Ceretto Vincent, Nacca Nicholas
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York; Department of Medical Toxicology, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York.
J Emerg Med. 2018 Nov;55(5):666-669. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2018.07.016. Epub 2018 Sep 24.
There are 215 families of plants that contain insoluble needle-shaped calcium oxalate crystals on the surface of their tissues. Upon mucosal contact, injury can cause extreme pain, soft-tissue swelling, salivation, dysphagia, and even aphonia. This presentation can resemble angioedema or anaphylaxis.
A 55-year-old Asian female presented to the emergency department complaining of oral pain, swelling, and numbness. Her family reported that she began to experience sharp pain of the tongue and lips immediately after eating "elephant root." Physical examination revealed a patient sitting in an upright position, leaning forward with pooling secretions. She had few lingual petechiae, a subtle diffuse erythema, and mild edema of the lower lip. Due to pain, she was unable to speak and swallow. Her vitals remained within normal limits. The patient was taking lisinopril for hypertension. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Injury by calcium oxalate crystals is a relatively common occurrence that will present to the emergency department. Although most exposures are benign, patients can develop critical illness, requiring emergent therapies and airway management. Due to the nature of presentation, exposure can easily be misdiagnosed as anaphylaxis or hereditary and drug-induced angioedema. Severe pain and the temporal relationship to plant ingestion distinguish insoluble calcium oxalate crystal exposure from these alternative causes of angioedema. There is minimal evidence-based data evaluating treatment of these injuries. Standard treatment regimen includes a local anesthetic, corticosteroids, opioids, and antihistaminergic agents. Given the relative low cost, ease of administration, and benign adverse effect profile, sodium bicarbonate rinse may have a role as an adjunct therapy, however, research is needed.
有215个植物科的组织表面含有不溶性针状草酸钙晶体。接触黏膜后,损伤可导致剧痛、软组织肿胀、流涎、吞咽困难甚至失声。这种表现可能类似于血管性水肿或过敏反应。
一名55岁的亚洲女性因口腔疼痛、肿胀和麻木到急诊科就诊。她的家人报告说,她在食用“象根”后立即开始感到舌头和嘴唇剧痛。体格检查发现患者坐直,身体前倾,分泌物积聚。她有少量舌部瘀点、轻微弥漫性红斑和下唇轻度水肿。由于疼痛,她无法说话和吞咽。她的生命体征仍在正常范围内。该患者因高血压正在服用赖诺普利。急诊医生为何应了解此事?:草酸钙晶体造成的损伤在急诊科较为常见。虽然大多数接触是良性的,但患者可能会发展为危重病,需要紧急治疗和气道管理。由于表现的性质,接触很容易被误诊为过敏反应或遗传性及药物性血管性水肿。严重疼痛以及与植物摄入的时间关系可将不溶性草酸钙晶体接触与这些血管性水肿的其他病因区分开来。评估这些损伤治疗的循证数据极少。标准治疗方案包括局部麻醉剂、皮质类固醇、阿片类药物和抗组胺药。鉴于碳酸氢钠冲洗成本相对较低、易于给药且不良反应较轻,可能作为辅助治疗,但仍需研究。