Post on 08-Apr-2022
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME
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PRECONGRESS
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PRE-CONGRESS
FUNDAMENTAL AND APPLIED STUDIES IN POISONING – AN OVERVIEW OF THEIR ROLE
FOR THE CLINICAL TOXICOLOGIST
09:00-09:01 Welcome and opening
Martin Wilks, Switzerland, and Paul Dargan, United Kingdom
Session 1
Moderators: Martin Wilks, Switzerland, and Paul Dargan, United Kingdom
09:01-09:30 In silico studies: Modelling drug-induced liver injury using machine learning
Felix Hammann, University Hospital Bern, Switzerland
09:30-10:00 Use of in vitro studies for prediction of clinical NPS toxicity
Dino Lüthi, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
10:00-10:30 Animal models to understand the mechanisms of toxicity and optimise poisoning
management
Bruno Mégarbane, Paris-Diderot University, France
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Explain the potential and limitations of machine learning and cheminformatics for drug induced liver injury.
Name at least one advantage and one disadvantage of in vitro research as predictor of the clinical toxicity of NPS.
To understand how experimental animal models are designed and to which level they contribute to understand toxicity in humans.
10:30-11:00 Rest break
11:00 Session 2
Moderators: Bruno Megarbane, France and Katrin Faber, Switzerland
11:00-11:30 Genomics, pharmacogenomics and genotyping, an overview for the clinical
toxicologist
Alexander Jetter, University Hospital Zürich, Switzerland
11:30-12:00 Identifying exposure biomarkers with metabolomics: the example of dioxin
Serge Rudaz, Université de Genève, Switzerland
12:00-12:30 Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modelling in clinical toxicology
Lucie Chevillard, Paris Descartes University, France
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Describe the opportunities and the limits of pharmacogenomics in patient care.
Know how metabolomic approaches could be useful to tackle the impact of toxicant such as acute dioxin exposure on human metabolism.
Learn the interest of different methods of pharmacokinetics analysis and how to relate PK to the markers of intoxication (pharmacodynamic) to better understand the possible mechanisms involved.
12:30-13:45 Lunch break
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13:45 Session 3
Moderators: Evangelia Liakoni, Switzerland, and Geert Verstegen Belgium
13:45-14:15 Cell cultures: In vitro human cell cultures to predict drug toxicity
Dirk Steinritz, Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie der Bundesweh, Münich,
Germany
14:15-14:45 A general roadmap to investigate the main mechanisms of mitochondrial toxicity
Bernard Fromenty, INSERM, Rennes, France
14:45-15:15 Organ chips: principles and applications for clinical toxicology
Pierre-Jean Ferron, INSERM, Rennes, France
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Explain the benefit but also the limitations of in vitro cell culture models for predicting acute drug toxicity.
Describe how xenobiotics disrupt mitocondrial metabolic pathways and the methods of investigation for these.
Overview of the different models of organ on chips and organoids used to identify toxicity mechanism: from the clinical case to the cell biology laboratory.
15:15-15:45 Rest break / (opportunity for short individually arranged satellite meetings)
15:45 Session 4
Moderators: Laura Hondebrink, The Netherlands and Piotr Kabata, Polonia
15:45-16:15 Imaging in neuropharmacology: applications to clinical toxicology
Nicholas Tournier, CEA, Orsay, France
16:15-16:45 Neuro-electrophysiology - principles and applications in organophosphate
poisoning
Tharaka Dassanayake,University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka
16:45-17:15 Understanding individual differences from big data analysis of patient records
Heikki Nikkanen, Mount Auburn Hospital, Boston, USA
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Outline how PET imaging and specific biomarkers may be utilised to study kinetics and interactions in the CNS.
Outline the basis of neuroelectrophysiological tests that assess peripheral nerves, neuromuscular junctional transmission and the central nervous system in organophosphate poisoning.
Describe the strengths and weaknesses of manipulation of large data sets for meaningful research in toxicology.
17:15 End of Pre-congress symposium 2021
Moderators: Laura Hondebrink, The Netherlands and Piotr Kabata, Polonia
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MAIN CONGRESS
26 to 28 May 2021
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DAY 1
08:45-09:00 WELCOME AND OPENING / INTRODUCTION TO THE CONFERENCE PLATFORM
Hosts: Horst Thiermann, EAPCCT President
Lotte Hoegberg, EAPCCT/SMC Chair
CAUSTIC INGESTION SYMPOSIUM
Moderators: - Ingrid Berling, Australia and Davide Lonati, Italy
09:00-09:20 Epidemiology of caustic ingestions in children and adults
Maren Hermans-Clausen, University Hospital, Freiburg, Germany
09:20-09:40 The role of CT in the assessment of oral caustic injury
Pierre Cattan, Saint-Louis Hospital, Paris, France
09:40-10:00 The role of endoscopy in the assessment of oral caustic injury
Filippo Torroni, Bambino Gesu' Children's Hospital, Rome, Italy
10:00-10:20 Risk factors for oesophageal stricture in alkali ingestion in children
Viorela Nitescu, Bucharest, Romania (2020- Abstract 199)
10:20-10:40 Effectiveness of endoscopic application of human collagen Type 1 in the treatment
of oesophageal chemical burns
Anastasia Yu Simonova, Moscow, Russia (2021- Abstract 293)
10:40-11:00 Management of caustic injury and the indications for surgical intervention
Wolfram Kluwe, University Hospital, Freiburg, Germany
11:00-11:10 Questions & Answers to the Caustic Ingestion Symposium speakers
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Describe factors influencing outcome of caustic ingestions regarding patterns of exposure, characteristics of agent involved and age of exposed patients.
Outline the potential benefits of CT in the emergency management of caustic injuries and discuss the optimal use of endoscopy in the emergency management of caustic injuries in children.
Explain the main points of the pathophysiology of caustic injuries and describe the management in acute situations and in the follow up.
11:10-11:40 Rest break and AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Morning grouping)
ORAL PLATFORM AND SHORT ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Moderators: Maren Hermans-Clausen Germany and Patricia Casey, Ireland
11:40-11:50 Characteristics and clinical features of patients attending UK emergency
departments with analytically-confirmed exposure to the synthetic cannabinoid
MDMB-4EN Pinaca
Simon HL Thomas, Newcastle, United Kingdom (2021 Abstract 294)
11:50-12:10 Changing patterns of synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists encountered in UK
emergency departments
Simon HL Thomas, Newcastle, United Kingdom (2021 Abstract 295)
12:10-12:20 Patterns of teenage heroin exposures reported to the US poison centres
Saumitra Vijay Rege, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA (2021- Abstract 296)
12:20-12:30 Questions & Answers to the Oral platform and Short Oral Presentation speakers
12:30-13:00 Lunch
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13:00-13:30 AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Lunchtime grouping)
ALCOHOL AS A CO-INGESTANT IN THE POISONED PATIENT
Moderators: Michael Eddleston, United Kingdom and Knut Erik Hovda, Norway
13:30-13:50 Alcohol as a co-ingestant with stimulant recreational drugs and energy drinks
Chris Yates, SAMU 061 Balears, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
13:50-14:10 Alcohol as a co-ingestant with benzodiazepines and/or other CNS depressants
Tobias Zellner, TUM School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich,
Germany
14:10-14:30 Interactions between alcohol and organophosphate insecticide poisoning
Michael Eddleston, University of Edinburgh, UK
14:30-14:50 Poisonings where ethanol may be acutely protective – paracetamol
Kim Dalhoff, Bispebjerg University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark
14:50-15:10 Poisoning where ethanol is protective - the toxic alcohols
Ken McMartin, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, USA
15:10-15:20 Fomepizole during continuous renal replacement therapy, an observational study
Yvonne Lao, Oslo, Norway (2021 Abstract 297)
15:20-15:30 Questions & Answers to the Alcohol as a Co-ingestant in the Poisoned Patient
speakers
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Discuss mechanistically how alcohol complicates management of stimulant drug ingestion and provide specific examples.
Describe the effect of ethanol when co-ingested with CNS-depressants in regard to symptoms, clinical management and outcome.
Explain how blood alcohol concentration interacts with insecticide dosing to worsen outcome in OP insecticide poisoning.
Listing clinically relevant studies of the effect(s) of alcohol on paracetamol toxicity, explain the possible protective mechanism of alcohol and debate the pros and cons of alcoholuse in the treatment of paracetamol poisoning.
Describe how ethanol can be used to treat methanol and ethylene glycol poisonings
UPDATE FROM THE GUIDELINES COLLABORATIVE GROUP
Moderators: Alex Campbell, United Kingdom and Lotte Hoegberg, Denmark
15:30-15:45 STATUS: QT prolongation in poisoning, Activated Charcoal, Paracetamol
Sophie Gosselin, CISSS de la Montérégie-Centre, Montreal, Canada
15:45-16:15 Rest break and AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Afternoon grouping)
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FELLOWS LECTURE
Moderators: Allister Vale, United Kingdom and Hugo Kupferschmidt, Germany
16:15-16:20 Introduction
16:20-17:15 Inaugural Fellows Lecture: “Vaping Induced Lung Injury”
David Christiani, Harvard University , Boston, USA
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Understand the exposures contained in current electronic vaping products in common use.
Understand the Acura effects of vaping aerosol exposure on the henna lung.
Understand the clinical syndromes associated with vaping.
Understand management and prevention interventions in EVALI. 7
17:15 END OF DAY 1
Hosts: Allister Vale, United Kingdom and Hugo Kupferschmidt, Germany
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DAY 2
08:45-09:00 WELCOME DAY 2 / RE-INTRODUCTION TO THE CONFERENCE PLATFORM
Host: Alex Campbell, United Kingdom
APAMT SYMPOSIUM: TOXICOVIGILANCE DURING COVID-19 IN THE ASIAN-PACIFIC REGION
Moderators: Nick Buckley, Australia and David Wood, United Kingdom
09:00-09:05 Introduction to the session
Nick Buckley, Australia
09:05-09:25 Covid-19, disinfection and methanol poisoning: A report from Iran
Hossein Hassanian-Moghaddam, Iran
09:25-09:45 Toxic disasters in India during Covid-19 pandemic
Ashish Bhalla, India
09:45-10:00 Caveat Emptor: Covid-19 and impacts on surPRISE illicit drug poisonings in Australia
Thanjira Jiranantakan, Australia
10:00-10:20 Ketamine Adulteration in Thailand: the issue of supply and demand during Covid-19
Summon Chomchai, Thailand
10:20-10:30 Questions & Answers to the Session
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Learn about significant toxic exposures during COVID-19 pandemic in the Asian-Pacific area
Understand key steps of toxicovigilance taken in an Asian-Pacific context
Apply lessons learned about the signal identification, data gathering, risk assessment and responses measures to their local context.
10:30-11:00 Rest break and AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Morning grouping)
ORAL PLATFORM AND SHORT ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Moderators: Gabija Laubner, Lithuania and Katrin Faber, Switzerland
11:00-11:20 Unintentional exposure to immediate-release Tramadol in ≤6-year old children: A
nationwide French Poisons Control Centre study
Dominique Vodovar, Paris, France (2021- Abstract 298)
11:20-11:30 Enquiries to the National Poisons Information Centre, Ireland concerning patients
who required tracheal intubation
Myles Monaghan, Dublin, Ireland (2021 Abstract 299)
11:30-11:35 Questions & Answers to the Oral Platform and Short Oral Presentations
11:40-12:30 FELLOWS MEETING
Hosts: 3 - Allister Vale, Hugo Kupferschmidt, Ian Whyte
11:40-12:30 Lunch
12:30-13:00 AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Lunchtime grouping)
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YOUNG INVESTIGATORS AWARD
Moderators: Mark Zammit, Malta and Piotr Kabata, Polonia
13:00-13:05 Introduction to the session
13:05-13:20 A 2 bag intravenous acetylcysteine regimen results in fewer treatment delays in the
management of paracetamol overdose
Anselm Wong, Australia (YIA 2021- Abstract 300)
13:20-13:35 Decision support for toxin prediction using artificial intelligence
Tobias Zellner, Munich Germany (YIA 2021- Abstract 301)
13:35-13:50 "Flu" the Looking-Glass: observational poison center study evaluating adverse
events secondary to flumazenil administration over time
Varun Vohra, USA (YIA 2021 -Abstract 302)
13:50-14:00 Collection of votes and Announcement of the winner of YIA
COVID-19 SYMPOSIUM
Moderators: Evangelia Liakoni, Switzerland and Erik Lindeman, Sweden
14:00-14:20 Impact of COVID on poisons centres - a European perspective
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre, Pavia, Italy
14:20-14:40 Impact of COVID-19 on poisons centers - a US perspective
Diane Calello, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, USA
14:40-15:00 The impact of the first wave of COVID-19 on Poisons Centre (PC) activities in 4
European countries: a pilot study
Laura Hondebrink, Utrecht, Netherlands (2021- Abstract 303)
15:00-15:10 A networked approach to a SARS-COV-2 information hotline in the state of Florida -
design, implementation and lessons learned
Alfred Aleguas, Tampa, Florida, USA (2021 -Abstract 304)
15:10-15:20 Virtual education and networking during COVID: the ACMT COVID-19 Webinar
series
Paul Wax, ACMT, Phoenix, USA
15:20-15:30 Questions & Answers to the Oral Platform Session speakers
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Describe the effect of pandemic waves on Europe Health System and how the EAPCCT working-group is investigating the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on the work of European Poison Control Centres (PCCs).
Describe the process of expanding the role of a regional poison center to provide a 24/7 public health hotline in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, as an information service as well as a critical component of surveillance and response.
Describe the opportunities for virtual toxicology education and networking during a pandemic.
15:30-16:00 Rest break and AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Afternoon grouping)
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COVID-19 SYMPOSIUM
Moderators: Ana Ferrer Dufol, Spain and Paul Dargan, United Kingdom
16:00-16:20 Toxicity of drugs and "other treatments" - Toxicity of therapeutic drugs used for
COVID or overview of the drugs used to treat COVID
Caroline Samer, Geneva University Hospitals, Switzerland
16:20-16:40 Toxicity of drugs and "other treatments" - Use of non-recommended toxic
treatments (toxic alcohols/cleaning products etc.
Craig Smollin, University of California, San Francisco, USA
16:40-17:00 Impact of COVID-19 on recreational drugs in Europe - an overview from the
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
Isabelle Giraudon, EMCDDA, Lisbon, Portugal
17:00-17:20 Intentional poisoning cases reported to the National Poisons Information Centre
during the initial lockdown phase of COVID-19 Public Health restrictions
Edel Duggan, Dublin, Ireland (2021 Abstract 305)
17:20-17:30 Recreational drug toxicity Emergency Department presentations during the initial
months of the COVID-19 pandemic
Juan Ortega Pérez, Palma de Mallorca, Spain (2021- Abstract 306)
17:30-17:40 Questions & Answers to the Oral Platform Session speakers
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
List the repurposed and new drugs used in the context of COVID19 and outline the available clinical data regarding their efficacy and safety for COVID19 prophylaxis and treatment
Describe the mechanism of toxicity and treatment of patients exposed to sodium chlorite.
To learn about the impact of COVID-19 on recreational drugs in Europe (including on market, use, harm and treatment) based on a 'Trendspotter analysis' of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).
17:40 END OF DAY 2
Hosts: Ana Ferrer Dufol, Spain and Paul Dargan, United Kingdom
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DAY 3
0845-0900 WELCOME DAY 3 / RE-INTRODUCTION TO THE CONFERENCE PLATFORM
Host: Alex Campbell , United Kingdom
DRUG FORMULATION AND ITS IMPORTANCE IN THE POISONED PATIENT
Moderators: Davide Lonati, Italy and Anselm Wong, Australia
09:00-09:20 The impact of new drug formulations on the assessment of the poisoned patient
Andis Graudins, Monash Health, Melbourne, Australia
09:20-09:35 The pharmacology of pharmacobezoars
Lotte Hoegberg, Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark
09:35-09:55 Management of pharmacobezoars
Soeren Boegevig, Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen,
Denmark
09:55-10:10 Misuse of prescriptions medicines by routes other than the intended route of use
David Wood, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
10:20-10:30 Questions & Answers to the Drug Formulation symposium
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Explain the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic features of poisoning with various newer drug formulations that can influence the risk assessment and initial management of the poisoned patient.
Identify known physicochemical properties of pharmaceutical preparations prone to cause pharmacobezoar formation - the formation and degradation.
Describe ways to identify the formation of pharmacobezoars and possible treatment modalities in the poisoned patient where their formation is suspected or identified.
Understand the frequency of and methods by which prescription medicines can be used by routes other than the intended licenced route(s) of use.
10:30-11:00 Rest break and Authors with posters (Morning grouping)
LOUIS ROCHE LECTURE
11:00-11:15 Introduction and presentation of the Louis Roche Lecturer
Horst Thiermann, EAPCCT President
11:15-12:00 Improving the evaluation, management and outcome of cardiotoxicant-poisoned patients - still a challenge for clinical toxicologists Bruno Mégarbane, Paris-Diderot University, France
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Understand the contribution of the proposed different therapies in cardiotoxicant poisonings
12:00-12:30 Authors with posters (Lunchtime grouping)
12:30-13:30 Lunch
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13:00-14:15 GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Hosts: Horst Thiermann (EAPCCT President),
Davide Lonati (EAPCCT General Secretary),
Sergej Zakharov and Bruno Mégarbane (EAPCCT Treasurers)
TOXICOLOGY 2.0 SYMPOSIUM
Moderators: Chris Yates, Spain and Mark Zammit, Malta
14:15-14:30 Games for dissemination of poison prevention education to the public
Yu-Hao Cheng, Taiwan National Poison Control Center, Taipei, Taiwan
14:30-14:45 Artificial intelligence in medicine and toxicology: current trends and outlook
Matjaž Kukar, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
14:45-14:55 Using Artificial Intelligence to understand recreational drug usage and toxicity from
internet forums
Michael Chary (2020- Abstract 098)
14:55-15:10 The role of data from drug user forums in determining recreational drug and NPS
toxicity
Sage Wiener, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, New York, USA
15:10-15:25 Google metrics and twitter to monitor recreational drugs and NPS trends
Jean Marie Perrone, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, USA
15:25-15:35 The geospatial and linguistic dynamics of conversations on Twitter about vaping
Michael Chary (2020 -Abstract 099)
15:35-15:50 Robotic wastewater analysis to understand community consumption of opioids,
cocaine, NPS and methamphetamines
Claire Duvallet, Biobot Analytics, Boston, USA
15:50-16:05 Web monitoring tools to monitor trends in prescription medicine misuse
Rick Dart, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, USA
16:05-16:20 Ingestible Electronics and Robotic Systems to measure medication adherence and
drug use events
Peter Chai, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, USA
16:20-16:35 Telemedicine as an assessment tool in chemical weapon attacks, experience in Syria
with global implications
Tim Erickson, Brigham Health / Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
16:35-16:45 Questions & Answers to the Toxicology 2.0 speakers
At the end of this session the audience should be able to:
Identify important poisoning trends.
State the features of poisoning events in different age groups.
Describe the importance and challenges of poison prevention education.
List two effective strategies for delivering poison prevention knowledge to children.
Describe various modern artificial intelligence techniques, applicable in different scenarios and types of data (tabular data, images, text), as well as determine and decide which particular problems are suitable for application of AI techniques.
Explain the role of online drug information forums in both reflecting and driving patterns of drug use, and their utility and limitations in studying these patterns.
Describe tools in Google and Twitter that can help characterize novel psychoactive substance trends.
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Explain the basic concepts behind using wastewater epidemiology to measure population-level exposure and consumption of opioids, cocaine, NPS and methamphetamines and describe results from a pilot study applying wastewater epidemiology to map opioid consumption in a US municipality.
Understand the appropriate use of data derived from various types of social media.
Understand the current state of art in ingestible electronics and the principles of biosensing in drug testing.
Describe current use of telemedicine and other emerging technologies in the setting of chemical weapon attacks.
16:45-17:15 Rest break and AUTHORS WITH POSTERS (Afternoon grouping)
ORAL PLATFORM AND SHORT ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Hosts: Horst Thiermann, Munich, Germany and Lotte Hoegberg, Copenhagen, Denmark
17:15-17:25 Foodborne botulism: a large outbreak in Sicily
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia, Italy (2021 Abstract 307)
17:25-17:45 Shiitake Dermatitis: a French nationwide study 2014-2019
David Boels, Nantes, France (2021- Abstract 308)
17:45-17:50 Questions & Answers to the Oral platform and Short Oral Presentation speakers
17:50 END OF DAY 3, END OF EAPCCT 2021 VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
Hosts: Horst Thiermann, Munich, Germany and Lotte Hoegberg, Copenhagen, Denmark
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E-POSTERS
(sorted by topic) Adverse reactions from medications 219 Clozapine-induced anemia: a case report
Andrea Giampreti, Emergency care, Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
220 Lacosamide-induced recurrent ventricular fibrillation
Andrea Giampreti, Emergency care, Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
222 Bleeding events due to warfarin therapy: how much does it cost?
Gabija Laubner, Toxicology centre, Vilnius University Faculty of Medicine, Clinic of Anaesthesiology
and Intensive Care, Toxicology centre, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
223 Phenytoin intoxication associated with omeprazole administration in a child with CYP2C9
polymorphism
Marco Marano, Emergency Department PICU. Regional Pediatric Poison Control Center., Bambino
Gesù Children Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
226 Olanzapine overdose-induced agranulocytosis
Gordana Vukovic Ercegovic, Department of Clinical Toxicology, National Poison Control Center,
Military Medical Academy, Belgrade, Serbia.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
227 From kitchen to clinical use, to emergency department admission: an Italian story about
curcumin
Francesco Gambassi, Toxicology Unit, Poison Control Center of Careggi University Hospital, Florence,
Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
229 Bowel perforation due to methotrexate therapeutic error: a case report.
Marco Cirronis, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
390 Pharmacovigilance for identification and prevention of therapeutic errors
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
391 Lamotrigine-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome: a case report
Andrea Giampreti, Emergency Department, Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
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392 Dimethyl fumarate-induced hepatotoxicity confirmed by biopsy
Ophir Lavon, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Unit, Carmel Medical Center, Haifa, Israel.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 07
224 Two case of opioid withdrawal syndrome precipitated by alcohol dependence treatment
with nalmefene successfully treated with morphine
Jonas Moens, Belgian Poison Centre, Brussels, Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
228 Accidental injection of pseudorabies pigs vaccine in humans
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
393 Iodoform medications may cause iodine toxicosis: two case reports
Marco Cirronis, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
394 Fooled by adrenaline: a pyrogenic-like reaction during treatment of a common European
viper bite
Anton Gustafsson, Swedish Poisons Information Center, Swedish Poisons Information Center,
Stockholm, Sweden.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
395 Symptomatic therapeutic errors in the elderly: a case study
Carlo A Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
396 Severe adverse effects after a second dose of paliperidone palmitate long-acting injectable
administration: a case report
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
397 Soft capsules formulated with ethanol: unexpected disulfiram-ethanol reaction after one
dosage of ciclosporin
Jonas Moens, Belgian Poison Control Centre, NEDER-OVER-HEEMBEEK, Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
398 Effect of a 12-hour intravenous acetylcysteine (SNAP) regimen on the International
Normalized Ratio (INR)
Ruben Thanacoody, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 09
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Alcohol as a co-ingestant 001 Effect of ethanol coingestion in patients with central nervous system (CNS)-depressant
intoxication
Eva-Carina Heier, Division of Clinical Toxicology and Poison Control Centre Munich, Department of
Internal Medicine II, TUM School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
031 Adults admitted to the emergency department of a university hospital in Belgium for acute
poisoning with ethanol as a co-ingestant: characteristics and direct medical costs
Anne-Marie K Descamps, Belgian Poison Centre, Brussels, Belgium.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
Analytical and Forensic Toxicology - including bedside testing 204 Bedside formate analysis in methanol poisoned patients: a pilot study
Knut Erik Hovda, The National CBRNE Centre of Medicine, Department of Acute Medicine, Oslo
University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 09
210 False positive result on colorimetric methanol screening test: report of two cases with
hyperglycaemia
Jones CM Chan, Medicine and Therapeutics, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong.
Morning Posters - Room 09
203 Emergent toxicological molecular screening test on ICU admission: can it be trusted?
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
211 The value of post-mortem toxicology in deciding whether a death is drug-induced
James M Coulson, Clinical Pharmacology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
216 Laboratory practice variations complicate poison centre recommendations for massive
paracetamol overdose
Timothy C Backus, NYU School of Medicine, New York, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
218 Poison center recommendations for methylxanthine toxicity may be complicated by limited
access to theophylline measurements
Timothy C Backus, NYU School of Medicine, New York, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
361 Biological sample collection in the emergency department and laboratory substance abuse
investigation and confirmation: a methamphetamine case report
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
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362 Post-mortem ethanol concentrations
James M Coulson, All Wales Therapeutics & Toxicology Centre, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
Caustic ingestion 207 A one-year retrospective study of caustic injury in adults admitted to a toxicology
department
Julia V Radenkova-Saeva, Clinic of Toxicology, UMHATEM "N.I.Pirogov", Sofia, Bulgaria.
Morning Posters - Room 09
Covid-19 and toxicology 402 Acute poisoning in Moscow during COVID-19 restrictive measures
Anastasia Yu Simonova, Toxicological department, N.V. Sklifosovsky’ Research Institute of
Emergency Medicine, Moscow, Russian Federation.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
403 Unintended consequences of public health measures: exposures to alcohol-based hand
sanitisers during the COVID-19 pandemic 2020
Patricia Casey, National Poisons Information Centre of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
404 Increased exposures to alcohol-based hand sanitizers reported by an Italian Poison Center
during the COVID-19 pandemic
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
405 Pediatric eye injuries related to public location of alcohol-based hand sanitizers during the
first pandemic COVID-19 context: French Poison Control Centers data
Alexis Descatha, PCC, Ester Unit (IRSET U1085), UNIV Angers, CHU Angers, Univ Rennes, Inserm,
EHESP, Irset,, Angers, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
406 Has the COVID-19 pandemic changed the pattern of poisoning cases attending Emergency
Departments?
Ana Ferrer-Dufol, Unit of Clinical Toxicology, Clinical University Hospital, Zaragoza, Spain.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
407 The only thing we have to fear is fear itself: inadvertent disopyramide toxicity during the
COVID-19 pandemic
Emma R Furlano, Division of Medical Toxicology, Ronald O. Perelman Department of Emergency
Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
22
408 Nicotine does not affect SARS-CoV-2 in-host viral kinetics in a modeling and simulation study
Charlotte Kern, Department of General Internal Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology,
Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of General Internal Medicine, Inselspital, Bern
University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern; Graduate School for Health Sciences, University of
Bern, Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
409 A human exposure to chlorine dioxide solution...not the solution
Valle Molina, Emergencie, Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra, pamplona, Spain.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
410 Changes in the epidemiological profile of poisonings during COVID-19: differences between
the first half of 2019 and 2020
Zanina Pereska, University Clinic of Toxicology, Skopje, Macedonia.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
411 Multiple factors in a COVID-19 patient leading to an elevated 5-oxoproline as cause of high-
anion gap metabolic acidosis: a case report
Marian Piqueur, Departement of Laboratory Medicine, Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen, Antwerp,
Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 02
Drugs of abuse and NPS poisoning 116 Massive gamma-hydroxybutyric acid overdose resulting in severe metabolic acidosis
requiring continuous venovenous haemofiltration
Anselm Wong, Victorian Poisons Information Centre, Austin Toxicology and Emergency Department,
Austin Health, Victoria, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 01
138 Just “nanging” around: case series of neurological sequelae from chronic nitrous oxide abuse
Angela L Chiew, Clinical Toxicology Unit, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 01
197 Analytically-confirmed exposure to new psychoactive substances in patients with severe
clinical toxicity in the UK, 2015-2018: a report from the IONA study
Simon H Thomas, Narional Poisons Information Service, Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,
Newcastle, United Kingdom.
Morning Posters - Room 01
198 Increasing abuse and addiction to nitrous oxide (N2O): still a legal high in Denmark
Lotte CG Hoegberg, Department of Anaesthesiology, The Danish Poisons Information Centre,
Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Morning Posters - Room 01
309 Severe cardiac and neurological toxic effects due to synthetic cannabinoid cumyl-pegaclone
(SGT-151) alone: a case report
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 01
23
310 Beta-hydroxybutyrate closed the gap in a sober patient with high anion gap metabolic
acidosis: a case report
Marian Piqueur, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen, Antwerp,
Belgium.
Morning Posters - Room 01
117 Hyperemesis and acute kidney injury following a “rebirth” ceremony with kambô and iboga
in the Netherlands
Marian Piqueur, Laboratory Medicine, Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen, Antwerp, Belgium.
Morning Posters - Room 02
126 Clinical effects following the use of freely available herbal drugs: the toxicity of “Happy
Caps”
Antoinette JHP Riel, Dutch Poisons Information Center(DPIC), Univesity Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Morning Posters - Room 02
131 Recreational nitrous oxide use rises dramatically after change in EU legislation
Antoinette JHP Van Riel, Dutch Poisons Information Center, University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht Univeristy, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Morning Posters - Room 02
136 Treating patients with opioid overdose at a primary care emergency outpatient clinic: a cost-
minimization analysis
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
137 Self-discharge during treatment for acute recreational drug toxicity: an analysis of four-years
of Euro-DEN Plus presentations
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
150 Treatment with naloxone and follow up after opioid overdose outside of hospital:
observational data 2014-2018 in Oslo, Norway
Arne K Skulberg, Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Norwegian University of Science
and Technology, Trondheim, Norway; Pre-hospital Division, Air Ambulance Department, Oslo
University Hospital, Oslo, Norway ; The Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation, Oslo, Norwa,
Trondheim, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
158 Change of quality of life in prescription opioid patients after rapid opioid detoxification
Gabija Laubner, Republican Vilnius University Hospital, Centre of Toxicology; Vilnius University
Faculty of Medicine, Vilnius University, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Morning Posters - Room 02
160 First identification of synthetic cannabinoid 5F-MDMB-PICA in Italy
Carlo Alessandro Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre -
Clinical and Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and
University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 02
24
313 Poisoning by central stimulant drugs in Oslo, Norway
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
314 Acute poisoning from concurrent use of opioids and amphetamine
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
315 Acute recreational drug toxicity among young patients
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
316 Acute poisonings involving cannabis in Oslo, Norway
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
317 Psychosis associated with acute recreational drug toxicity
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 02
119 3,4-Methylenedioxy-α-pyrrolidinohexiophenone (MDPHP): four severe confirmed
intoxications
Dieter Müller, Clinical Toxicology Laboratory, GIZ-Nord Poisons Centre, University Medical Center
Göttingen, Georg-August-University, Göttingen, Germany.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
143 Methadone poisonings admitted to the ICU: investigation of the predictive value of plasma
methadone concentration and the required naloxone dose regimen
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
147 Severe acidosis and prolonged coma after a massive overdose of gamma-hydroxybutyrate
(GHB)
Johanna Nordmark Grass, Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Stockholm, Sweden.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
155 The development of poisonings with illegal substances: data from the Danish Poisons
Information Centre (DPIC)
Dorte F Palmqvist, Department of Anaesthesiology, The Danish Poisons Information Centre,
Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
318 E-liquid sold as CBD e-liquid containing XRL-11: 4 cases reported. A warning signal to health
authorities and e-cigarettes users
Francis Grossenbacher, University Hospital Reims, Clinical Toxicologist Emergency Department,
Reims, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
319 Significant cannabidiol (CBD) urine concentration in a young male admitted after using an e-
cigarette obtained from a street market
Francis Grossenbacher, University Hospital Reims, Clinical Toxicologist Emergency Department,
Reims, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
25
320 Swedes like their O-juice from Florida and their E-juice from California
Sonny Larsson, Swedish Poisons Information Center, Swedish Poisons Information Center,
Stockholm, Sweden.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
321 Hydroxyphencyclidines (OH-PCPs), fluoroamphetamine (FA) and fluoromethamphetamine
(FMA): an explosive NPS mixture and a challenge for appropriate sedation in a severely
intoxicated patient patient.
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
322 Recreational, inhalational misuse of hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan®) tablets as reported
to the UK National Poisons Information Service
Emma J Moyns, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
323 A case of crack-lung-like syndrome due to new synthetic opioid consumption with analytical
confirmation
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre – Istituti
Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 01
124 In-patient prescription opioid detoxification: peculiarities of consumption and treatment
outcomes
Gabija Laubner, Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Vilnius, Lithuania, Vilnius University
Emergency hospital, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
125 In-patient prescription opioid detoxification: gender differences and harmful habits
Gabija Laubner, Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Vilnius, Lithuania, Vilnius University
Emergency hospital, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
132 Analysis of drugs in blood and urine samples from suspected spiked drink victims
Odd Martin Vallersnes, Department of General Practice, Institute of Health and Society,, University
of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
142 Transient delayed brain edema after consumption of synthetic cathinones
Sabrina Schmoll, Department for clinical toxicology and poision control centre munich, Klinikum
rechts der Isar München, München, Germany.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
149 GHB overdose in nightlife settings and effectiveness of on-site harm-reduction organization
Miran Brvar, Centre for Clinical Toxicology and Pharmacology, University Medical Centre Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
26
152 Acute intoxication with α-pyrrolidinohexanophenone, 4-fluoromethylphenidate and
aminopropylbenzofuran complicated with rhabdomyolysis: a case report
Gambassi Francesco, Toxicology Unit and Poison Control Center, Careggi University Hospital,
Florence, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
157 Characteristics of ecstasy toxicity in a Norwegian cohort of hospitalized poisoned patients
Per Sverre Persett, Department of Acute Medicine, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
324 A comparative analysis between acute ethanol poisoning and acute ethanol combined with
drugs of abuse poisoning in adolescents
Viorela Nitescu, Pediatric Poisoning Centre Emergency Clinical Hospital for Children "Grigore
Alexandrescu", Bucharest, Romania.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
325 Predicting hypertension using subjective symptoms in recreational drug users at first-aid
stations at dance events
Yoram P Prins, Dutch Poisons Information Center, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 02
109 Non-medical use and injection use of prescription opioids in Europe in the Non-Medical Use
of Prescription Drug (NMURx) National Surveys
Janetta L Iwanicki, Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Safety, Denver, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
118 Drug abuse trends, focussing on novel psychoactive substances (NPS) over the last three
years (2016-2018) from the perspective of the Austrian Poisons Information Centre
Kinga Bartecka-Mino, Poisons Information Centre Austria, Vienna, Austria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
122 A retrospective study of observation times in a healthcare facility and 48-hour mortality
after heroin overdose with naloxone rescue
William Rushton, Office of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of
Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
127 Analysis of Twitter content to explore use of modafinil and methylphenidate as drugs to
facilitate studying in the UK
David Wood, Clinical Toxicology, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
128 Non-medical use of prescription and over the counter opioids in the UK
David Wood, Clinical Toxicology, Guy's and St Thomas's NHS Foundation Trust, London, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
27
140 Comparison of drugs involved in acute recreational drug toxicity presentations to the
Emergency Department in young people versus adults reported to the Euro-DEN Plus project
Alison M Dines, Clinical Toxicology, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's Health
Partners, London, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
145 Mining and analysis of opioid content in longitudinal data posted in a social media forum
Jeanmarie Perrone, Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
156 Global interest in tramadol and polysubstance use
Janetta Iwanicki, Rocky Mountain Poison & Drug Safety, Denver Health, Denver, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
326 Acute recreational drug toxicity in Ghent, Belgium. Comparison of self-reports and analytical
detection by immunoassay (IA) and mass spectrometry (MS) testing
Laurence Daveloose, Emergency medicine, UZ Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
327 In vino veritas: accidental MDMA poisoning by illicit drug trafficking
Katrin Faber, National Poisons Information Centre, Associated Institute of the University of Zurich,
Zurich, Switzerland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
328 Frequent hospitalization for synthetic cathinone poisonings: a case series reported to the
Dutch Poisons Information Center
Johanna J Nugteren-Van Lonkhuyzen, Dutch Poisons Information Center, University Medical Center
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
329 Exposures involving opioids and alcohol reported to the US Poison Centers
Saumitra Rege, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, United
States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
330 The Color Purple: death associated with brorphine, an emerging novel synthetic opioid
Varun Vohra, Emergency Medicine, Michigan Poison Center, Wayne State University School of
Medicine, Detroit, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 01
Epidemiology of poisoning 011 Hydrofluoric acid exposure: a five-year review of enquiries made to the UK National Poisons
Information Service (NPIS)
Michael J Beech, NPIS (Birmingham Unit), City Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Morning Posters - Room 05
28
012 Enquiries to the National Poisons Information Centre in Ireland from ambulance control,
emergency medical dispatchers and paramedics attending poisoning incidents from 2010-2018
Edel Duggan, National Poisons Information Centre, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Morning Posters - Room 05
014 109 toxicological inquiries for one patient
Daniela Pelclova, Toxicological Information Centre, First Medical Faculty and General University
Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic.
Morning Posters - Room 05
019 Eye injuries: case reports to the BfR from 2004 to 2018
Kathrin Begemann, Department Exposure, Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), Berlin,
Germany.
Morning Posters - Room 05
020 A worrying trend: Poisonings with pharmaceuticals in young girls in Norway
Merethe Midtervoll, Norwegian Poison Information Centre, National Institute of Public Health, Oslo,
Norway.
Morning Posters - Room 05
021 Study on e-liquids: risk of exposure and effectiveness of regulation by Tobacco Products
Directive 2
Nina Glaser, German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), Berlin, Germany.
Morning Posters - Room 05
025 Mortality and patient characteristics in paracetamol overdosing: a retrospective study
Soeren Boegevig, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital,
Copenhagen, Denmark.
Morning Posters - Room 05
106 Assessment of advice given by the Danish Poisons Information Centre concerning medication
errors in nursing homes and institutions
Soeren Boegevig, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, The Danish Poisons Information Centre,
Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Morning Posters - Room 05
009 Colchicine: telephone enquiries to the UK’s National Poisons Information Service (NPIS) and
UK trends in TOXBASE® accesses and prescribing data
Victoria A Eagling, NPIS Edinburgh, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
010 An analysis of cases of methaemoglobinaemia reported in telephone enquiries to the UK’s
National Poisons Information Service (NPIS)
Victoria A Eagling, NPIS Edinburgh, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
017 Drug-induced death in the intensive care unit in France: what are the characteristics?
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
023 Review of drug poisoning assessment at Emergency Department
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
29
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
100 Poisoning in adolescents
Patricia Casey, National Poisons Information Centre of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
115 The ICU Requirement Score (IRS) - does it identify poisoned patients who do not need
intensive care unit referral? A validation cohort study
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
344 Comparison of acute kidney injury and renal replacement therapy in patients with
rhabdomyolysis acutely intoxicated with psychotropic or chemical substances
Aleksandra Babulovska, Toxicology, University Clinic of Toxicology, Skopje, Macedonia.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
345 Increasing enquiries to the Norwegian Poison Information Center (NPIC) concerning ozone
Marte S Evje, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norwegian Poison Information Centre, Oslo,
Norway.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
346 A 10-year review of ocular exposures reported to the Irish National Poisons Information
Centre
Conor P Malone, National Health Library and Knowledge Service, HSE, Dublin, Ireland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
347 Fatalities due to acute poisoning: a one year retrospective study
Julia V Radenkova - Saeva, Clinic of Toxicology, University Hospital for Emergency Medicine „
N.I.Pirogov”, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
112 Mushroom poisonings in Finland: a 15-year retrospective study
Anne Tähkäpää, Poison Information Center, University of Helsinki and Department of Emergency
Medicine and Services, Helsinki, Finland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
104 Long-term exposure to Sargassum-seaweed pollution in the French Caribbean Islands:
clinical consequences and outcome
Dabor Resiere, Critical Care Medicine, University Hospital of Martinique, Fort de France, Martinique.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
Heavy Metal Poisoning 103 Mass acute thallium poisoning treated with enteral detoxification using Prussian blue and
gut lavage
Anastasyja Yu Simonova, N.V.Sklifosovsky Rtesearch Institute of Emergency Medicine, Poisonings
Treatment Department, Moscow, Russian Federation.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
162 Arsenic exposure and peripheral neuropathy
Chay J Markham, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
30
163 Gadolinum contrast media: old substance, new challenges
Gabija Laubner, Toxicology Centre, Vilnius University Faculty of Medicine, Clinic of Anaesthesiology
and Intensive Care, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
165 Comparison of unithiol (DMPS) treatment effect in two patients with severe cobalt
intoxication
Daniela Pelclova, Toxicological Information Centre, First Medical Faculty and General University
Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
168 Toxicokinetics of silver and chelation unithiol (DMPS) challenge tests in argyria due to
colloidal silver
Gasper Razinger, Centre for Clinical Toxicology and Pharmacology, University Medical Centre
Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
412 An unsolved mystery: idiopathic thallium exposure resulting in clinically significant toxic
effects
Varun Vohra, Emergency Medicine, Michigan Poison Center at Wayne State University School of
Medicine, Detroit, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 05
Household Products Poisoning 046 Unanticipated sources of methanol poisoning: report of two cases
Jones CM Chan, Medicine & Therapeutics, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong.
Morning Posters - Room 07
049 Laundry pod exposure in children: evaluation of 17 years’ of cases in a tertiary care hospital
in Italy
Marcello Montibeller, Department of Emergency. Regional Paediatric Control Center., Bambino
Gesù Children's Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 07
351 Protective effects of hypercalcaemia in the setting of severe hypermagnesaemia
David Emmerig, Western Sydney Local Health District Toxicology Service, Western Sydney Local
Health District Toxicology Service, Westmead, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 07
352 Caustic exposures attending the Emergency Department: results of the Spanish Toxic
Surveillance System (STSS) 2010-2019
Ana Ferrer-Dufol, Unit of Clinical Toxicology, Clinical University Hospital, Zaragoza, Spain.
Morning Posters - Room 07
31
008 Portal embolism in hydrogen peroxide ingestion: a case series
Marco Cirronis, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
051 Artificial nail primer: a case series from Pavia Poison Control Centre
Carlo A Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
052 Nail glue: a beauty hazard
Carlo A Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
353 Accidental exposures to caustic drain cleaners
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
354 The “lactate gap” as a useful tool to detect ethylene glycol intoxications
Dieter Geysels, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen, Antwerp,
Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
355 A one-year review of enquiries to the UK National Poisons Information Service involving
cosmetic products
Emma J Moyns, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
356 Acute ethylene glycol poisoning: a one year epidemiological study
Julia V Radenkova - Saeva, Clinic of Toxicology, University Hospital for Emergency Medicine „
N.I.Pirogov”,, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
357 Button battery ingestion: experience of the UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS)
Simon H L Thomas, National Poisons Information Service (Newcastle Unit), Regional Drugs and
Therapeutics Centre, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 07
Mechanisms of Toxicity and Basic Research 196 Is fentanyl responsible for more severe neuro-respiratory depression than morphine? A rat
in vivo investigation
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
32
005 Is lithium exposure responsible for brain injuries with prolonged treatment or overdose? A
rat investigation
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 05
Occupational poisoning 175 EXP3OP study: occupational eye exposures reported to a western France poison center
Gaël Le Roux, Centre antipoison et Toxicovigilance Grand Ouest, CHU d'Angers, Angers, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
399 Severe gasoline poisoning and its treatment. The autonomy of the lung response facing
different pathogenic agents
Ana Ferrer-Dufol, Unit of Clinical Toxicology, Clinical University Hospital, Zaragoza, Spain.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
400 The health and blood aluminium concentration in firefighters following the Alytus tyre
recycling factory fire
Gabija Laubner, Toxicology center, Republic Vilnius university hospital, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
401 A case of acute occupational exposure to sodium molybdate with determination of
molybdenum concentration
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 08
Paediatric Poisoning 057 Alcohol "abuse" among children younger 5 years
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Morning Posters - Room 10
060 Overrepresentation of flavoured, orodispersible tablets in paediatric paracetamol overdoses
Johanna Nordmark Grass, Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Stockholm, Sweden.
Morning Posters - Room 10
061 Drug-induced liver injury induced by nicotinamide
Maren Hermanns-Clausen, Poisons Information Centre, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Center – University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Morning Posters - Room 10
064 Pediatric and adolescent self-poisoning: a 3-year case series
Carlo Alessandro Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre -
Clinical and Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and
University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 10
33
367 The importance of free digoxin serum concentrations: case report of an infant treated for
digoxin poisoning
Marco Marano, Pediatric Intensive Care Unit; Pediatric Poison Control Center, Children's Hospital
Bambino Gesù, Rome, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 10
368 Fentanyl transdermal patch mistaken for wound patch: two pediatric case reports
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 10
369 Bottles and messages revisited: circumstances of poisonings among infants under 1 year old
in Estonia
Ruth Kastanje, Poisonings Information Centre, Estonian Health Board, Tallinn, Estonia.
Morning Posters - Room 10
370 Alcohol abuse among teenagers during the vacation period: description and pattern
differences by gender
Juan Ortega Pérez, Adult emergency department. Toxicology Unit, Attending physician, Palma de
Mallorca, Spain.
Morning Posters - Room 10
372 Paediatric paracetamol overdose: reducing side-effects with the SNAP 12 hour N-
acetylcysteine regime
David G Cairney, Acute Receiving Unit, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Morning Posters - Room 10
058 Sticky eye: a pediatric case of cyanoacrylate ocular exposure
Presented By Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre -
Clinical and Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and
University of Pavia, Pavia, Spain.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
063 Pediatric cannabis poisonings in France: more and more frequent and severe.
Gaël Le Roux, Centre antipoison et Toxicovigilance Grand Ouest, CHU d'Angers, Angers, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
371 Childhood poisonings: five-years’ experience from an Italian pediatric emergency
department
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, ASST Papa Giovanni XXIII, Bergamo, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
373 Altered mental status following a large ondansetron ingestion in a toddler
Vincent Calleo, Emergency Medicine, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
374 Severe salicylic acid intoxication with a topical skin preparation in a newborn
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
375 38 Weeks pregnant: managing a mother and neonate after a third-trimester acetaminophen
ingestion
Charlotte Goldfine, Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
34
376 Epidemiology of pediatric benzodiazepines exposures using the National Poison Data System
Saumitra Rege, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, United
States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 10
Pesticide Poisoning 036 Assessment of the effectiveness of gastric lavage in organophosphorus poisoning by
quantifying pesticide in lavage fluid
Indira Madhavan, General Medicine, Associate Proferssor, Thrissur, India.
Morning Posters - Room 08
042 Human exposures to pesticides: results of a subproject of the German pilot study PiMont
Esther Feistkorn, German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Department Exposure, Unit
Exposure Assessment of Hazardous Products, Berlin, Germany.
Morning Posters - Room 08
358 Hepatorenal dysfunction following fipronil ingestion
Indira Madhavan, Government Medical College, Thrissur, India.
Morning Posters - Room 08
359 Malathion poisoning causing prolonged cholinergic crisis and refractory hypotension
requiring high-dose atropine treatment
Kit Rowe, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 08
035 Amitraz: an unfamiliar insecticide with familiar toxicity
William Rushton, Office of Medical Toxicology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,
United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
040 The impact of obidoxime on duration of hospitalization in acute organophosphate poisoning
in Muratsan University Hospital, Yerevan, Armenia, 2012-2019
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
041 Poisoning risk of acute exposures to repellents: results from a prospective observational
study
Maren Hermanns-Clausen, Poisons Information Centre, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Center – University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
043 Organophosphate poisoning among children and adolescents in Armenia: a retrospective
case study
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
35
044 Lethal intoxication by pentachlorophenol
Francesca Maida, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical
and Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and
University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
360 Evaluation of biocidal product enquiries to the Austrian Poisons Information Centre, 2017
Tara Arif, Poisons Information Centre, Vienna, Austria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 08
Pharmaceutical Poisoning 007 The severity and mortality prediction of calcium-channel blocker poisoning in the intensive
care unit
Chun Kuei Chen, Emergency department, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Linkou, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
Morning Posters - Room 03
201 Comparison of the Australian and New Zealand Referral Criteria versus the King’s College
Criteria to predict mortality or liver transplant in paracetamol overdose
Anselm Wong, Victorian Poisons Information Centre, Austin Toxicology Unit and Emergency
Department, Austin Health, Victoria, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
241 Angiotensin axis antagonists increase the severity of dihydropyridine poisoning
Betty S Chan, Clinical Toxicology & Emergency Medicine, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
242 A case series of flecainide poisoning
Betty S Chan, Clinical Toxicology & Emergency Medicine, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
243 Effect of serum alkalinisation on QRS narrowing in tricyclic antidepressant poisoning
Betty S Chan, Clinical Toxicology & Emergency Medicine, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
244 Optimal way to achieve serum alkalinisation in tricyclic antidepressant overdose
Betty S Chan, Clinical Toxicology & Emergency Medicine, Prince of Wales Hosptial, Sydney, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
246 An uncommon cause of high-anion gap metabolic acidosis after repeated supratherapeutic
paracetamol ingestion
Hwee Min D Lee, Emergency, Monash Health, Melbourne, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
262 Lurasidone mono-ingestion overdoses: a case series with minimal toxicity
Andis Graudins, Clinical Toxicology Unit, Emergency Medicine Service, Monash Health and Monash
University, Dandenong, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
36
331 A 1-year prospective analysis of propranolol exposures reported to the UK National Poisons
Information Service (NPIS)
Pardeep S Jagpal, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Morning Posters - Room 03
332 Intravenous pentobarbital overdose treated with supportive care and multidose activated
charcoal
Rachel Wc Ng, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Western Sydney Local Health District
Toxicology Service, Westmead, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
333 The impact of codeine upscheduling on prescriptions, overdoses, Emergency Department
presentations and mortality in Victoria, Australia
Anselm Wong, Victorian Poisons Information Centre and Austin Toxicology Unit, Austin Health,
Victoria, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 03
231 Sarolaner-poisoning in an infant: a case report
Angelika Holzer, Poisons Information Centre Austria, Vienna, Austria.
Morning Posters - Room 04
252 Acute kidney failure due to acetaminophen overdose: a case report
Marian Piqueur, Departement of Laboratory Medicine, Ziekenhuis Netwerk Antwerpen, Antwerp,
Belgium.
Morning Posters - Room 04
253 Venlafaxine-associated hypoglycemia: frequency and correlation with symptom severity
Elias Bekka, Department of Clinical Toxicology, Klinikum Rechts der Isar, Technical University of
Munich, Munich, Germany.
Morning Posters - Room 04
254 Hydroxyzine poisoning in the intensive care unit: predictive factors of cardiovascular
complications and toxicokinetics
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
255 Lamotrigine poisoning in the ICU: a case series with evaluation of the toxicocokinetics and
the predictive value of the plasma concentration on admission
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
256 Rispiridone poisoning in the intensive care unit: evaluation of the poisoning severity on
admission
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
37
257 Nicardipine poisoning in the intensive care unit: management, outcome and toxicokinetics
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
258 Poisonings involving angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in the intensive care unit: a
case series
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
259 Salicylate poisoning admitted to the intensive care unit: features and toxicokinetics
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
260 Antidepressant drug poisonings and the risk of thromboembolic complications: a case series
from an intensive care unit
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Department of Medical
and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital, Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144,
Paris, France.
Morning Posters - Room 04
263 Combined beta-blocker and beta-agonist drugs overdose: an unusual balance
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital, BERGAMO, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 04
264 Characteristics of use and outcome of naloxone administration to non-intensive care and
non-surgical hospitalized adult patients: a pilot study
Ophir Lavon, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Unit, Carmel Medical Center, Haifa, Israel.
Morning Posters - Room 04
266 Medication errors in nursing homes and other residential institutions with full-time staff
attendance: a Danish Poisons Information Centre quality project
Karen R Eriksen, Bispebjerg Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Morning Posters - Room 04
268 Crisis averted? Olanzapine as an antidote for serotonin toxicity: a case report
Erik Lindeman, Swedish Poisons Informatiom Center, Stockholm, Sweden.
Morning Posters - Room 04
269 Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema in amlodipine poisoning: the lesser evil?
Erik Lindeman, Swedish Poisons Information Center, Stockholm, Sweden.
Morning Posters - Room 04
271 Pharmacobezoar and gastric perforation in severe quetiapine intoxication: a case report
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 04
38
273 Intoxication with colchicine: a retrospective study
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Morning Posters - Room 04
334 Intravenous iron overdose: don’t trust the blood levels
Ann-Charlott Svanhagen, Swedish Poisons Information Center, Swedish Poisons Information Center,
Stockholm, Sweden.
Morning Posters - Room 04
205 Bedside quantitative electroencephalographic monitoring using the Patient State Index
correlates poorly with Glasgow Coma Score in acutely poisoned patients
Shaun L Greene, Victoria Poisons Information Centre, Austin health, Melbourne, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 09
335 Favorable acute toxicity profile of the “hiking” stimulant nikethamide
Colette Degrandi, National Poisons Information Centre, Tox Info Suisse, Associated Institute of the
University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
336 Successful 40-hour delayed acetylcysteine treatment in a severe acetaminophen acute
hepatitis
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
337 “Reversal” of dabigatran-induced anticoagulation with idarucizumab: experience of an
Italian hospital
Andrea Giampreti, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo Poison Control Center, Bergamo, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
338 Metformin-related enquiries from hospitals to the National Poisons Information Service
(NPIS) between 2010-2019: a comparison of metformin only and polypharmacy exposures
Bethan W Hughes, National Poisons Information Service, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
339 Characteristics of emergency department presentations following a drug suicide attempt
Mirjam Kummer, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of General Internal Medicine,
Inselspital, Bern University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
340 Propylthiouracil administration in 5 cases of thyroid hormone intoxication
Francesca Maida, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Toxicology
Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
341 Evaluation of the overdosage section in Summaries of the Product Characteristics for
medicines responsible for exposure calls to the Belgian Poison Centre
Jonas Moens, Belgian Poison Control Centre, Neder-Over-Heembeek, Belgium.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
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342 Is haem arginate safer in overdose than previously thought? An uneventful four-fold
accidental overdose
Nandesh C Patel, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), City Hospital,
Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 03
200 Efficacy of a 12h intravenous acetylcysteine (SNAP) regimen following single acute
paracetamol overdose
Ruben HK Thanacoody, National Poisons Information Service (Newcastle), Newcastle Hospitals NHS
Foundation Trust, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 03
239 Torsade de pointes following repeated massive loperamide ingestion
Aza Kader, Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Stockholm, Sweden.
Afternoon Posters - Room 03
247 Using “symptom search” to resolve an unusual case of poisoning reported to the UK National
Poisons Information Service (NPIS)
Ho MR Lee, NPIS (Birmingham Unit), City Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 03
249 Different courses of quetiapine poisoning in two patients with gastric decontamination
Anne Stuerzebecher, Poisons Information Centre Erfurt, Erfurt, Germany.
Afternoon Posters - Room 03
261 Massive polypharmacy overdose resulting in diltiazem pharmacobezoar formation
David Goldberger, Emergency Medicine, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 03
232 General characteristics of acute poisonings by hypotensive and antiarrhythmic drugs in
Moscow, 2010-2017
Presented By Anastasia Yu Simonova, Moscow N.V.SklifosovskyResearch Institute of emergency
medical Help, Poisonng teatment Center, Moscow, Russian Federation.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
233 Acute toxicity profile of levomepromazine in overdose: a consecutive case series
Stefan Weiler, National Poisons Centre, Tox Info Suisse, Associated Institute of the University of
Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
234 Be(a)ware of the fentanyl patch: unusual accidental cases of fentanyl intoxication
Marianne EC Leenders, National Poisons Information Center/Department of Anesthesiology,
University Medical Center, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
235 Calls to the Finnish Poison Information Centre related to drug poisoning in older people
Mervi Saukkonen, Poison Information Center, University of Helsinki and Department of Emergency
Medicine and Services, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
236 Preliminary experience with plasmapheresis instead of molecular adsorbent recirculating
system as liver support for paracetamol-induced hepatic failure
Philippe Hantson, Intensive Care, Cliniques St-Luc, Université catholique de Louvain, Brussels,
40
Belgium.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
237 Acute poisoning with antihypertensive drugs: a retrospective study
Julia V Radenkova-Saeva, Clinic of Toxicology, UMHATEM “N.I.Pirogov”, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
238 Rectal overdose of paracetamol
Johanna Nordmark Grass, Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Stockholm, Sweden.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
248 Favorable toxicity profile of escitalopram in acute overdose in adults
Katharina M Schenk-Jaeger, National Poisons Information Centre, Tox Info Suisse, Associated
Institute of the University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
250 The association between phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin) and permanent cerebellar damage
Rachel Day, National Poisons Information Service, Birmingham Centre, Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
343 Literature review of antidotal carbapenem use in valproic acid toxicity
William Rushton, Alabama Poison Information Center, Children's of Alabama, Birmingham, United
States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 04
Plant and Mushroom Poisoning 077 Beauty can occasionally be toxic: local irritation from a houseplant
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Morning Posters - Room 06
087 Kombucha tea: a potential hepatotoxic agent
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 06
348 Veratrum Aqua poisonings resulting from its misuse: a case series from Moscow, Russia
Elizaveta V Melnik, Institute of Pharmacy, I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University
(Sechenov University), Moscow, Russian Federation.
Morning Posters - Room 06
071 A 16 year (2002-2017) review of enquiries regarding plant abuse in Austria
Susanna Dorner-Schulmeister, Poisons Information Centre Austria, Vienna, Austria.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
072 A 16-year (2002-2017) review of suicide attempts by plant ingestion in Austria
Susanna Dorner-Schulmeister, Poisons Information Centre Austria, Vienna, Austria.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
091 Mistaking monkshood for radish resulting in a potentially fatal blood concentration of
aconitine
41
Uwe Stedtler, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Centre, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
092 Intoxication with castor beans
Marine Grigoryan, Yerevan State Medical University after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
349 Lethal poisoning with Oenanthe crocata. Survive or not?
Alexis Descatha, PCC, Ester Unit (IRSET U1085), Univ Angers- CHU Angers- Inserm, Angers, France.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 06
070 Suicidal Cerbera odollam poisoning: a case report
Angelika Holzer, Poisons Information Centre Austria, Vienna, Austria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
081 A severe and prolonged case of Amanita phalloides poisoning
Anja J Huusom, Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, The Danish Poisons
Information Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
085 Facial paralysis after cutaneous burns from Heracleum mantegazzianum
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
088 Does combining vitamin C and vitamin B17 (amygdalin) worsen toxicity?
Faisal S Minhaj, Maryland Poison Center, Baltimore, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
089 Confusion between toxic and edible plants registered by the French Poison Control Centres
from 2012 to 2018
Sandra Sinno-Tellier, Health Alerts and Vigilance department, French Agency for Food,
Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety, MAISONS-ALFORT, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
090 Acute poisoning due to Datura ingestion: case report
Marine Grigoryan, Toxicology and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Yerevan State Medical University
after Mkhitar Heratsi, Yerevan, Armenia.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
093 Severe plant poisonings admitted to the intensive care in France: management and outcome
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
350 The White Panther: rare exposure to Amanita multisquamosa causing clinically significant
toxicity
Varun Vohra, Emergency Medicine, Michigan Poison Center, Wayne State University School of
Medicine, Detroit, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
42
Toxinology (bites, stings, antivenom etc) 195 Antidote treatment in viper envenomation in Italy: a comparison of 4 antivenoms during a 6
year study
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 11
278 The changing pattern of treatment for latrodectism over time in a toxicology unit: red-back
spider antivenom or standard analgesic therapy: nothing to RAVE about
Andis Graudins, Clinical Toxicology Unit, Emergency Medicine Service, Monash Health and Monash
University, Dandenong, Australia.
Morning Posters - Room 11
280 A serious viper bite in a pregnancy
Francesco Gambassi, Toxicology Unit and Poison Control Center, Firenze, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 11
281 Spider bites in France: a retrospective study using the French Poison Control Centers
Network from 2007 to 2017
Gaël Le Roux, Centre antipoison et Toxicovigilance Grand Ouest, Centre antipoison et
Toxicovigilance Grand Ouest, Angers, France.
Morning Posters - Room 11
283 Recurrent thrombocytopenia after Italian viper bite: a case report
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy, Pavia, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 11
377 Hyperbaric oxygen therapy in Loxoscelism skin necrosis: a case report
Anna Celentano, Milan Poison Control Center, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda,
Milan, Italy.
Morning Posters - Room 11
378 Exotic venomous snakebites in Switzerland reported to the National Poisons Information
Centre over 22 years
Joan Fuchs, Tox Info Suisse, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Morning Posters - Room 11
379 Far from home: compartmental syndrome after envenomation by Crotalus atrox in
metropolitan France
Gaël Le Roux, Poison Control Center and Toxicovigilance, Angers, France.
Morning Posters - Room 11
380 Human exposure to larvae of processionary moths in France: study of symptomatic cases
registered by the French Poison Control Centres between 2012 and 2019
Sandra Sinno-Tellier, Health Alerts and Vigilance Department, French Agency for Food,
environmental and Occupational Health & Safety, MAISONS-ALFORT, France.
Morning Posters - Room 11
284 Latrodectus tredecemguttatus poisoning: a case report treated with antidote
Marco Cirronis, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
43
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
285 Prolonged neurological effects after delayed antivenin administration
Alfred Aleguas, Poison Information Center-Tampa, Tampa General Hospital, Tampa, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
286 Cardiovascular complications following ciguatera fish poisoning in the French West Indies: a
case series
Dabor Resiere, Critical Care Medicine, University Hospital of Martinique, Fort de France,
Martinique.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
287 Epidemiology of bites by indigenous venomous snakes in Switzerland reported to Tox Info
Suisse over a 22 year period
Joan Fuchs, Swiss National Poisons Information Center, Tox Info Suisse, Associated Institute of the
University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
289 An analysis of envenoming features in adder bite cases referred to the UK National Poisons
Information Service (NPIS)
David Stewart, NPIS Edinburgh, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
290 Kambô: a healing potion or a poisonous toxin?
Annie Watt, NPIS Edinburgh, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
291 Viper bite neurotoxicity: two pediatric cases in central Italy
Marco Marano, Emergency Department PICU. Regional Pediatric Poison Control Center, Bambino
Gesù Children Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
292 Thromboelastogram use in Crotalus adamanteus envenomation
William F Rushton, Office of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of
Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
381 Rattlesnake bite in Austria: a case report
Susanna Dorner-Schulmeister, Poisons Information Centre, Vienna, Austria.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
382 Bitten abroad, an unforgettable souvenir: bites and stings reported to the UK National
Poisons Information Service (NPIS) sustained whilst travelling overseas, 2009-2019
Pardeep S Jagpal, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 11
Veterinary toxicology (poisoning in animals) 065 Animal PoisonLine: review of a new public access veterinary poisons information service
Zoe Tizzard, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
44
066 Flurbiprofen toxicosis in dogs
Nicola Bates, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
067 A retrospective study of cement exposure in 42 dogs
Nicola Bates, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
068 Cases of botulism in waterfowls in the Po river valley
Carlo A. Locatelli, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre, Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
383 Role of decontamination in dogs poisoned by alphachloralose-based rodenticides: a case
series
Marieke A Dijkman, Dutch Poisons Information Center (DPIC), University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
384 “Curiosity killed the cat”: cats poisoned by alphachloralose containing rodenticides
Marieke A Dijkman, Dutch Poisons Information Center (DPIC), University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
385 A case series of hypothermic, sedated cats with sensory-induced CNS excitation:
alphachloralose poisoning?
Marieke A Dijkman, Dutch Poisons Information Center (DPIC), University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
386 When does xylitol-induced hypoglycaemia occur in dogs?
Nick Edwards, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
387 The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on call numbers to the Veterinary Poisons Information
Service (VPIS) and Animal PoisonLine (APL)
Nick Edwards, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
388 The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on animal poisons cases reported to the Veterinary
Poisons Information Service (VPIS) and Animal PoisonLine (APL)
Nick Edwards, Veterinary Poisons Information Service, London, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
389 The successful treatment of thallium sulfate toxicity in a dog using Prussian blue
Anne Kan, Dutch Poisons Information Center, University Medical Center, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 04
45
Miscellaneous 108 Utilization of the Danish Poisons Information Centre: a nationwide registry study
Tonny S Petersen, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen,
Denmark.
Morning Posters - Room 05
002 A watchful foretaste of Article 45 Annex VIII: things you will wish you knew before
Geert Verstegen, Belgian Poison Centre, Brussels, Belgium.
Morning Posters - Room 09
003 Current experience of the Belgian Poison Centre with the new product notification
requirements implementing article 45
Anne-Marie K Descamps, Belgian Poison Centre, Brussels, Belgium.
Morning Posters - Room 09
179 Human skin explants ex vivo study: lesions caused by topical exposure to 25%
tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH)
Alan H Hall, Medical Toxicology, Toxicology Consulting and Medical Translating Services, Azle,
Texas, United States.
Morning Posters - Room 09
190 Risk assessment and lessons learned: a collaboration between Public Health and a National
Poisons Information Centre
Edel Duggan, National Poisons Information Centre, Dublin, Ireland.
Morning Posters - Room 09
202 Three years of experience implementing a chemical submission protocol at an Emergency
Department
Juan Ortega Pérez, Emergengy Department Hospital Universitari Son Espases, Attending Physician,
Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
Morning Posters - Room 10
178 The role of CYP450 in the molecular toxicology of sulfur mustard in vitro
Presented By Simone Rothmiller, Bundeswehr Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Munich,
Germany.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
181 “All right, I’ll be more careful next time”: frequent callers in Finnish Poison Information
Centre (FPIC)
Suvi Pajarre-Sorsa, Poison Information Centre, Poison Information Centre, University of Helsinki and
Department of Emergency Medicine and Services, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland,
Helsinki, Finland.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
184 Risky dietary supplements: self-harm with potassium salt capsules
Sonny Larsson, Swedish Poison Information Centre, Solna, Sweden.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
188 Supporting the establishment of an Ethiopian Poisons Centre
Ruben Thanacoody, National Poisons Information Service (Newcastle Unit), Newcastle Hospitals
NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
46
192 Diphtheria: two cases treated with antitoxin
Davide Lonati, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
363 Requests regarding snus to the Poisons Information Centre in Austria
Tara Arif, Poisons Information Centre, Vienna, Austria.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
364 Multiple treatments of clotrimazole during pregnancy
Sian C D Harbon, National Poisons Information Service, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
365 Challenges facing the UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS) ahead of EU Exit and
commencement of Annex VIII of Article 45 (Classification, Labelling and Packaging)
Pardeep S Jagpal, National Poisons Information Service (Birmingham Unit), Birmingham, United
Kingdom.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
366 When volvulus hides a poisoning: a case of severe foodborne botulism
Roberto Zoppellari, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, S. Anna Hospital, Ferrara, Italy.
Lunchtime Posters - Room 09
105 Toxicological evaluation of a cluster of reports of hepatitis related to turmeric dietary
supplements in Italy
Azzurra Schicchi, Pavia Poison Control Centre - National Toxicology Information Centre - Clinical and
Experimental Lab, Toxicology Unit, Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institutes IRCCS and University of
Pavia (Italy), Pavia, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 06
185 Valproic acid in the management of delirious, agitated critically ill toxicology patients
Joseph J Rasimas, Consultation - Liaison Psychiatry, Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis,
United States.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
186 Takotsubo syndrome during benzodiazepine withdrawal: a case report
Francesco Gambassi, Medical Toxicology Unit and Poison Control Center, Azienda Ospedaliero-
Universitaria Careggi, Firenze, Italy.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
191 Myocardial infarction in the acutely poisoned patient: a case series
Bruno Mégarbane, Department of Medical and Toxicological Critical Care, Lariboisière Hospital,
Paris-Diderot University, INSERM UMRS-1144, Paris, France.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12
193 QTc interval and electrolyte derangement in alcohol withdrawal-related seizures
Agnesa Mustafa, Clinical Toxicology, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, United
Kingdom.
Afternoon Posters - Room 12