Jump to content

Salt poisoning

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Draft:Salt toxicosis)
Salt poisoning
Other namesSodium poisoning
High resolution image of a grain of sea salt. Sea salt is one of the most common causes of sodium poisoning.

Salt poisoning is an intoxication resulting from the excessive intake of sodium (usually as sodium chloride) either in solid form or in solution (saline water, including brine, brackish water, or seawater). Salt poisoning sufficient to produce severe symptoms is rare, and lethal salt poisoning is possible but even rarer. The lethal dose of table salt is roughly 0.5–1 gram per kilogram of body weight.[1]

In medicine, salt poisoning is most frequently encountered in children or infants[2][3] who may be made to consume excessive amounts of table salt. At least one instance of murder of a hospitalized child by salt poisoning has been reported.[4]

Adults can consume too much salt by consuming seawater, pickled goods, brine water or soy sauce.[5] Salt poisoning has been seen in a number of adults with mental health problems.[6]

Salt poisoning can affect most species of animals, although it is more common in swine, cattle, and poultry.[7]

Symptoms and physiology

[edit]

Salt poisoning typically results in a feeling of confusion and jitteriness; more severe intoxication can cause seizures and coma. Death can result if medical intervention is not forthcoming. These symptoms are generally a consequence of hypernatremia – an abnormally high sodium level in the blood. (There are myriad causes of hypernatremia, which is frequently encountered in medical practice; salt poisoning is not a common cause).[citation needed]

Early on, the intoxicant will cause a strong feeling of thirst, followed by weakness, nausea, and loss of appetite. More severe symptoms ensue, including confusion, muscle twitching, and bleeding in or around the brain. Death results by the swelling of the brain against the skull. (Normal serum sodium levels are 135–145 mEq/liter (135–145 mmol/L). Severe symptoms typically only occur when levels are above 160 mEq/L.) The human renal system actively regulates sodium chloride in the blood within a very narrow range around 9 g/L (0.9% by weight).[citation needed]

Accidentally consuming small quantities of clean seawater is not harmful, especially if the seawater is taken along with a larger quantity of fresh water. However, drinking seawater to maintain hydration is counterproductive; more water must be excreted to eliminate the salt (via urine) than the amount of water obtained from the seawater itself.[8]

In most open waters concentrations vary somewhat around typical values of about 3.5%; drinking seawater temporarily increases blood's NaCl concentration, which signals the kidney to excrete sodium. However, seawater's sodium concentration is above the kidney's maximum concentrating ability. Eventually the blood's sodium concentration rises to toxic levels, removing water from cells and interfering with nerve conduction, ultimately producing a fatal seizure and cardiac arrhythmia.[citation needed]

Sea water poisoning

[edit]

Survival manuals consistently advise against drinking seawater.[9] A summary of 163 life raft voyages estimated the risk of death at 39% for those who drank seawater, compared to 3% for those who did not. The effect of seawater intake on rats confirmed the negative effects of drinking seawater when dehydrated.[10] (In contrast to humans, pelagic birds and other sea animals can – and must – drink sea water without ill effects, having evolved for life at sea over the course of aeons.) [citation needed]

Historical experiences

[edit]

In The Odyssey, when faced with the prospect of starvation, the sailors consider drinking salt water "and be done with it".

Some historians have suggested that the mysterious sicknesses afflicting the early English colonists at Jamestown, Virginia (1607–1610) – which nearly extinguished the settlement – reflect sea water poisoning. The settlers arrived in the spring, when the James River water was relatively fresh, but by summer a drought of historical magnitude had rendered it much more brackish. The historical geographer Carville Earle, among others, holds to this view.[11]

The temptation to drink seawater was greatest for sailors who had expended their supply of fresh water, and were unable to capture enough rainwater for drinking. This frustration was described by a line from Samuel Taylor Coleridge's epic poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798):

"Water, water, everywhere,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink."

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Strazzullo, Pasquale; Leclercq, Catherine (1 March 2014). "Sodium". Advances in Nutrition. 5 (2): 188–190. doi:10.3945/an.113.005215. PMC 3951800. PMID 24618759.
  2. ^ Saunders, N.; Balfe, J. W.; Laski, B. (1976). "Severe salt poisoning in an infant". J. Pediatr. 88 (2): 258–61. doi:10.1016/s0022-3476(76)80992-4. PMID 1249688.
  3. ^ Paut, O.; Andre, N.; Fabre, P.; Sobraquas, P.; Drouet, G.; Arditti, J.; Camboulives, J. (March 1999). "The management of extreme hypernatraemia secondary to salt poisoning in an infant". Pediatric Anesthesia. 9 (2): 171–174. doi:10.1046/j.1460-9592.1999.9220325.x. PMID 10189662. S2CID 3212802.
  4. ^ Roberts, Troy (17 September 2017). "A Mother Accused". CBS News.
  5. ^ Carlberg, David J.; Borek, Heather A.; Syverud, Scott A.; Holstege, Christopher P. (August 2013). "Survival of Acute Hypernatremia Due to Massive Soy Sauce Ingestion". The Journal of Emergency Medicine. 45 (2): 228–231. doi:10.1016/j.jemermed.2012.11.109. PMID 23735849.
  6. ^ Ofran, Y.; Lavi, D.; Opher, D.; Weiss, T. A.; Elinav, E. (December 2004). "Fatal voluntary salt intake resulting in the highest ever documented sodium plasma level in adults (255 mmol L-1): a disorder linked to female gender and psychiatric disorders". Journal of Internal Medicine. 256 (6): 525–528. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1084.757. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2796.2004.01411.x. PMID 15554954. S2CID 20446209.
  7. ^ Larry J. Thompson. "Salt Toxicity". Kenilworth, NJ, USA: Merck & Co.
  8. ^ "Can humans drink seawater?". National Ocean Service (NOAA).
  9. ^ "29". Shipboard Medicine (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 June 2007. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  10. ^ Etzion, Z; Yagil, R (January 1987). "Metabolic effects in rats drinking increasing concentrations of sea-water". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology. 86 (1): 49–55. doi:10.1016/0300-9629(87)90275-1. PMID 2881655.
  11. ^ "Cohen, Jennie (17 Oct 2011), "Did Jamestown's Settlers Drink Themselves to Death?"; History.com.