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Chapter 109

Chapter 109. Potential Weapons of Biologic, Radiologic, and Chemical Terrorism. Potential Weapons of Terrorism. Bacteria Viruses Biotoxins Chemical weapons Nerve agents and mustard gas Radiologic weapons. Bacteria and Viruses. Anthrax Bacillus anthracis

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Chapter 109

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  1. Chapter 109 Potential Weapons of Biologic, Radiologic, and Chemical Terrorism

  2. Potential Weapons of Terrorism • Bacteria • Viruses • Biotoxins • Chemical weapons • Nerve agents and mustard gas • Radiologic weapons

  3. Bacteria and Viruses • Anthrax • Bacillus anthracis • Aerobic gram-positive bacterium • Dormant form viable for decades • Inhalational, cutaneous, gastrointestinal • Enters the body via the skin or mucous membranes of the respiratory tract • Not transmitted person to person

  4. Inhalational Anthrax • Anthrax spores deposit in alveolar space • Even with treatment, mortality can be high • Clinical latency 2 days-4 weeks • Mature bacilli release toxins • Hemorrhage, edema, and necrosis • If toxins reach critical level, antibiotics cannot prevent death • Initial symptoms • Fever, cough, malaise, weakness • Second stage (2-3 days later) • Sudden increase in fever, severe respiratory distress, septicemia, hemorrhagic meningitis, and shock

  5. Cutaneous Anthrax • Symptoms 1-7 days after exposure to spores • Broken skin most vulnerable • Injury can develop anywhere spores land • Initial lesion – small papule or vesicle associated with local itching • 2 days – lesion enlarges into painless ulcer with necrotic core • 7-10 days after symptoms – black eschar forms, then dries, loosens, and sloughs off by days 12-14 • In most cases lesions resolve without complications or scarring • Treatment is usually successful, but 20% die without antibiotic treatment

  6. Treatment of Anthrax Infection • Respiratory • IV ciprofloxacin • IV doxycycline • Cutaneous • Oral ciprofloxacin • Oral doxycycline

  7. Pre-Exposure Vaccination • BioThrax (formerly known as Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed, or AVA) • Licensed for use in U.S. • Inactivated cell-free preparation • 3 subQ injections 2 weeks apart, then at 6, 12, and 18 months • Persons at high risk should be vaccinated • Military personnel, those who handle animal products from anthrax-endemic areas, including veterinarians, lab workers, others

  8. Postexposure Prophylaxis • Oral antibiotics + anthrax vaccine • Vaccine at 0, 2, and 4 weeks • BioThrax not currently licensed for postexposure

  9. Francisella tularensis (Tularemia) “Rabbit Fever” and “Deer Fly Fever” • Potentially fatal • Skin, mucous membranes, GI tract, or lungs • Acute flu-like symptoms initially • Pneumonia and pleuritis can develop • Treatment • IM streptomycin, gentamicin • Mass outbreak – oral doxycycline or ciprofloxacin

  10. Pneumonic Plague • Transmitted person to person • Acquired by inhaling aerosolized Yersinia pestis • With no treatment, rapidly progresses to respiratory failure and death • Treatment is streptomycin (IM) and gentamicin (IM or IV)

  11. Smallpox • No proven treatment • Highly contagious; fatality rate 30% • ACAM2000 approved vaccine • Imvamune (in clinical trials) • Vaccine produces high level of immunity for 5 to 10 years (before exposure or within a few days of exposure) • Pathogenesis and clinical manifestations • Transmission

  12. Smallpox Vaccine • Adverse effects • Mild effects • Local inflammation, along with swelling and tenderness in regional lymph nodes • Transient symptoms (fever, headache, muscle aches, fatigue) • Moderate to severe • Eczema vaccinatum, generalized vaccinia, progressive vaccinia, postvaccinial encephalitis, fetal vaccinia, possible cardiac effects • Who should not be vaccinated? • Persons with eczema, atopic dermatitis, immunodeficiency, pregnancy • Persons living with someone else

  13. Biotoxins • Botulinum toxin • Clostridium botulinum • Blocks release of acetylcholine from cholinergic neurons • With no treatment, rapidly progresses to paralysis and respiratory failure and death • Classic symptoms – double vision, blurred vision, drooping eyelids, slurred speech, dry mouth, dysphagia, muscle weakness, descending flaccid paralysis

  14. Botulinum Toxin • Treatment • Prolonged supportive care • Fluid/nutritional support • Mechanical ventilation • Immediate infusion of botulinum antitoxin

  15. Ricin • Toxin present in castor beans • Extraction from the “mash” when beans are processed to make castor oil • Powder, pellet, mist, or dissolved in water or a weak acid • Inhibits protein synthesis • Treatment is purely supportive • No antidote for ricin • Vaccine in development

  16. Ricin: Clinical Manifestations • Inhalation • Few hours – coughing, chest tightness, difficulty breathing, nausea, muscle aches • Later – severely inflamed/edematous airway; cyanosis and death can follow • Ingestion • Intestinal and gastric hemorrhage, vomiting, diarrhea; then liver, spleen, kidneys may fail; death within 10-12 days of ingestion • Injection • Severe symptoms and death; impractical route for terrorism

  17. Chemical Weapons • Nerve agents • Produce a state of cholinergic crisis, characterized by excessive muscarinic stimulation and depolarizing neuromuscular blockade • Treatment – mechanical ventilation, atropine, and diazepam

  18. Chemical Weapons • Sulfur mustard (mustard gas) • Alkylating agent and vesicant • Can be vaporized into air or released into water supply • Injuries severe, but fatality rate is low • During WWI – killed less than 5% of victims

  19. Radiologic Weapons • Nuclear bombs • Immediate and delayed impact • Nuclear power plant attack • Radiation exposure in area • Dirty bombs (radiologic dispersion devices) • Radioactive material formulated into powder or pellets

  20. Drugs for Radiation Emergencies • Potassium iodide • Prompt treatment necessary • Penetrate zinc trisodium and penetrate calcium trisodium • Treatment within 24 hours most effective • Prussian blue (Radiogardase)

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