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By LAURAN NEERGAARD : AP Medical Writer
Jul 22, 2003 : 10:02 am ET
WASHINGTON -- Generations of parents knew the
rule: Keep a bottle of ipecac around to induce vomiting in case your
child swallows a poison. Now that rule may be about to change.
Amid evidence that ipecac doesn't actually
treat poisoning well -- and is being abused, sometimes fatally, by
people with bulimia -- the government is considering ending
over-the-counter sales of the syrup.
Already some poison-control centers have quit
recommending ipecac at all, and overall use is plummeting. Last
year, poison-control centers recorded 16,000 cases of ipecac
treatment for poison ingestion, down from 150,000 in 1986.
For many of last year's cases, specialists
say the children didn't swallow enough poison to do real damage, and
the ipecac made no difference.
"So we take somebody who's going to do fine
with nothing, and we make them throw up a few times, and we all feel
better because, you know, we've done something," Dr. Alastair Wood
of Vanderbilt University told fellow scientific advisers to the Food
and Drug Administration.
"That's not medicine. That's black magic,"
Wood said as the advisers voted, 6-4, last month that FDA should
rescind nonprescription sales of ipecac.
FDA, which expects to decide by early next
year, isn't the only organization grappling with the issue.
The American Association of Poison Control
Centers and American Academy of Pediatrics are writing new
guidelines, due this fall, that are expected to discourage use of
ipecac in almost every poison exposure. An exception might be when a
child lives hours away from the hospital care required to treat
certain severe poisonings.
While the debate continues, the best advice
hasn't changed: People who think someone has been exposed to a
poison should call the nationwide poison-control hot line
immediately, at 1-800-222-1222.
The move away from ipecac probably will shock
parents -- it is counterintuitive. But it's fueled by a lack of
proof that ipecac helps children survive severe poisoning, despite
widespread in-home use since 1965.
Yes, it makes them vomit. But it was never
meant for every swallowed poison -- anything caustic or that could
be aspirated into the lungs isn't supposed to be thrown up. And even
if administered within a half-hour of ingesting a target poison,
studies show ipecac removes, on average, only about 30 percent.
To some doctors, every little bit helps. To
others, in a severe poisoning, giving ipecac delays getting to the
hospital for better care.
In fact, hospitals are moving away from
vomiting and stomach-flushing as poison treatments, in favor of such
methods as oral antidotes or activated charcoal, which can absorb
certain toxins before they reach the bloodstream.
At the same time, ipecac has risks. Sometimes
vomiting continues for more than an hour, and, very rarely, the
retching can be violent enough to trigger brain hemorrhaging or
gastric tears.
Used repeatedly, ipecac can build up and
destroy muscle tissue, including the heart. It's sold in small
bottles to deter abuse, yet some 4 percent of bulimia patients in
eating-disorder clinics acknowledge regularly using ipecac to purge.
A Buffalo, N.Y., woman recently wrote FDA
describing empty ipecac bottles found in her 22-year-old daughter's
apartment after the emaciated young woman died of bulimia in March.
Then there's Munchausen syndrome by proxy,
where parents harm children to get attention. Medical journals
describe 13 known cases where ipecac was the poison used.
The FDA now must decide if there's enough
possible benefit to keep ipecac readily available to offset those
risks. An alternative might be to let doctors prescribe the syrup
for families in rural areas far from hospitals.
There's little else to offer at home. Some
doctors advise keeping activated charcoal on hand, too, but it
tastes so bad that getting it down children often is impossible.
Don't force vomiting by gagging a child or giving homemade purges,
specialists stress.
The bottom line: Child-poisoning deaths have
plummeted in recent decades thanks largely to prevention. Use
child-resistant packaging and keep toxic substances locked away.
If you think a poisoning has occurred, stay
calm, call poison control right away and describe the substance so
the experts can offer the best advice.
Editor's note: EDITOR'S NOTE _ Lauran
Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press
from Washington.
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