Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology 2001-01-01

Cholestatic hepatitis caused by acute gold potassium cyanide poisoning.

M L Wu, W J Tsai, J Ger, J F Deng, S H Tsay, M H Yang

Index: J. Toxicol. Clin. Toxicol. 39(7) , 739-43, (2001)

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Abstract

Poisoning after oral ingestion of gold potassium cyanide is rarely reported. A case of suicidal ingestion of gold potassium cyanide (potassium dicyanoaurate; CAS# 13967-50-5) is described.A 27-year-old man attempted suicide by ingesting 5 mL gold potassium cyanide solution. He developed vomiting, hyperamylasemia, and hepatic dysfunction. Cyanide poisoning was not detected but acute gold toxicity was noted. Pathologic findings of the liver showed centrilobular cholestasis with eosinophilic degeneration. The whole blood and serum gold were 4361 and 6011 microg/L, respectively, and the 24-hour urine gold was 429 microg/d in samples obtained on day 4.Gold-induced hepatotoxicity has been seen infrequently in patients receiving gold therapy. Reported agents include sodium aurothiomalate, sodium aurothiopropranol sulfonate, aurothioglucose, aurothiopolypeptide (Auro-detoxin), auric sulfide, and gold thiosulfate, our report adds gold potassium cyanide.

Related Compounds

Structure Name/CAS No. Articles
Potassium dicyanoaurate Structure Potassium dicyanoaurate
CAS:13967-50-5
gold(i) cyanide Structure gold(i) cyanide
CAS:506-65-0
sodium dicyanoaurate(1-) Structure sodium dicyanoaurate(1-)
CAS:15280-09-8