Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-4-220
Title: Delayed ethylene glycol poisoning presenting with abdominal pain and multiple cranial and peripheral neuropathies: A case report
Authors: Baldwin, F
Sran, H 
Keywords: antibiotic agent
C reactive protein
ciprofloxacin
cyclizine
ethylene glycol
infusion fluid
paracetamol
abdominal pain
acute kidney failure
adult
adult respiratory distress syndrome
agitation
anion gap
anuria
article
artificial ventilation
aspiration pneumonia
Babinski reflex
blood gas analysis
blurred vision
bulbar paralysis
case report
cerebrospinal fluid pressure
computer assisted tomography
confusion
consciousness disorder
continuous hemodiafiltration
convalescence
cranial nerve paralysis
cranial neuropathy
dehydration
electromyography
epigastric pain
erythrocyte sedimentation rate
extubation
glomerulus filtration rate
hiccup
human
hypercapnia
intensive care unit
intoxication
intubation
limb weakness
low back pain
lumbar puncture
male
mydriasis
nerve conduction
neuropathic pain
neutrophil count
oliguria
orthostatic hypotension
peripheral neuropathy
polyradiculoneuropathy
priority journal
protein blood level
protein cerebrospinal fluid level
pyelonephritis
renal replacement therapy
tendon reflex
tracheostomy
urethral catheter
vomiting
Issue Date: 2010
Publisher: BMC
Citation: Baldwin, F, Sran, H (2010). Delayed ethylene glycol poisoning presenting with abdominal pain and multiple cranial and peripheral neuropathies: A case report. Journal of Medical Case Reports 4 : 220. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-4-220
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Introduction. Ethylene glycol poisoning may pose diagnostic difficulties if the history of ingestion is not volunteered, or if the presentation is delayed. This is because the biochemical features of high anion-gap metabolic acidosis and an osmolar gap resolve within 24 to 72 hours as the ethylene glycol is metabolized to toxic metabolites. This case illustrates the less well-known clinical features of delayed ethylene glycol poisoning, including multiple cranial and peripheral neuropathies, and the clinical findings which may point towards this diagnosis in the absence of a history of ingestion. Case presentation. A 53-year-old Afro-Caribbean man presented with vomiting, abdominal pain and oliguria, and was found to have acute renal failure requiring emergency hemofiltration, and raised inflammatory markers. Computed tomography imaging of the abdomen revealed the appearance of bilateral pyelonephritis, however he failed to improve with broad-spectrum antibiotics, and subsequently developed multiple cranial neuropathies and increasing obtundation, necessitating intubation and ventilation. Computed tomography of the brain showed no focal lesions, and a lumbar puncture revealed a raised cerebrospinal fluid opening pressure and cyto-albuminological dissociation. Nerve conduction studies revealed a sensorimotor radiculoneuropathy mimicking a Guillain-Barre type lesion with an atypical distribution. It was only about two weeks after presentation that the history of ethylene glycol ingestion one week before presentation was confirmed. He had a slow recovery on the intensive care unit, requiring renal replacement therapy for eight weeks, and complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome, neuropathic pain and a slow neurological recovery requiring prolonged rehabilitation. Conclusions. Although neuropathy as a result of ethylene glycol poisoning has been described in a few case reports, all of these were in the context of a known history of ingestion. As the diagnosis may well be obscured if the history of ingestion is not elucidated, it is important to be aware of this possibility especially if presentation is delayed. © 2010 Baldwin and Sran; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: Journal of Medical Case Reports
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/178199
ISSN: 1752-1947
DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-4-220
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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