Estimation of the risk of local and systemic effects in infants after ingestion of low-concentrated weak acids from descaling products

Publication date

2022-01-02

Authors

Koppen, ArjenORCID 0000-0002-1753-4637ISNI 0000000393651349
Hunault, Claudine CORCID 0000-0001-7843-6208ISNI 0000000396049679
van Kleef, Regina G.D.M.
van Velzen, Agnes GORCID 0000-0002-4214-2491ISNI 0000000394051740
Westerink, Remco H.S.
de Vries, Irma
de Lange, Dylan WORCID 0000-0002-0191-7270

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Introduction: The accidental ingestion of diluted household descaling products by infants is a phenomenon that poison control centers regularly encounter. Feeding infants with baby milk prepared with water from electric kettles still containing descaler is a common way of exposure. This study aimed to determine the risks related to ingestion of (diluted) descalers by infants. Methods: pH measurements were performed using acetic acid and three different commercially available electric kettle descalers. The pH of different dilutions was measured in the absence or presence of baby milk powder. In addition, an overview was made of pH values of different electric kettle descalers as given by the product information of the manufacturer. Finally, a simple pharmacokinetic (PK) model was used to predict changes in blood pH in infants after ingestion of acetic acid, which is the most commonly used descaler. Results: Several commercially available electric kettle descalers have a pH <2. Even after diluting such descalers up to 10 times the pH can remain low. The addition of milk powder increases the pH of descalers containing weaker acids, with a pH >1.5, while descalers with stronger acids and pH <1 show little pH increase after the addition of milk powder. Finally, a simple PBPK model for the ingestion of acetic acid predicted that the ingestion of larger amounts of acetic acid (>1000 mg) by an infant could result in relevant changes in blood pH. Conclusions: Commercially available electric kettle descaling products may pose a health risk to infants in case of accidental ingestion since the pH of some of these products can be very low, even when diluted 10-times or in the presence of baby milk powder. Oral exposure of infants to the common descaler acetic acid, after accidental preparation of baby milk with cleaning vinegar, will probably not result in serious local effects, but changes in blood pH cannot be excluded when larger amounts of acetic acid are ingested.

Keywords

Descaler, acetic acid, infant, oral exposure, weak acid, Toxicology, Journal Article

Citation

Koppen, A, Hunault, C C, van Kleef, R G D M, van Velzen, A G, Westerink, R H S, de Vries, I & de Lange, D W 2022, 'Estimation of the risk of local and systemic effects in infants after ingestion of low-concentrated weak acids from descaling products', Clinical Toxicology , vol. 60, no. 1, pp. 71-75. https://doi.org/10.1080/15563650.2021.1933511