“Liquid nicotine is highly concentrated, which makes it especially
dangerous in households with children,” said lead study author
Matthew Noble, MD, of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Oregon
Health and Science University, Portland, Ore. “In this instance, the
girl lost consciousness nearly immediately after drinking the liquid
nicotine and despite prompt action by her parents and emergency
medical services, she still required mechanical ventilation and
admission to the intensive care unit. Fortunately, she was
ultimately discharged from the hospital in stable condition, but
under slightly different circumstances could have suffered a tragic
outcome.”
The patient’s mother had filled an empty ibuprofen bottle with
liquid nicotine she mixed herself, using a combination of unflavored
nicotine she purchased online and vegetable glycerin. The child’s
father, not realizing the ibuprofen bottle contained his wife’s
nicotine, administered a dose to his daughter for pain associated
with a sprained ankle. The effects were immediate and the father
contacted poison control and 9-1-1 within 5 minutes. Even after she
regained consciousness, she had altered mental status, her heart
rate dropped, and she developed vomiting, profuse sweating, muscle
twitching, and inability to control her copious secretions.
Maximum commercial liquid nicotine concentrations are currently
neither well established nor well regulated. Some electronic
cigarette consumers have advocated increasing nicotine
concentrations in electronic cigarettes to more closely
approximately nicotine delivery from conventional tobacco
cigarettes. With nicotine products being marketed online and
available for direct purchase by consumers, electronic cigarette
users now have access to a range of nicotine refill products,
including highly concentrated liquid.
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“As electronic cigarette use proliferates, children are now
increasingly at risk of toxicity from ingestions of much larger
quantities of nicotine from highly concentrated refill liquid, as in
our case study,” said Dr. Noble. “We expect that emergency
physicians and poison centers will continue to encounter clinical
significant cases of nicotine toxicity, especially in pediatric
patients.”
Annals of Emergency Medicine is the peer-reviewed scientific journal
for the American College of Emergency Physicians, the national
medical society representing emergency medicine. ACEP is committed
to advancing emergency care through continuing education, research,
and public education. Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, ACEP has 53
chapters representing each state, as well as Puerto Rico and the
District of Columbia. A Government Services Chapter represents
emergency physicians employed by military branches and other
government agencies. For more information, visit www.acep.org.
[American College of Emergency
Physicians]
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