Ganendran_1976_Southeast.Asian.J.Trop.Med.Public.Health_7_543

Reference

Title : Pralidoxime as an insignificant reactivator in severe anticholinesterase (organophosphate insecticide) poisoning - Ganendran_1976_Southeast.Asian.J.Trop.Med.Public.Health_7_543
Author(s) : Ganendran A , Balabaskaran S
Ref : Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health , 7 :543 , 1976
Abstract :

In acute severe anticholinesterase poisoning by organophosphate compounds, pralidoxime (P-2-AM, pyridine-2-aldoxime methiodide) used in the recommended doses, intravenously, has not been shown to reactivate the inhibited cholinesterase, as evidenced both clinically and biochemically. In vitro studies using pralidoxime iodide up to ten times the recommended concentrations, produced insignificant reactivation of cholinesterases inhibited by the organophosphate insecticide Bidrin (di-methyl-3-hydroxyl-N, N-dimethyl-crotonamide phosphate). This was even so despite prolonged exposure of the inhibited cholinesterases to the oxime. The value of pralidoxime as a reactivator of phosphorylated cholinesterases is therefore in doubt, and should not be used in preference to large doses of atropine and other supportive treatment in poisoning by organophosphate insecticides.

PubMedSearch : Ganendran_1976_Southeast.Asian.J.Trop.Med.Public.Health_7_543
PubMedID: 1030852

Related information

Reactivator 2-PAM

Citations formats

Ganendran A, Balabaskaran S (1976)
Pralidoxime as an insignificant reactivator in severe anticholinesterase (organophosphate insecticide) poisoning
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 7 :543

Ganendran A, Balabaskaran S (1976)
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 7 :543