White 2002 - Chemical and biological weapons Flashcards

1
Q

Summarise White 2002

A

Published in BJA

Commentary on chemical and biological agents and their treatment

Covers:
- Factors affecting the severity of an attack
- Initial management of casualties
- Agents
- Chemical and biological weapons
- Biological weapons
- Conclusions

Odd paper very focussed on anaesthetists

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2
Q

Discuss the initial management of casualties in a CBW attack

A

Triage
- Discusses triage classifications
- Classifications can change

Decontamination
- Ambulance reception area
- Showers or specific treatments
- Need full PPE

Table 1 shows various weapons and their decontamination/PPE requirements

Protection of staff
- Decontamination prior to arrival
- PPE
- Isolation

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3
Q

What factors affect the casualty rate of a CBW attack as per White 2002?
As shown in figure 1

A

Deployment
Agent
Population

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4
Q

Outline the types of chemical agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Any chemical can be used but some have been designed for the job

Nerve agents (eg sarin, VX)
- Extremely toxic
- Odourless, tasteless, colourless
- Cholinesterase inhibitors
- Atropine and pralidoxime

Blistering agents (eg. mustard gas)
- chemical burns and blistering
- Respiratory failure, blindness, vomiting

Choking agents (eg. Chlorine, phosgene)
- Respiratory distress then toxic pulmonary oedema

Blood agents (eg. hydrogen cyanide)
- inhibit cytochrome oxidases etc
- metabolic acidosis, hypoxia and cardiac arrest

Toxins (eg. botulinium)

Tear gas
- Sensory irritants
- Often death occurs due to accident while incapacitated

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5
Q

Outline the nature of biological agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Low dose release into unprotected population with low immunity
Consistent rapid, high rate of fatality
Easy to mass produce
Difficult to treat

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6
Q

Outline the nature of toxin agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Only 17 have the utility to be used on the battlefield

Includes
Botulininum, Ricin, Saxitoxin

Botulinum:
- More toxic than sarin
- Permanent inhibition of acetylecholine release
- Presents 1-4 days post exposure
- Bulbar palsy followed by symmetrical descending weakness and resp failure
- Week to months of supportive treatment
- Antitoxin available but efficacy unknown

Ricin
- Easily produced from commercial production of castor oil
- Abdo pain and diarrhoea
- Inhalation rapidly fatal
- Supportive treatment
- Interrupts protein synthesis

Saxitoxin
- Found in shellfish
- 20 times more lethal than sarin
- Inhibitor of sodium channels
- GI upset then bulbar palsy and respiratory and cardiovascular failure
- Supportive treatment

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7
Q

Outline the nature of nerve agents used in CBW incidents as per White 2002

A

Highly potent anticholinesterases

Related to organophosphates

Acetylcholine accumulates at muscarinic, nicotinic and CNS synapses

Salivation, bradycardia, miosis, vomiting, urinary and faecal incontinence
Weakness and paralysis

Incapacitates in 1-10 mins, death in 1-15 mins

Worse if inhaled

Triphasic clinical syndrome
1. Cholinergic phase
2. Intermediate syndrome
3. Delayed polyneuropathy

Treatments:
Pyridostigmine - pretreatment
Atropine - antagonises muscarinic effects
Oximes - reverse nicotinic effects

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8
Q

Outline the types of blood agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Hydrogen cyanide and cyanogen chloride

Metabolic poisons

Fatal within 15 minutes

Dizziness, confusion, tachypnoea following by seizure, coma and arrest

Sodium thiosulphate and sodium nitrate

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9
Q

Outline the types of blistering agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Arsenicals and mustards

Mustard gas odourless at lethal concentrations

Latent period followed by symptoms

Diffuse cutaneous oedema with first degree burns
Manage as burns

Ocular symptoms very common - delayed onset eye pain, blurred vision and lacrimation
Copious irrigation with saline

Respiratory symptoms, sloughed respiratory epithelium
May need ventilation

Bone marrow supression - primarily leukopenia, with anaemia and thrombocytopenia

Sodium thiosulphate, vitamin E, dexamethasone

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10
Q

Outline the types of choking agents used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Chlorine and phosgene

Both mediate by formation of hydrochloric acid

Chlorine tends to affect eyes
Phosgene works its way into lower airways causing severe pulmonary oedema

Supportive management
Cortiosteroids

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11
Q

Outline the types of biological weapons used in CBW attacks from White 2002

A

Anthrax
- Three presentations
- Cutaneous - pruritic papules, vesicles then gross oedema
- Gastrointestinal - GI ulcers and GI Bleeding
- Systemic - malaise, fatigue, myalgia
- Cipro and doxy

Plague
- Bubonic/pneumonic
- Streptomycin/gent/doxy/chloramphenicol

VHF
- Multiple pathogens
- Malaise followed by vasculopathy and coagulopathy
Supportive treatment

Viral encephalitis
Tularaemia
Smallpox
Glanders
Q fever

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