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A Boy Ate 3 Laundry Pods. This Is What Happened To His Lungs. - YouTube
Channel: Chubbyemu
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A boy ate three laundry pods in one bite.This is what happened to his lungs.
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"JR" is a 17 year old boy
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presenting to the emergency room with emesis, respiratory distress, and somnolence.
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His mother Jane tells the admitting nurse
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that he had been vomiting, gagging, and struggling to breathe for at least 30 minutes.
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You see, JR had been participating in a contest with friends, The Forbidden Fruit Challenge,
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where contenders would take videos of themselves
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chewing on laundry detergent pods and the person with the most social media likes and comments would win...
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... nothing.
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Clearly this was for jokes and memes on behalf of teenagers. Most of them knew this was dangerous
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and were not actually going to put any laundry detergent in their mouths, but JR was determined.
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He was going to, as he told his friends, "experience the greatness of laundry pod flavor" and become internet famous.
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Immediately, after putting three pods in his mouth, he could feel a slight burning sensation waft up into his nose.
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Huddled over the sink, JR was prepared to spit out the detergent as soon as he started biting.
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But as he chewed down on the pods. piercing into the vinyl plastic, laundry detergent poured into his mouth.
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He was suddenly overcome by a severe burning, numbing sensation on his tongue.
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JR began coughing, retching, with his tongue paralyzed by the sensation.
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Laundry detergent began to seep down into his throat.
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In his coughing fit, he aspirated some of the detergent into his trachea,
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corroding the tissue, compromising part of his airway as the liquid began to drip and ooze into his bronchi.
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With every cough, more and more detergent was lodged further and further into the airways of his lungs.
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His mother Jane hears the commotion and rushes to him.
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She sees him vomiting his gastric contents, which come out with green and blue laundry detergent as he begins foaming at the mouth.
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As he collapses, he grips his chest and cries out in pain as he feels the detergent set fire to his esophagus,
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down into his stomach. As he struggles to breathe and is panicked, his lips begin to cyanose, or turn blue.
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Confused and unaware as to what just happened Jane looks around and sees the plastic wrapping of the laundry pods that JR spit out of his mouth.
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She calls the poison control center who initially tells her to give her son water
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and to not induce vomiting, but his cyanose lips prompts a 911 call.
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In the ambulance JR Becomes more somnolent as he arrives to the emergency room where we are now.
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Given the patient's immediate past history, it's very clear his symptoms are because of laundry detergent pod ingestion
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but the presentation is multifactorial and there's a few challenges to consider first.
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JR is suffering from an early manifestation of caustic esophageal injury.
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Esophageal referring to the esophagus, the tube that connects the mouth to the stomach.
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Caustic referring to a burning or corrosion of organic tissue through chemical origin,
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referring back to the three laundry detergent pods that JR just consumed.
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There's a wide variability in the chemical composition of various laundry pods on the market, which brings us to the first challenge.
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Jane was unsure the brand of pod used in her household.
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Some are alkaline, or strongly basic, when in solution with water like many other detergents and soaps.
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These agents can be at least a hundred thousand times more basic than human blood and
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contact with mucosal surfaces like the esophagus induces liquefactive necrosis.
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"- osis" meaning abnormal state, "necro-" meaning death,
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and "liquefactive" meaning as the tissue dies, its sloughs off into a liquid pus,
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disintegrating the lining of the esophagus as it rolls down into the stomach, causing deep penetration and possible tissue perforation -
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all of this happening within one second of contact.
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The pods JR consumed appeared to be acidic in solution,
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opposite of alkaline, meaning instead they corrode the esophageal lining and instead induce coagulation necrosis,
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a state of death marked by clotted blood
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blocking the flow of oxygen and choking the cells to death.
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But this isn't the only problem. Because the patient was found gagging and choking,
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he's also suffering from upper airway injury, which leads us to the second challenge.
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JR presents with stridor, a high-pitched wheezing sound caused by disrupted airflow.
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His breathing is hoarse with coughing and choking, all of which exacerbates his hypoxemia.
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"hypo-" meaning low, "ox-" referring to oxygen and "-emia" meaning presence in blood.
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"Low oxygen presence in blood."
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Further examination finds that JR has tachycardia. "tachy-" meaning fast and "-cardia" referring to heart rate.
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It's measured at a hundred and thirty beats per minute, more than two times that of normal.
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He's tachypnic, meaning his respiratory rate is much higher than normal.
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Both of these are combined with somnolence as JR appears sleepy and lethargic.
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As the patient workup is continued by the medical team, JR suddenly loses consciousness.
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Given his hypoxemia, his upper airway distress, the severe tachycardia, and tachypnea,
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JR is now presenting with imminent respiratory failure.
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Without immediate airway management, he will go into cardiopulmonary arrest and die instantly.
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How is it possible that something so candy-like in appearance and so ubiquitous in availability could be this deadly?
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Well, there's a few things to consider.
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First, laundry pod detergent is more concentrated than free liquid product.
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This one pod is the equivalent of this much free laundry detergent.
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The interesting thing about detergent is that each molecule has simultaneous affinity for both water and fat.
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In this small science experiment, I put oil and water together in a jar. You can see that they don't mix.
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But when I add detergent you'll see that the oil droplets become suspended inside water,
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forming something called an emulsion.
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This happens because each detergent molecule has a hydrophilic end.
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"hydro-" meaning water and "-philic" meaning affinity for.
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This means that end orients towards and interacts with water only.
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But the opposite end of the same molecule has a lipophilic end,
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one that orients towards and interacts with fat only.
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This is important to note because the mucosal surfaces like the mouth and the esophagus are wet and abundant with water,
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but they also have an epithelial lining of cells:
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cells which have an outer membrane made of fat,
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meaning at a molecular level the detergent has a hydrophilic moiety
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that latches onto water in the mucosa and a lipophilic end that latches on to the cell membrane.
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These attractive forces are strong enough for the detergent molecule to rip open the cell membrane,
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causing the cell to spill out its contents and die.
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Stripping the epithelium, killing all of the cells, and causing tissue injury.
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This is what happened to JR's esophagus.
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Because of the instant irritation caused by the stripping off of the epithelium Junior started coughing violently
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But it doesn't stop there. In this fit, he aspirated droplets of the highly concentrated laundry detergent,
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which lodged into his trachea as it entered into his airway.
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The more he coughed, the more smaller droplets lodged deeper into his bronchi,
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where amounts of detergent entered into his smaller airways.
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Because the lungs also contain water in the form of moisture,
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those cells too were torn apart by the detergent.
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It's here where his lungs are literally getting stripped of their cell lining as the tissue begins to die.
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The body detects this and initiates an inflammatory response in the airway in an effort to defend against the injury,
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meaning his lungs begin to swell with water and white blood cells,
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exacerbating his respiratory distress and leading to his imminent respiratory failure.
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This mechanism of laundry pod detergent damage to biologic tissue is
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generalized to all parts of the human body.
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The eyes can suffer burns as well as the skin when they come into contact
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with the highly concentrated detergent.
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Mild soaps much weaker than laundry detergents can be used to wash hands because skin cells contain keratin,
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a protein that protects cellular membranes from rupturing on detergent contact.
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But the soaps will rupture bacterial, viral, and fungal membranes, which typically don't contain keratin.
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Similarly, the cells of the eyes, mouth, and throat also don't contain this protein,
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so they too would be irritated by these same mild soaps.
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The concept of surface active detergents with a dual nature in hydrophilicity and lipophilicity
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is an important physiologic theme in medicine.
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Ironically, the lungs produce their own detergent called dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine.
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This prevents collapse of the small bubbles of the alveoli where oxygen exchange occurs with the blood.
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Premature babies often experience respiratory distress syndrome from collapsed airways
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because their bodies don't develop the capability to produce this surfactant until term.
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This isn't in the same league of detergent as contained in the laundry pods and exists inside the alveoli
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rather than outside, where JR's damage is occurring. Fats and oils are difficult for the body to digest
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if not for bile, an emulsifying agent that encapsulates fat globules in a structure
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that can interact with both water and fat, helping absorption of fat-soluble vitamins as well as digestion of oils.
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Pharmaceutical dosage forms famously employed detergents in an effort to increase bioavailability,
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enhance absorption and distribution of drug in the body.
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Creams and lotions contain emulsified oils that absorbed transdermally into the skin.
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Inhalers use surfactants to maintain dispersion of the drug for absorption into the lungs.
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And most recently, liposomal nanoparticles are being researched and engineered for gene therapy and
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for targeted drug delivery in cancer. These particles can be self forming "in vivo," or in the body and
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are not the ethoxylated, sulfated, anionic and non-ionic
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surfactants of laundry detergent which were
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specifically formulated and designed to remove grease and stains from clothing.
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There is no place in or on any part of the human body for any kind of laundry detergent.
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Ever.
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For JR,
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There's no cure for laundry pod poisoning.
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The best that can be done in patient is supportive care to alleviate symptoms and monitoring.
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His airway is stabilized and he's intubated to prevent respiratory arrest.
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Because he was shown to have severe circumferential burns to his esophagus,
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prophylactic antibiotics were given as well as
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corticosteroids to limit inflammation. Because he's unable to swallow, he can only be fed intravenously or through a nasogastric
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tube as his esophageal epithelium begins to heal from the chemical burn injury that it had suffered.
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This was a tragic case that did not need to happen.
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Warning labels are prominent on laundry pod packaging.
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Previously poison call centers have dealt with thousands of cases like this,
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but mostly in very young children as well as impaired geriatric patients.
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Make no mistake, one has absolutely nothing to gain from putting laundry detergent in their mouths,
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and they have everything to lose instead.
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With supportive care in the intensive care unit in addition to timely monitoring,
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a strong lesson learned,
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a story, that'll never be lived down amongst his friends
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and an event that he'll wanna erase from his memory for the rest of his life
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JR was able to make a recovery from his injuries.
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Thank you so much for watching. Take care of yourself and be well.
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