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Shortly after ingestion of either agent, patients usually appear drunk
After several hours, there is tachypnea, confusion, convulsions, and coma
Methanol intoxication frequently causes visual disturbances
Ethylene glycol often produces oxalate crystalluria and acute kidney injury
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Initially, the serum osmolality is usually increased
After several hours, there is a severe anion gap metabolic acidosis
Ethylene glycol often produces oxalate crystalluria
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Empty stomach by aspiration through a nasogastric tube if recent ingestion (within 30–60 minutes)
Folic acid, thiamine, and pyridoxine may enhance the breakdown of toxic metabolites
Ethanol blocks metabolism of the parent compounds by competing for the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase
Fomepizole
Blocks alcohol dehydrogenase
Much easier to use than ethanol
If started before onset of acidosis, may be used as the sole treatment for ethylene glycol ingestion in some cases
Contact a regional poison control center for indications and dosing
For significant toxicity (manifested by severe metabolic acidosis, altered mental status, markedly elevated osmolar gap, or evidence of end-organ toxicity), perform hemodialysis as soon as possible