Toxin
Arsenic
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Arsenic
, Arsenic Poisoning, Arsenic Toxicity
See Also
Unknown Ingestion
Heavy Metal Poisoning
Pathophysiology
Arsenic is a metalloid element (atomic number 33)
Similar chemical properties to
Phosphorus
Although highly toxic in its inorganic salt states, it is nonpoisonous in gray, elemental state
Found throughout earth's crust and in mined ores (esp. as sulfide) or combined with other metals (e.g. iron)
Mechanism of toxicity
Arsenic blocks cellular respiration (
Oxidative Phosphorylation
) and
Gluconeogenesis
at multiple pathway sites
Inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase
Arsenic affects glutathione metabolism leading to
Hemolysis
and
Anemia
Inhibits glutathione synthetase and
G6PD
Arsenic inhibits cardiac
Potassium
channels
Dysrhythmia
risk
Arsenic has a
Garlic
-like odor when ingested
Arsenic Ingestion (or less commonly by skin absorption or inhalation)
Acute large ingestions
Insect
poisons (
Pesticide
s)
Manufacturing (Ceramics, semiconductors)
Chronic exposures
Contaminated water
Produce grown in contaminated soil (e.g. rice)
Low organic levels are found in fish, crustaceans and algae
Medical uses
Acute promyelocytic
Leukemia
(
Arsenic Trioxide
or ATO)
African Trypanosomiasis
(
Melarsoprol
)
Veterinary antihelminth (Thiacetarsamide)
Pharmacokinetics
Gastrointestinal absorption is rapid
Inorganic forms (trivalent, pentavalent) are more toxic than organic forms
Lethal dose
Child: >2 mg/kg
Adult: >120 to 200 mg
Findings
Acute Poisoning
Gastrointestinal Symptoms (within minutes to hours of ingestion)
Nausea
or
Vomiting
Abdominal Pain
Watery
Diarrhea
(rice-water)
Cardiopulmonary symptoms and signs
Hypotension
to Cardiovascular collapse
Tachycardia
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
(
ARDS
)
QTc Prolongation
Dysrhythmia
Paradoxically low
Systemic Vascular Resistance
(
Vasoplegia
)
Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
(
SIRS
)
Neurologic Symptoms
Headache
Vertigo
Fatigue
Encephalopathy with
Delirium
Peripheral Neuropathy
(motor and sensory) is delayed
Paresthesia
Paralysis
Skin
Skin irritation
Mucosal burning
Sensation
Erythroderma
Desquamation
Miscellaneous
Acute Renal Failure
Rhabdomyolysis
Acute Hepatitis
Findings
Chronic
Poisoning
Mottled brown skin
Hyperkeratosis of palms and soles
Cutis edema
Transverse striate
Leukonychia
Perforation of nasal septum
Eyelid Edema
Coryza
Limb paralysis
Reduced
Deep Tendon Reflex
es
Carcinogenic with chronic exposure
Labs
See
Unknown Ingestion
Creatine Phosphokinase
Comprehensive metabolic panel
Complete Blood Count
and
Peripheral Smear
Macrocytic Anemia
Urinalysis
Oliguria
Hematuria
Hemoglobinuria
Arsenic Concentration
Urine Arsenic (24 hour level)
Abnormal if >100 mcg total (or 50 mcg/L, >100 mcg/g
Creatinine
)
May also be positive with seafood ingestion
Tissue Exam reveals Arsenic deposits
Urine
Nails
Hair
Diagnostics
Electrocardiogram
QTc Prolongation
Imaging
Abdominal XRay
Arsenic is radiopaque
Management
See
Unknown Ingestion
Consult poison control
Supportive care
ABC Management
Intravenous Fluid
s
Gastric Lavage
and
Whole Bowel Irrigation
indications
Abdominal XRay
positive for radiopaque Arsenic
Chelation
Severe acute Arsenic Toxicity
Dimercaprol (British Anti-
Lewisite
or BAL) 4 mg/kg IM every 4 hours
Chronic Arsenic Toxicity or less severe acute toxicity
Dimercaptosuccinic acid (succimer) 10 mg/kg orally every 8 hours for 5 days
Disposition
Admit symptomatic patients (more than isolated gastrointestinal symptoms) to ICU
May typically discharge if no gastrointestinal signs or symptoms at 6-12 hours after ingestion
Other measures
Hemodialysis
is NOT typically effective
References
Carroll (2026) Crit Dec Emerg Med 40(1): 34
Kinker and Glauser (2021) Crit Dec Emerg Med 35(9): 19-27
Tomaszewski (2022) Crit Dec Emerg Med 37(1): 32
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