug therapy
  4. Chung WM, Chian YY, Azmir A
    Med J Malaysia, 2018 12;73(6):453-454.
    PMID: 30647232
    Datura plants contain anticholinergic properties. Consumers may present with a spectrum of anticholinergic symptoms, including hallucination, agitation, tachycardia, delirium, hyperthermia, and dilated pupils. Prompt identification of the symptoms with appropriate treatment can be life-saving. Some patients might not be able to provide history and therefore recognition of toxidromes is imperative. Awareness should be built among the public who may be exposed to such fruits or plants.
    Matched MeSH terms: Fruit/poisoning*; Plant Poisoning/diagnosis*; Plant Poisoning/drug therapy; Plant Poisoning/etiology; Datura/poisoning*
  5. Lai SM, Lim KW, Cheng HK
    Singapore Med J, 1990 Oct;31(5):463-5.
    PMID: 2259944
    Margosa Oil is an extract of the seed of the Neem tree and is widely used as a traditional medicine by Indians in India, Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Used mainly for external applications, it is often administered orally to neonates and infants regularly in small amounts. Margosa Oil causes toxic encephalopathy particularly in infants and young children. The usual features are vomiting, drowsiness, tachypnea and recurrent generalised seizures. Leucocytosis and metabolic acidosis are significant laboratory findings. Management is aimed primarily towards the control of convulsions although supportive management is equally important. Prognosis is usually good but fatalities and neurological deficits have been reported. We report here two infants with Margosa Oil poisoning presenting with encephalopathy.
    Matched MeSH terms: Glycerides/poisoning*; Plant Oils/poisoning; Poisoning/diagnosis; Poisoning/therapy; Terpenes/poisoning*
  6. Arokiasamy JT
    Med J Malaysia, 1994 Jun;49(2):109-12.
    PMID: 8090087
    http://www.e-mjm.org/1994/v49n2/Accidental_Poisoning.pdf
    Matched MeSH terms: Poisoning/etiology*; Poisoning/prevention & control
  7. Lim HH, Abu Bakar CM
    Med J Malaysia, 1983 Sep;38(3):212-6.
    PMID: 6672564
    A study was carried out by the Factories and Machinery Department of Malaysia to assess the problem ofoccupational exposure to inorganic lead in Malaysian battery workers. The eight factories studied were divided into two categories: large, multinational subsidiaries with good industrial hygiene measures and small, locally-owned companies with poor hygiene features. A total of 251 workers (221 males and 30 females) were included in the study. Personal air sampling showed that 47% of the samples in the small factories had lead-in-air levels exceeding 150 ug/m3, compared unth. 29% in the larger establishments. The highest air lead levels were found in the cutting, pasting/mixing and battery assembly sections. 86.7% ofthe female workers and 62.2% of the male workers in the smaller factories had blood lead concentrations above the proposed limits of 70 ug/100 ml (males) and 40 ug/100 ml (females). In contrast, only 7.6% of the male workers in the larger factories had blood lead levels exceeding the proposed limits. Three workers also had positive signs or symptoms on clinical examination. Legislation of specific regulations to protect the health of lead-exposed workers in Malaysia is currently being drafted by the government.
    Matched MeSH terms: Lead Poisoning/etiology*; Lead Poisoning/epidemiology
  8. Paranjothy M
    Med J Malaysia, 1978 Sep;33(1):17-9.
    PMID: 750889
    Matched MeSH terms: Oils/poisoning; Plant Extracts/poisoning*
  9. Nasir HM, Kassim MS, Malinee T, Khairul AM, Low BH
    Med J Malaysia, 1993 Sep;48(3):361-3.
    PMID: 8183154
    We report here a case of lead poisoning in a 20 month old girl who presented with acute encephalopathy and status epilepticus. The major clues leading to the diagnosis were the occupational family history and dense lead lines on X-ray of the long bones. She showed evidence of neurological dysfunction in the initial phase, but she improved steadily, regaining her motor power partially and her vision, although some cognitive and language deficits were already evident. She will need long-term neurological assessment and evaluation to ascertain the extent of permanent brain damage.
    Matched MeSH terms: Lead Poisoning/diagnosis*; Lead Poisoning/etiology; Lead Poisoning/prevention & control
  10. Simpson IA, Lim EC
    Malayan Medical Journal, 1935;10:138-9.
    Matched MeSH terms: Poisoning
  11. Seng NT, Wai TK
    Med J Malaysia, 1978 Jun;32(4):278-81.
    PMID: 732620
    Matched MeSH terms: Paraquat/poisoning*
  12. Yñiguez AT, Lim PT, Leaw CP, Jipanin SJ, Iwataki M, Benico G, et al.
    Harmful Algae, 2021 02;102:101776.
    PMID: 33875175 DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2020.101776
    In the Southeast Asian region, the Philippines and Malaysia are two of the most affected by Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs). Using long-term observations of HAB events, we determined if these are increasing in frequency and duration, and expanding across space in each country. Blooms of Paralytic Shellfish Toxin (PST)-producing species in the Philippines did increase in frequency and duration during the early to mid-1990s, but have stabilized since then. However, the number of sites affected by these blooms continue to expand though at a slower rate than in the 1990s. Furthermore, the type of HABs and causative species have diversified for both toxic blooms and fish kill events. In contrast, Malaysia showed no increasing trend in the frequency of toxic blooms over the past three decades since Pyrodinium bahamense was reported in 1976. However, similar to the Philippines, other PST producers such as Alexandrium minutum and Alexandrium tamiyavanichii have become a concern. No amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP) has been confirmed in either Philippines or Malaysia thus far, while ciguatera fish poisoning cases are known from the Philippines and Malaysia but the causative organisms remain poorly studied. Since the 1990s and early 2000s, recognition of the distribution of other PST-producing species such as species of Alexandrium and Gymnodinium catenatum in Southeast Asia has grown, though there has been no significant expansion in the known distributions within the last decade. A major more recent problem in the two countries and for Southeast Asia in general are the frequent fish-killing algal blooms of various species such as Prorocentrum cordatum, Margalefidinium polykrikoides, Chattonella spp., and unarmored dinoflagellates (e.g., Karlodinium australe and Takayama sp.). These new sites affected and the increase in types of HABs and causative species could be attributed to various factors such as introduction through mariculture and eutrophication, and partly because of increased scientific awareness. These connections still need to be more concretely investigated. The link to the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) should also be better understood if we want to discern how climate change plays a role in these patterns of HAB occurrences.
    Matched MeSH terms: Shellfish Poisoning*
  13. Seng NT
    Med J Malaysia, 1978 Sep;33(1):13-6.
    PMID: 750888
    Matched MeSH terms: Methanol/poisoning*
  14. Nik Muhamad NA, Hawari R, Shafie H
    Med J Malaysia, 2016 Aug;71(4):213-214.
    PMID: 27770125 MyJurnal
    Aluminium phosphide (ALP) is highly toxic and poisoning can result in high mortality rates. A 26-year-old female who allegedly ingested a toxic dose of ALP presented with vomiting and diarrhoea. She developed cardiac arrest with refractory pulseless ventricular tachycardia. Despite aggressive resuscitation, she succumbed to death seven hours following ingestion. In cases like this, a better outcome can be achieved with early arrival, prompt diagnosis, aggressive resuscitation and intensive monitoring.
    Matched MeSH terms: Poisoning*
  15. Long IJ, Flaherty GT
    J Travel Med, 2017 05 01;24(3).
    PMID: 28355614 DOI: 10.1093/jtm/tax002
    Matched MeSH terms: Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/prevention & control*
  16. Abdullah AS, Lajis NH, Bremner JB, Davies NW, Mustapha W, Rajion MA
    Vet Hum Toxicol, 1992 Apr;34(2):154-5.
    PMID: 1509678
    Spectroscopic examinations of purified extracts of the rumen content of sheep intoxicated by Brachiaria decumbens revealed the presence of a mixture of sapogenins, identified as 3-spirostanols. These isomeric steroid sapogenins (C27H44O3) are believed the toxic principles in causing toxicity in sheep after feeding on B. decumbens.
    Matched MeSH terms: Plant Extracts/poisoning; Plant Poisoning/etiology; Plant Poisoning/veterinary*; Sapogenins/poisoning
  17. Rajasuriar R, Awang R, Hashim SB, Rahmat HR
    Hum Exp Toxicol, 2007 Feb;26(2):73-81.
    PMID: 17370864
    We retrospectively reviewed poisoning admissions to all government health facilities from 1999 to 2001, in an effort to expand our current knowledge on poisoning in Malaysia to a level that better reflects a nationwide burden. There were 21 714 admissions reported with 779 deaths. The case-fatality rate was 35.88/1000 admissions. The majority of admissions (89.7%) and deaths (98.9%) occurred in adults. Some 55.1% of all admissions were female, mostly involving pharmaceutical agents. Male poisoning admissions were more often due to chemical substances. The prevalence of poisoning and death was highest among Indians compared to all other races in Malaysia. Overall, the majority of poisoning admissions were due to pharmaceutical agents, with agents classified as non-opioid analgesics, anti-pyretics and anti-rheumatics the most common. Pesticides accounted for the largest number of fatalities. It was also the commonest substance reported in cases of intentional self-harm. Most cases of poisoning admissions occurred due to accidental exposure (47%), followed by cases of intentional self-harm (20.7%). Overall, this study has managed to contribute substantial additional information regarding the epidemiology of poisoning in Malaysia, highlighting important issues, such as the rampant poisonings involving pesticides and analgesics, as well as the high prevalence of poisoning among Indians in Malaysia.
    Matched MeSH terms: Pesticides/poisoning; Poisoning/epidemiology*; Solvents/poisoning
  18. Lawai V, Abdul Rahim NA, Ngaini Z
    J Forensic Sci, 2015 11;60(6):1620-4.
    PMID: 26382214 DOI: 10.1111/1556-4029.12852
    Paraquat poisoning is commonly associated with suicide or homicide in Malaysia. In a case involving advanced body decomposition, pathological analysis regarding the cause of death may become difficult or almost impossible. Insects serve as common alternative matrix for poison detection in forensic analysis. Paraquat detection via secondary bioaccumulation in fly larvae tissue has never been reported. In this study, tissues from blowfly larvae collected from a rabbit carcass with paraquat poisoning were analyzed for secondary bioaccumulation. Larvae samples were collected and analyzed using liquid-liquid extraction. The detection was performed via reduction of quaternary ammonium presence in paraquat and analyzed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) with selected ion monitoring mode (SIM mode). GC-MS showed the elution of reduced paraquat was at retention time 12.8 min. Blowfly larvae tissue has proven useful as a secondary detector in paraquat-related deaths.
    Matched MeSH terms: Herbicides/poisoning*; Paraquat/poisoning*; Poisoning/diagnosis
  19. Khairi HM, Elsheikh HA, Salam Abdullah A
    Vet Hum Toxicol, 2000 Aug;42(4):193-5.
    PMID: 10928679
    The effect of Brachiaria decumbens (signal grass) on drug-metabolizing enzymes was studied in sheep. After 14 d of grazing a pure signal grass pasture, significant declines were observed in hepatic aminopyrine N-demethylase and aniline 4-hydroxylase (phase I biotransformation) and in conjugative enzymes UDP-glucuronyltransferase and glutathione S-transferase. Kidney enzymes were significantly decreased except for UDP-glucuronyltransferase. Enzyme activities were also compared for normal sheep and cattle livers and kidneys. Lower activities were found in cattle, indicating that factors other than biotransformation are responsible for the clincial tolerance of cattle to B. decumbens toxicity.
    Matched MeSH terms: Poaceae/poisoning*; Plant Poisoning/enzymology; Plant Poisoning/veterinary*
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