Pharm
DEET Poisoning
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DEET Poisoning
, Acute DEET Toxicity
See Also
Diethyltoluamide
(
DEET
)
Unknown Ingestion
Pathophysiology
DEET
Toxicity is rare outside of large ingestions or excessive application to skin
Toxicity
Neurologic Effects
Cholinergic Toxicity
(weak, reversible
Cholinesterase Inhibitor
)
Pharmacokinetics
Excessive Skin exposure (>10% solutions)
Skin absorbs 50% of the
DEET
applied (levels peak at 1 hour)
Large Ingestion (e.g. >1 to 2 ml of a 50% solution)
Levels peak at 30 minutes
Other exposures
DEET
Inhalation is also possible
Metabolism
Hepatic metabolism
Renal excretion of 70% of
DEET
within 24 hours
Findings
Gene
ral
Nausea
and
Vomiting
Skin reactions (e.g.
Urticaria
) are uncommon
Cardiovascular
Bradycardia
Hypotension
Neuromuscular
Muscle Weakness
Myoclonus
Acute Respiratory Failure
Encephalopathy
Seizure
s
Labs
See
Unknown Ingestion
Management
Decontamination
See
Decontamination After Toxin Exposure
Wash skin off of residual
DEET
Avoid
Activated Charcoal
for
DEET
exposure
DEET
absorption and effects are too rapid to be affected by charcoal
Hypotension
Manage
Hypotension
with
Intravenous Fluid
s (and
Norepinephrine
if fluid refractory)
Seizure
s
See
Status Epilepticus
Benzodiazepine
s or
Barbiturate
s
References
Tomaszewski (2023) Crit Dec Emerg Med 37(8): 32
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