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Merck

Ethylene glycol poisoning.

Forensic science international (2005-10-18)
Peter Mygind Leth, Markil Gregersen
ABSTRACT

Ethylene glycol (EG) can be found in many agents, such as antifreeze. Ingestion of EG may cause serious poisoning. Adults are typically exposed when EG is ingested as a cheap substitute for ethanol or in suicide-attempts. Children may be exposed by accidental ingestion caused by decantation of EG to unlabeled bottles. EG has in itself a low toxicity, but is in vivo broken down to four organic acids: glycoaldehyde, glycolic acid, glyoxylic acid and oxalic acid. The metabolites are cell toxins that cause central nervous system depression, and cardio-pulmonary and renal failure. Glycolic acid causes severe acidosis, and oxalate is precipitated as calcium oxalate in the kidneys and other tissues. We present five case reports of fatal EG-poisoning, and review the literature concerning clinical presentation and diagnosis, pathological findings, treatment and prevention.

MATERIALI
N° Catalogo
Marchio
Descrizione del prodotto

Sigma-Aldrich
Etilenglicole, ReagentPlus®, ≥99%
Sigma-Aldrich
Etilenglicole, anhydrous, 99.8%
USP
Etilenglicole, United States Pharmacopeia (USP) Reference Standard
Supelco
Etilenglicole, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Sigma-Aldrich
Etilenglicole, spectrophotometric grade, ≥99%
Supelco
Etilenglicole, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Etilenglicole, BioUltra, ≥99.5% (GC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Ethylene glycol 5 M solution
Supelco
Ethylene glycol solution, NMR reference standard, 80% in DMSO-d6 (99.9 atom % D), NMR tube size 5 mm × 8 in.