J

Jane Benton

Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust

Publishes on Acute Kidney Injury Research, Dialysis and Renal Disease Management, Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes. 8 papers and 133 citations.

8Publications
133Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Hemorrhagic Colitis and Pseudomelanosis Coli in Ipecac Ingestion by Proxy
Joseph E. Johnson, Becky L. M. Carpenter, Jane Benton et al.|Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition|1991
Cited by 22

This report describes a toddler with chronic diarrhea, vomiting, and hypotonia due to surreptitious administration of syrup of ipecac by his mother (Munchausen's syndrome by proxy). Several features of this case distinguish it from previous reports of chronic ipecac ingestion in childhood: the development of grossly bloody stools; radiologic, endoscopic, and biopsy evidence of a chronic moderate colitis resembling ulcerative colitis; and the histologic finding of pseudomelanosis coli, providing an important clue to toxic ingestion. The significance and possible mechanism for genesis of pseudomelanosis coli is discussed. This case emphasizes the variability in presentation and difficulty in diagnosing long-term ipecac ingestion by proxy. Ipecac toxicity should be considered in children with unexplained colitis and vomiting.

Hemorrhagic Colitis and Pseudomelanosis Coli in Ipecac Ingestion by Proxy
Joseph E. Johnson, Becky L. M. Carpenter, Jane Benton et al.|Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition|1991
Cited by 2

Summary This report describes a toddler with chronic diarrhea, vomiting, and hypotonia due to surreptitious administration of syrup of ipecac by his mother (Munchausen's syndrome by proxy). Several features of this case distinguish it from previous reports of chronic ipecac ingestion in childhood: the development of grossly bloody stools; radiologic, endoscopic, and biopsy evidence of a chronic moderate colitis resembling ulcerative colitis; and the histologic finding of pseudomelanosis coli, providing an important clue to toxic ingestion. The significance and possible mechanism for genesis of pseudomelanosis coli is discussed. This case emphasizes the variability in presentation and difficulty in diagnosing long‐term ipecac ingestion by proxy. Ipecac toxicity should be considered in children with unexplained colitis and vomiting.