Bird acute poisoning symptoms?

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Acute poisoning refers to that poison enters human body through skin, mucous membrane, respiratory tract, digestive tract and other ways in a short period of time, causing body damage and organ dysfunction. The onset of acute poisoning is sudden, the symptoms are serious, the condition changes rapidly, and it is often dangerous and life-threatening if it is not treated in time. It is necessary to make diagnosis and emergency treatment as soon as possible.

Bird acute poisoning symptoms?

1. Skin and mucous membrane: Burn (strong acid, strong base), cyanosis (nitrite), jaundice (fish bile) 2. Eyes: mydriasis (atropine), mydriasis (morphine), optic neuritis (methanol poisoning).

3. Nervous system: coma, delirium (seen in atropine poisoning), muscle fibrillation (seen in organophosphorus), convulsion (seen in organochlorine and isoniazid), paralysis (seen in arsenic trioxide), and mental disorder (seen in carbon monoxide and atropine).

4. Respiratory system: breath smell: wine, bitter almond (cyanide), garlic, etc. Rapid breathing: salicylic acid, methanol. Slow breathing: hypnotics, morphine. Pulmonary edema: zinc phosphide, organic phosphorus, etc. 5. Circulatory system: arrhythmia: such as digitalis, theophylline. Cardiac arrest: such as digitalis, theophylline is a direct effect on the heart; Asphyxiating poisons lead to hypoxia; Barium salt and gossypol lead to low potassium.

matters needing attention

Gastrointestinal symptoms are usually the most significant in acute poisoning of digestive system. Most of the poisons were ingestion poisoning, and a few were non ingestion poisoning. After entering the digestive tract, the toxicant directly stimulates the intestinal tract and destroys the local tissues of the digestive tract, which can cause abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. The same symptoms can also be caused by nerve reflex and systemic action after the poison is absorbed. Therefore, we should pay attention to the identification of acute gastrointestinal symptoms in children with unknown causes. Dehydration, acidosis, electrolyte disorder and other symptoms often occur in patients with severe gastrointestinal symptoms. The liver is the main place of toxicant metabolism and transformation. Most toxicants entering the digestive tract have toxicity decline or lose toxicity after liver metabolism. The liver may be damaged in varying degrees after being invaded by poison, and jaundice and hepatitis may appear. The patients with liver dysfunction may be aggravated by the decrease of detoxification function.