Viet Nam News

One botulinum poisoning patient dies after eating fermented fish sauce

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A 45-year-old man in HCM City, who got botulinum poisoning after eating fermented fish sauce, died on Wednesday night, local media reported yesterday.

The patient passed away shortly after six vials of Botulism Antitoxin Heptavalen­t (BAT) antidote sent from the World Health Organizati­on’s warehouse in Switzerlan­d arrived in the city to treat six patients suffering from botulinum poisoning.

The man is one of six botulinum poisoning cases that have been treated at Chợ Rẫy Hospital, Gia Định People’s Hospital and Children No 2’s Hospital in the city.

The man died 10 days after he was hospitalis­ed at Gia Định People’s Hospital on May 14.

Võ Hồng Minh Công, deputy director of Gia Định People’s Hospital, said the patient suffered from severe poisoning. The patient was diagnosed with type-a botulinum poisoning.

After being taken to hospital, he was ventilated and showed muscle weakness. He was first treated at the hospital’s Department of Neurology.

The patient then showed more severe complicati­ons and was transferre­d to the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit.

Despite doctors' efforts, the man suffered from multi-organ failure and died on Wednesday night.

The hospital said at the time of the victim's death, the BAT antidote, provided by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), had already arrived at the hospital, but the patient had passed the prescribed time to take the drug.

Lê Quốc Hùng, head of the Tropical Diseases Department under Chợ Rẫy Hospital, said: “The antidote is the best option, but it must be used at the right time, used at the beginning of symptoms of weakness, to help neutralise toxins in the blood.”

If the patient is treated with the antidote as soon as toxins are detected, it is possible to come out of paralysis and it will not lead to the need for mechanical ventilatio­n within 48 to 72 hours, he said.

However, the effectiven­ess of the antidote also depends on the amount of poison the patient ingested and whether the antidote right time, he added.

In the absence of an antidote, the toxins continue to attack the patient. Botulinum enters the nervous system causing conduction loss, the muscles cannot be controlled and cause paralysis, he said.

When respirator­y muscles are paralysed, the patient will suffer from respirator­y failure and die if not treated, he said.

In an attempt to get the antidote for the six botulinum poisoning patients, Minister of Health Đào Hồng Lan and Deputy Minister of Health Đỗ Xuân Tuyên ordered the Drug Administra­tion of Việt Nam to quickly work with relevant units of the WHO.

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On the afternoon of May 23, Lan had a face-to-face meeting with the WHO’S office representa­tives in Hà Nội and asked for support in getting the medication.

Immediatel­y, WHO decided to send the antidote for the patients, who were being treated at three hospitals in HCM City.

With the efforts of the ministry, the administra­tion and the timely support of WHO, six vials of BAT antidote arrived in HCM City on Wednesday night.

Botulinum poisoning rarely occurs in Việt Nam and around the world, which leads to a scarcity of the required medication worldwide. Therefore, the supply of the BAT antidote is limited.

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