Emergency Medicine Docs Say Some Helpful Drugs Can Pose a Deadly
Risk to Tots
By DARRIA LONG, M.D.

ABC News Medical Unit
March 18, 2010
Allison Muller understands the dangers of pills that find their way
into a toddler's hands. As director of the Poison Control Center at
the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, she knows that one to two
tablets of certain medications can be lethal to a toddler.
According to
the American Association of Poison Control Centers, in 2002 there
were 2.4 million toxic
ingestions, and more than half of these occurred in children
younger than 6. Children aged 18 to 36
months seemed to be at the highest risk, and in these little
bodies, just one pill can be
deadly.
(Getty Images)
So when her 1-year-old son had nearly swallowed a potentially
dangerous pill, she said she "panicked."
Upon arriving home from work, Muller learned from her husband that
her
infant son had found a pill on the floor and put it in his
mouth.
"You can't turn your back for a second, or he's putting something
in his mouth," she said.
The pill turned out to be Tramadol, a medication known to increase
the risk of seizure.
She later learned that the pill had fallen out of the pocket of one
of her friends who had visited her home recently.
Muller said that the episode showed her that even though she keeps
the family's medications in a locked tackle box, the threat of
accidental ingestion remains.
Indeed, such cases are all too common, statistics suggest.
According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, in
2002 there were 2.4 million toxic ingestions, and more than half of
these occurred in children younger than 6.
Children aged 18 to 36 months seemed to be at the highest risk, and
in these little bodies, just one pill can be deadly. Even more
worrisome is the fact that, after taking some of these pills, a
child can appear perfectly fine until it is too late.
Article Source:
ABC News
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