Ethylene glycol is a type of alcohol used as a coolant or antifreeze
Features of toxicity are divided into 3 stages:
- Stage 1: symptoms similar to alcohol intoxication: confusion, slurred speech, dizziness
- Stage 2: metabolic acidosis with high anion gap and high osmolar gap. Also tachycardia, hypertension
- Stage 3: acute kidney injury
Management has changed in recent times
- ethanol has been used for many years
- works by competing with ethylene glycol for the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase
- this limits the formation of toxic metabolites (e.g. glycoaldehyde and glycolic acid) which are responsible for the haemodynamic/metabolic features of poisoning
- fomepizole, an inhibitor of alcohol dehydrogenase, is now used first-line in preference to ethanol
- haemodialysis also has a role in refractory cases