Essential oil poisoning on the rise

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Poisoning by essential oil exposure is frequent and on the rise in Australia, with 63 per cent of cases occurring in children under 15, according to Australian research. The study of calls to the NSW Poisons Information Centre between 2011 and 2018 found that of most exposures were accidental and the result of mistakes such as mistaking essential oils for cough liquids. However, 105 cases were the result of people intentionally ingested them for perceived health benefits. The researchers recommend keeping essential oils separate from oral medications and also suggest extending child-proof closures to all containers, not just those over 15ml.

Journal/conference: MJA

Link to research (DOI): 10.5694/mja2.50403

Organisation/s: The University of Sydney

Funder: None declared

Media Release

From: Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)

ESSENTIAL OIL POISONING CALLS INCREASE; CHILDREN MOST AFFECTED

POISONING by essential oil exposure is frequent and on the rise in Australia, with 63% of cases occurring in children under the age of 15 years, according to the authors of research published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Essential oils are aromatic, volatile liquids extracted from plant material by steam distillation and named for the plants from which they are derived. Essential oils are readily available in pharmacies, supermarkets, health food stores, and online. They are typically used topically or added to vaporisers, but oral ingestion of small amounts is recommended by some suppliers.

The researchers, led by Dr Rose Cairns, Director of Research at the NSW Poisons Information Centre (NSWPIC), and a lecturer at the University of Sydney, wrote that essential oils can cause severe toxicity when ingested, the risk depending on the oil used.

“The onset of toxicity can be rapid, and small quantities (as little as 5 mL) can cause life-threatening toxicity in children,” Cairns and colleagues wrote.

The authors conducted a retrospective study of essential oil exposure calls to NSWPIC between July 2014 and June 2018. They identified 4412 essential oil exposures reported during the 4-year study period; 1387 callers (31%) had symptoms of poisoning at the time of the call. The number of calls increased from 1011 in 2014–15 to 1177 in 2017– 2018 (16.4% increase, or 5.3% per year). Most exposures were accidental (3530, 80%) or the results of therapeutic error (580, 13%), typically mistaking essential oils for liquid pharmaceuticals, usually cough liquids (84, 14%); there were 105 cases (2.4%) of misinformed misuse (eg, intended ingestion of essential oils with therapeutic intent). In 2790 cases (63%), the exposed person was under 15 years of age.

The essential oils most frequently involved in poisoning calls were eucalyptus (2049, 46.4%), tea tree (749, 17.0%), lavender (271, 6.1%), clove (179, 4.1%), and peppermint oils (154, 3.5%).

Cairns and colleagues recommended that essential oils be kept separate from oral medications to prevent therapeutic errors.

“Flow restrictors and child-resistant closures would be desirable, but containers are only required to have such closures when the essential oil volume exceeds 15 mL,” they concluded.

“As severe toxicity can be caused by as little as 5 mL, this is inadequate for protecting children.”

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The Medical Journal of Australia is a publication of the Australian Medical Association.

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