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Alcohol
Rose Ann
Gould Soloway
The Bottom Line
Alcohol can be a
dangerous poison for children.
Alcohol depresses
the central nervous system and causes low blood glucose (sugar).
Children who drink
alcohol can have seizures and coma; they could even die.
This is true of
beverage alcohol (beer, wine, liquor) and alcohol found in mouthwash and other
personal care products.
The Full Story
Why is alcohol so
dangerous for children? A four-year-old was found unconscious in bed, with an
open bottle of rum beside her.
She was taken to
the emergency room right away. Even so, she died a few hours later. What
happened?
Low blood sugar is
a dangerous effect in children who drink alcohol. (This doesn't usually happen
to healthy adults who drink alcohol.)
Low blood sugar can
cause seizures and coma, because the brain doesn't get enough glucose. If blood
sugar drops too low, it can be fatal.
Alcohol affects the
central nervous system. Children who drink alcohol can act drunk, just like
adults do.
They might stagger
when they walk, speak without making sense, or seem sleepy. They might vomit
because alcohol can irritate the stomach.
Breathing and heart
rate might slow down to a dangerous level. Blood pressure drops. These children
can pass out and even die.
Too much alcohol is
bad for anyone. But for young children, it causes problems that most people
don't expect. This is true for alcohol from any source, but the most likely
source is beverage alcohol.
That means ethanol,
found in beer, wine, hard liquor, and other alcoholic drinks.
The amount of
alcohol poisonous to children varies. Different beverages contain different
amounts of alcohol.
A child's age and
weight make a difference, too. Alcohol is absorbed quickly from the stomach
into the bloodstream.
The bottom line:
small amounts of alcohol can harm children, much smaller than the amounts that
adults can tolerate.
Ethanol is found in
products other than beverage alcohol, including mouthwash, some facial
cleansers, hair products, and hand sanitizer.
Again, the amount
that is poisonous to children varies. But no matter the source, the problems
are the same: too much alcohol compared to a child’s body weight can cause
poisoning.
Lock up your
alcoholic beverages. Empty out beer cans, wine glasses, and drinks glasses
before children can get to them.
Store your
mouthwash and alcohol-containing cosmetics and cleansers out of sight and
reach.
If a child swallows
alcohol, remove the container and use the webPOISONCONTROL® online
tool for guidance or call Poison Control right away at 1-800-222-1222..
You will need to
answer the following questions:
· the name of the product;
· how much is missing;
· how long ago it happened;
· the child's age and weight;
· whether the child is having any symptoms;
· your telephone number to stay in touch with you.
With this
information, the webPOISONCONTROL® tool or the poison
specialist will figure out if the child took a poisonous amount.
If the child may
have swallowed a dangerous amount, you'll be sent to the hospital. Your child's
blood sugar will be measured. IV's might be needed.
Pulse, blood
pressure, and breathing will be checked to be sure they are not dropping too
low.
Again, Poison
Control will stay in touch with the emergency room to provide treatment
advice as needed.
This Really Happened
A 2-year-old child
found a bottle of vodka on a coffee table, removed the screw cap, and drank
about two ounces. His father found him unconscious and called 911.
When the paramedics
arrived, the child was in a coma. The child was taken to the emergency room,
where his blood alcohol level was very high, 248 mg/dL.
The local hospital
couldn't care for critically ill children; he was flown by helicopter to a
hospital with an intensive care unit for children.
The child could not
breathe on his own, so a breathing tube was put into his throat and he was put
on a ventilator to breathe for him.
He was given IV
fluids and his blood glucose levels were checked every hour to be sure they
didn't drop too low. The child remained in a coma for several hours.
By the next morning,
his blood alcohol level had dropped to 16 mg/dL. He woke up and could breathe
on his own. He made a full recovery and was discharged from the hospital the
next day.
Be sure webPOISONCONTROL® is
one of your browser favorites, download the webPOISONCONTROL® app, and
be sure the Poison Control phone number is on or near every phone in your home:
1-800-222-1222.
Rose
Ann Gould Soloway,
RN, BSN, MSEd, DABAT emerita
Clinical Toxicologist
Clinical Toxicologist
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