By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH
07/08/2012 03:43
Kaplan Medical Center in Rehovot warned parents that they should never transfer cleaning fluids to “innocent-looking bottles.”
PHOTO: COURTESY
She was hospitalized in the pediatric intensive care unit, where a food tube was connected directly to her stomach so she could receive food and water for two weeks without it going through her damaged esophagus. Under this care, she improved and was out of danger. She was fortunate that the acidic material had not burned a hole in her esophagus.
The girl’s mother said the girl was with her brother at her aunt’s home and went to the kitchen to take a drink.
She and her little cousin saw a bottle of “mineral water” containing a material the color of diluted raspberry syrup. She poured it into two cups and started to drink it but noticed a terrible taste.
Her cousin almost drank it as well, but she managed to prevent him from doing so.
Dr. Michal Korey, head of the pediatric gastroenterology unit at Kaplan said fat remover is extremely poisonous and can kill. “The girl arrived with burns on her mouth and stomach pains.”
Treatment was carried out under general anesthesia.
Such accidents can be prevented entirely by locking cleaning products and other chemicals and keeping them out of the reach of children.
If such an event occurs, the child must be taken immediately to a hospital emergency room.
Now the child is attached to a food tube, said the mother, “and we feel we are in safe hands,” her mother said.

