Occupational inhalation poisoning with the veterinary antibiotic tiamulin.
Journal: 2019/June - Clinical Toxicology
ISSN: 1556-9519
Abstract:
Introduction: Tiamulin is a semisynthetic pleuromutilin diterpene veterinary antibiotic, widely used in farms. We present a case of prolonged QT-interval and ventricular tachyarrhythmia after tiamulin inhalation. Case presentation: A 43-year-old veterinarian without previous medical history was dividing granulated powder of antibiotic gravimetrically without wearing personal protective equipment. Half an hour after exposure, nausea occurred; four hours later he started to vomit and soon after that he experienced syncope. He was unconscious three minutes; afterwards he became somnolent, dizzy and nauseated with sweating and salivation. On admission to hospital five hours after exposure, he was conscious and had heart rate 70 beats/min and blood pressure 140/80 mmHg. Initial laboratory results were normal. Electrocardiography showed a prolonged QTc-interval of 730 ms with numerous polymorphic ventricular extrasystoles and episodes of non-sustained polymorphic ventricular tachycardia that resolved after treatment with lidocaine and magnesium. Subsequent electrocardiography revealed gradual shortening of QTc-interval with QTc-interval normalization (430 ms) between 24 and 32 hours after tiamulin exposure. Laboratory tests, morphologic heart diagnostics and genetic testing excluded other potential causes of QTc-interval prolongation. Subsequent toxicology analysis by LC-MS/MS confirmed tiamulin in his serum samples on admittance (500 ng/mL). Conclusion: Tiamulin inhalation can be associated with prolonged QT-interval and ventricular tachyarrhythmia. QT-interval prolongation could be expected in overdoses of emerging human pleuromutilins.
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