Aluminum phosphide poisoning

Background

  • Aluminum phosphide (AlP) poisoning is one of the most lethal forms of self-poisoning worldwide.
  • Upon contact with moisture or gastric acid, AlP liberates phosphine gas (PH₃), which inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome C oxidase, causing profound cellular hypoxia, refractory cardiovascular collapse, and multiorgan failure.[1] There is no specific antidote; mortality ranges from 37-100%.[2]
  • Aluminum phosphide is sold as tablets or pellets (3 g each, containing approximately 56% AlP) under trade names including Celphos, Quickphos, Phostoxin, and Fumitoxin
  • Known colloquially as "rice tablet" in parts of India and Iran
  • Used worldwide as a grain fumigant and rodenticide, especially in developing countries
  • AlP is unstable — releases phosphine gas rapidly on contact with moisture, making it more acutely lethal than zinc phosphide[3]
  • Lethal dose: 150-500 mg (as little as one-tenth of a standard 3 g tablet can be fatal)[1]
  • Deaths from cardiovascular toxicity typically occur within the first 12-24 hours[4]
  • Most poisoning cases are intentional (self-harm) in young adults in agricultural regions of South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa[5]

Mechanism of toxicity

  • AlP + gastric HCl/moisture → phosphine gas (PH₃)
  • Phosphine inhibits cytochrome C oxidase (complex IV of mitochondrial electron transport chain) → blocks oxidative phosphorylation → cellular energy crisis[1]
  • Generates highly reactive hydroxyl radicals → lipid peroxidation, glutathione depletion → oxidative cellular injury
  • Myocardium is the primary target — cell membrane dysfunction, impaired glucose utilization, oxidative stress → cardiogenic shock (most common cause of death)[6]
  • Also targets lungs, liver, kidneys, adrenals, and GI tract
  • Phosphine may also be exhaled by the patient and released from vomitus — posing a risk to healthcare workers

Healthcare worker safety

  • Phosphine gas is hazardous to staff — vomitus, gastric aspirate, and exhaled air may contain phosphine
  • Treat in a well-ventilated area or negative-pressure room
  • PPE including respiratory protection is recommended
  • Exposure at 1400 mg/m³ for 30 minutes can be fatal[4]
  • Handle gastric lavage effluent as hazardous material

Clinical features

  • Onset is rapid (minutes to hours), in contrast to the more delayed presentation of zinc phosphide[3]
  • The cardinal feature is profound, refractory hypotension (present in 50-100% of severe cases)[1]

Gastrointestinal

  • Nausea, vomiting (most common presenting symptom; 74% of cases)[5]
  • Severe epigastric and abdominal pain
  • Diarrhea
  • Hematemesis (from erosive gastropathy)
  • Garlic or decaying fish odor from breath/vomitus (classic but not always present)

Cardiovascular (primary cause of mortality)

  • Refractory hypotension and cardiogenic shock
  • Myocarditis, pericarditis, subendocardial infarction
  • ECG abnormalities: ST-segment elevation/depression, T-wave inversion, QTc prolongation, conduction blocks, ventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation[1]
  • Cardiac arrest (often within 12-24 hours of ingestion)
  • Elevated troponin

Respiratory

Metabolic

  • Severe metabolic acidosis (high anion gap; elevated lactate) — most sensitive marker of severity and strongest predictor of mortality[1]
  • Hyperkalemia (from cellular injury and acidosis)
  • Hypomagnesemia (associated with increased mortality)
  • Hypoglycemia (poor prognostic sign)

Hepatic

  • Hepatocellular injury (elevated AST, ALT)
  • Hepatic failure with coagulopathy

Renal

Neurologic

  • Agitation, restlessness, anxiety
  • Altered mental status, delirium, coma
  • Seizures

Other

Differential diagnosis


Toxic gas exposure

Evaluation

Workup

  • Silver nitrate test: simple bedside diagnostic test[1]
    • Expose filter paper impregnated with silver nitrate solution to the patient's gastric aspirate, vomitus, or exhaled breath
    • Positive test: paper turns black (silver phosphide formation) — confirms phosphine exposure
  • ABG/VBG: metabolic acidosis with elevated lactate — severity correlates directly with mortality
  • ECG: continuous monitoring; look for ST changes, QTc prolongation, arrhythmias, conduction blocks
  • CBC, BMP, hepatic function panel, coagulation studies (PT/INR)
  • Cardiac biomarkers: troponin (serial), BNP
  • Serum magnesium, calcium, phosphorus
  • Blood glucose (monitor frequently; hypoglycemia is a poor prognostic indicator)
  • Chest radiograph: pulmonary edema, ARDS
  • Echocardiography: assess myocardial function; may show global hypokinesis in severe myocarditis
  • Abdominal radiograph: AlP tablets are not reliably radiopaque (unlike zinc phosphide)
  • Methemoglobin level if cyanosis present
  • Salicylate, acetaminophen, ethanol levels if intentional co-ingestion suspected

Diagnosis

  • Primarily clinical: history of ingestion of fumigant/rodenticide tablet + garlic odor + rapid-onset refractory shock + metabolic acidosis
  • Silver nitrate test on gastric aspirate or breath is the most accessible confirmatory test
  • Phosphine gas levels are not routinely available
  • Poor prognostic indicators:[1][5]
    • Shock or hypotension at presentation
    • Severe metabolic acidosis (pH <7.2) or elevated lactate
    • Cardiac arrhythmias
    • Hyperkalemia
    • Hypoglycemia
    • Need for vasopressors or mechanical ventilation
    • Amount ingested >1.5 g

Management

No specific antidote exists. Management is aggressive supportive care and GI decontamination.[1]

GI decontamination

  • Gastric lavage with potassium permanganate (KMnO₄ 1:10,000) — oxidizes phosphine to non-toxic phosphate[1]
  • Coconut oil (100-200 mL via NG tube) — forms a protective mucosal barrier and may reduce phosphine liberation; reported to decrease absorption even up to 6 hours after ingestion[7]
  • Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO₃ 7.5%) added to lavage fluid — neutralizes gastric acid to reduce phosphide-to-phosphine conversion[8]
  • Do NOT use plain water for lavage — promotes phosphine gas formation
  • Activated charcoal: limited evidence of benefit (phosphine is a gas and poorly adsorbed); may be given if co-ingestant suspected
  • Do NOT induce emesis — re-exposure risk and aspiration hazard

Cardiovascular support (core of management)

  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation
  • Vasopressors: norepinephrine or dopamine for refractory hypotension; high doses frequently required[1]
  • Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP): case reports of use as rescue therapy for refractory cardiogenic shock[9]
  • Hyperinsulinemia-euglycemia therapy (HIE): emerging evidence suggests benefit by shifting myocardial metabolism from beta-oxidation to glycolysis, improving contractility[6]
    • Insulin 1 IU/kg/h with dextrose infusion to maintain euglycemia
  • ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation): may be considered as bridge therapy in refractory cardiogenic shock in centers with capability
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring — arrhythmias are common and frequently fatal
  • For ventricular tachycardia or Torsades de pointes: magnesium sulfate, lidocaine, defibrillation
    • Avoid class IA (procainamide, quinidine), IC, and III antiarrhythmics — risk of further QTc prolongation

Magnesium sulfate

  • IV magnesium sulfate — membrane stabilizer, antioxidant (restores glutathione), cardioprotective[1]
  • Multiple dosing regimens described; one protocol: 1 g IV q1h for 3 hours, then 6 g/day infusion for 3-5 days[8]
  • Studies suggest improved survival, particularly in patients with hypomagnesemia[1]
  • Monitor for magnesium toxicity (loss of DTRs, respiratory depression)

Sodium bicarbonate

  • IV sodium bicarbonate for correction of metabolic acidosis
  • Also used in gastric lavage (see above)
  • May help stabilize myocardial membranes

Antioxidant therapy

  • N-acetylcysteine (NAC): hepatoprotective, replenishes glutathione; loading dose 140 mg/kg, maintenance 70 mg/kg for 17 additional doses[6]
  • Vitamin C: 1 g IV q8h (antioxidant; limited evidence)
  • Vitamin E: 100 IU q12h (antioxidant; limited evidence)

Additional supportive measures

  • Hydrocortisone: IV stress-dose steroids for refractory shock (relative adrenal insufficiency may contribute)[5]
  • Calcium gluconate: for hypocalcemia
  • Hemodialysis: not effective at removing phosphine (protein-bound), but essential for supportive management of AKI, hyperkalemia, and refractory acidosis[4]
  • Blood products: as needed for coagulopathy/DIC
  • Intubation and mechanical ventilation for respiratory failure

Medication Dosing

Magnesium sulfate 4g IV over 20min, then 6g over 12hr infusion IV Sodium bicarbonate 1-2mEq/kg IV bolus, then infusion to maintain pH >7.2 IV

Disposition

  • All patients with confirmed or suspected AlP ingestion must be admitted to the ICU — even if initially stable[1]
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring for a minimum of 72 hours — most deaths occur within 12-24 hours, but delayed deterioration can occur
  • Serial ABGs, ECGs, cardiac biomarkers, LFTs, renal function, electrolytes, and blood glucose every 4-6 hours during the first 48 hours
  • Death typically occurs from refractory cardiogenic shock within 24 hours in severe cases[4]
  • Survivors of the acute phase generally recover fully if organ failure is supported
  • All intentional ingestions: psychiatric evaluation mandatory prior to discharge
  • Contact Poison control (1-800-222-1222 in the US) for all cases
  • Key differences from zinc phosphide poisoning:
Feature Aluminum phosphide Zinc phosphide
Onset of systemic toxicity Rapid (minutes to hours) Delayed (hours to >12 hours)
Stability of compound Unstable; rapid phosphine release Relatively stable
Radiopaque on X-ray No (not reliably) Yes (zinc component)
Mortality rate Higher (37-100%) Lower (~7-37%)
Primary cause of death Cardiogenic shock Cardiogenic shock/hepatic failure
Hepatic failure Less prominent More prominent (delayed)

See Also

External Links

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Gurjar M, et al. Managing aluminum phosphide poisonings. J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2011;4(3):378-384. doi:10.4103/0974-2700.83868
  2. Wahab A, Zaheer MS, Wahab S, Khan RA. Acute aluminium phosphide poisoning: an update. Hong Kong J Emerg Med. 2008;15:152-155.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Trakulsrichai S, et al. Clinical characteristics of zinc phosphide poisoning in Thailand. Ther Clin Risk Manag. 2017;13:335-340.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Turkmen YH, et al. Successful Management of Aluminium Phosphide Poisoning Resulting in Cardiac Arrest. Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim. 2016;44(3):155-157. doi:10.5152/TJAR.2016.96168
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Teshome Z, et al. Clinical Profile and Treatment Outcome of Aluminum Phosphide Poisoning in Felege Hiwot Referral Hospital, Northwest Ethiopia. Open Access Emerg Med. 2021;13:223-230. doi:10.2147/OAEM.S313181
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Aluminum phosphide poisoning and its clinical management. Nature Research Intelligence. 2025.
  7. Shadnia S, et al. Successful treatment of acute aluminium phosphide poisoning: possible benefit of coconut oil. Hum Exp Toxicol. 2005;24(4):215-218.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Agrawal VK, et al. Aluminum phosphide poisoning: possible role of supportive measures in the absence of specific antidote. Indian J Crit Care Med. 2015;19(2):113-115. doi:10.4103/0972-5229.151019
  9. Siddaiah L, et al. Intra-aortic balloon pump in toxic myocarditis due to aluminium phosphide poisoning. J Med Toxicol. 2009;5(2):80-83.