Paraquat poisoning
MONDO:0017862Paraquat poisoning is a rare intoxication with paraquat (a non-selective bipyridilium herbicide that has been banned in Europe), usually occurring through ingestion of the poison, and that presents with caustic injury of the oral cavity and pharynx, as well as nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, lethargy, loss of consciousness and fever. Patients may develop potentially life-threatening complications such as hepatic dysfunction, acute tubular necrosis and renal insufficiency, and respiratory failure (due to pulmonary fibrosis) due to its inherent toxicity and lack of effective treatment. Intoxication via inhalation, injection and dermal or mucus contact have also been reported.
6 clinical trials for this condition and its sub-types.
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Massive study tests Blood-Cleaning therapy for poisoning victims
Disease control OngoingThis study looks at whether blood-filtering treatments, such as dialysis or plasma exchange, can help people survive acute poisoning. Researchers will compare over 5,000 poisoned patients who received these treatments with those who did not. The goal is to see if the treatments i…
Sponsor: The Affiliated Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital of Nanjing University Medical School • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 08:02 UTC
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Blood levels may predict organ damage in diquat poisoning
Knowledge-focused OngoingThis study tracks 193 people who swallowed the herbicide diquat to see how the amount of poison in their blood relates to damage in organs like the brain. Researchers will also look at how well blood-filtering treatments work. The goal is to better predict who is at highest risk …
Sponsor: The Affiliated Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital of Nanjing University Medical School • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 08:02 UTC