Methanol Poisoning

In November 2024 six tourists died of suspected Methanol Poisoning in Laos, and several more were hospitalized. Methanol, or methyl alcohol, is an industrial chemical used to thin paints, as a precursor for medley chemicals and for fuel cells. It is passed off as “vodka” (odorless, tasteless, clear) to unsuspecting victims.

Methanol is metaboized by the same pathways as ethanol, but to formaldehyde and formate. Although small amounts of methanol may be found in the body, due to gut bacterial fermentation, methanol poisoning is a life threatening problem. Formate causes a widened anion gap metabolic acidosis, blindness, brain damage and interferes with mitochondrial function resulting in cytotoxic hypoxia.

The treatment for methanol poisoning is fomipazole given 12 hourly intravenously, folate, intravenous fluids and, if necessary, renal replacement therapy. Fomipazole competitively antagonizes the metabolism of methanol by the enzyme alcohol dehyrogenase. If fomipazole is unavailable, ethanol can be given as an emergency measure, intravenously or orally.