Background: Serum pseudo-cholinesterase (PChE) levels are used to determine the therapeutic efficacy and severity of liver dysfunction, as well as to act as a prognostic and therapeutic index of liver injury in people who have been poisoned by Diazinon, whether or not they are alcoholics.
Methods: Blood samples were taken from healthy male adults as a control group, and PChE was calculated. Blood samples were taken from diazinon poisoning patients with or without drunkenness who attended local hospitals on the first and fifth days for pseudocholinesterase estimate. PChE levels in the blood were calculated.
Results: Serum PChE was calculated in healthy male adults and used as the reference value. The control value of PChE in 30 healthy adults ranged from 125 to 321 mol/ml, with 212 being the mean. On the fifth day, blood samples from patients with diazinon poisoning were measured after therapy with atropine, PAM (Pyridine-2-Aldoxime), and blood transfusion. Their average concentration was determined to be 200 mol/ml. In non-alcoholics with diazinon poisoning, there is a tendency for serum PChE levels to rise. The return of serum PChE to normal levels is good. On the first day, serum PChE is lower in people who have been poisoned by alcohol or diazinon. The concentration is 100 mol/ml. This inadequate response is most likely related to alcohol-induced hepatotoxicity and diazinon poisoning.
Conclusions: The medications' prognostic and therapeutic performance in diazinon poisoning without alcoholism is superior to those of alcoholics. As a result, it's possible that hepatoprotective measures will be required.Author(S) Details
K. Swarnalatha
Siddhartha Medical College, Vijayawada, India.
B. Surya Prakasa Rao
Siddhartha Medical College, Vijayawada, India.
S. Sharon Sonia
Department of Pharmacology, Kurnool Medical College, Kurnool-518002, India.
View Book:- https://stm.bookpi.org/CAPRD-V4/article/view/4703
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