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Chemical Agents as Terrorist Weapons

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Title: Chemical Agents as Terrorist Weapons


1
Chemical Agents as Terrorist Weapons
2
Acknowledgements
  • South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium
    (AHEC)
  • Funded by the Health Resources and Services
    Administration.
  • Grant number 1T01HP01418-01-00
  • P.I. David Garr, MD, Executive Director AHEC
  • BT Project Director Beth Kennedy, Associate
    Program Director AHEC
  • Core Team
  • BT Co-director Ralph Shealy, MD
  • BT Project Manager Deborah Stier Carson, PharmD
  • BT CME Director William Simpson, MD
  • IT Coordinator Liz Riccardone, MHS
  • Web Master Mary Mauldin, PhD
  • P.R Coordinator Nicole Brundage, MHA
  • Evaluation Specialist Yvonne Michel, PhD
  • Financial Director Donald Tyner, MBA

3
Acknowledgment
  • This material has been prepared for SC AHEC
    Bioterrorism Training Networkby
  • Ralph M. Shealy, M.D., FACEPCo-Director of SC
    AHEC Bioterrorism Training Network
  • Medical Director for Operations, Charleston
    County EMS
  • Medical Director, Charleston County Rescue Squad

4
Objectives
  • At the conclusion of this presentation, the
    participant will
  • Outline the historical frequency with which
    chemical agents have been used.
  • Describe common civilian situations in which a
    chemical community health emergency may occur.
  • Describe how the physical state of an agents
    influences its effectiveness.
  • List the six general classes of chemical agents.
  • Describe the signs, symptoms, mechanism of
    action, decontamination procedure, and clinical
    management of each class of chemical agents

5
Regarding chemical weapons..
The effect is so deadly to the unprepared that
we can never afford to neglect the
question. General John Pershing Commander
of American Forces in Europe during World War I

6
World War I
  • 1915 Germans released 150 tons of chlorine gas
    from 600 cylinders in Belgium
  • British and French fielded cyanide to a limited
    extent during World War I.
  • 1917 Germans deliver artillery shells containing
    sulfur mustard, causing 20,000 casualties.
  • Russia suffered 500,000 chemical casualties in
    World War I

7
Following World War I
  • Britain used chemicals against Russians and
    mustard against the Afghans north of Khyber Pass.
  • Spain used mustard shells and bombs against the
    Riff tribes of Morocco.
  • Soviet Union used lung irritants against
    tribesmen in Kurdistan
  • Italy under Mussolini used mustard against
    Abyssinian tribesmen
  • Japan used chemicals against China.

8
World War II
  • There was limited use of chemical weapons during
    the World War II
  • Germany used cyanide in the concentration camps.
  • In 1943, Germans bombed an American ship loaded
    with two thousand 100 pound mustard bombs in Bari
    Harbor, Italy, causing 600 military deaths and an
    unknown number of civilian casualties.

9
Recent Decades
  • Egypt used mustard bombs against North Yemen
    royalists in 1963.
  • The United States used defoliants and riot
    control agents in Vietnam and Laos.
  • Chemicals were used against Cambodian refugees
    and Hmong tribesmen of Laos in 1970s and 1980s.
  • The Soviet Union used chemicals in its war
    against Afghanistan.
  • Iraq used mustard and nerve gas against Iran in
    the 1980s.

10
Why Tell This Story?
  • Chemical weapons have been used frequently in the
    past.
  • There is every reason to believe they will be
    used again.
  • Chemical weapons give the underdog an advantage.
  • The effect is so deadly to the unprepared that
    we can never afford to neglect the question.

11
Why would terrorist use chemical agents as
weapons of terrorism?
  • Chemical agents are
  • Cheap.
  • Readily available.
  • Do not require technological sophistication.
  • Do not require high tech delivery systems.
  • Cause fear and panic out of proportion to actual
    physical damage.

12
Recent Japanese Experience
  • In June 1994, a cult group spread Sarin nerve
    gas in the city of Matsumoto. Seven died and
    fifty-six required hospitalization
  • On March 20, 1995, the same group released Sarin
    in the Tokyo subway. Eleven died and 5,500 were
    injured.
  • In both incidents, health professionals were
    injured.

13
Why not do it the easy way?
  • Dangerous chemicals are already available in our
    cities and towns.
  • A terrorist need only utilized chemicals that are
    already here.
  • Exotic chemical agents used as weapons are not
    necessary.

14
More Probable Events
  • South Carolina health professionals are more
    likely to be confronted by
  • Industrial releases
  • Transportation accidents with leakage
  • Agricultural exposures

15
The Bottom Line
  • THIS REALLY CAN HAPPEN TO YOU!

16
Physical States of Chemical Agents
  • Chemical agents in weapons are usually liquids.
  • Aerosols are very small particles of a solid or
    tiny droplets of a liquid suspended in the air.
  • Liquid agents evaporate to form a vapor.
  • Solids and liquids tend to be persistent, while
    vapors and aerosols are non-persistent.

17
Vapors and Gases
  • Vapors and gases attack
  • the lungs
  • the tracheobronchial tree
  • mucous membranes, including the eyes
  • Vapors and gases require special personal
    protective equipment.

18
Six Types of Chemical Agents
  • Lung damaging agents
  • Cyanide (also called blood agents)
  • Vesicants (also called blister agents)
  • Nerve agents
  • Incapacitating agents
  • Riot-control agents

19
Toxidrome (Toxic Syndrome)
  • A toxidrome is a set of clinical signs and
    symptoms by which a class of toxic agents can be
    recognized. Recognition of a toxidrome by
    clinicians can often lead to the identification
    of a causative agent faster and more effectively
    than can the analytical laboratory.

20
Pulmonary Agents
  • Phosgene and chlorine.
  • Attack mucous membranes and respiratory system.
  • Odor of new mown hay.
  • Decontaminate with fresh air and copious water
    irrigation.
  • Supportive care.

21
Cyanide
  • Hyperpnea with flushed skin.
  • Seizures.
  • Respiratory and cardiac arrest.
  • Odor of almonds.
  • Causes cellular asphyxia and profound metabolic
    acidosis.
  • Decontaminate with fresh air and copious water
    irrigation.
  • Use nitrates to liberate cyanide from hemoglobin
    and thiosulfate to facilitate excretion.

22
Vesicants
  • Sodium mustard is the prototype blistering agents
  • Delayed onset of symptoms
  • Attacks skin, eyes, airway, lungs, GI tract, and
    bone marrow
  • Odor of onion, garlic, or mustard.
  • Immediately decontaminate with hypochlorite to
    prevent damage.
  • No specific therapy.

23
Vesicants
  • Lewisite causes immediate pain on contact, which
    encourages immediate escape from exposure and
    decontamination.
  • Lewisite produce skin, eye, and respirator damage
    similar to mustard.
  • Lewisite causes systemic toxicity
  • BAL is the antidote

24
Nerve Agents
  • May cause death within minutes.
  • Inhibit serum acetylcholinesterase.
  • Smooth muscles become hyperactive.
  • Striated muscle becomes flaccid.
  • Secretory glands become hyperactive.
  • Decontamination is with hypochlorite and fluid
    irrigation.
  • Atropine and pralidoxime are antidotes.

25
Incapacitating Agents
  • Impair performance by CNS effects.
  • Anticholinergic agents that have opposite effects
    of nerve agents.
  • Cause decreased concentration, impaired memory,
    loss of judgment, and distortion of perceptions.
  • Physostigmine is a specific antidote.

26
Riot Control Agents
  • Known as tear gas, Mace, and pepper spray.
  • Burning and pain on exposed mucous membranes and
    skin, eye pain and tearing, burning nostrils, and
    respiratory discomfort
  • Occasional deaths with prolonged exposure to high
    concentrations in a confined space.
  • Effects typically brief and self limiting.

27
Decontamination
  • The reduction or removal of a chemical agent.
  • Achieved by physical means, such as washing, or
    by chemical neutralization or detoxification
  • The single most effective decontamination
    procedure is the removal of contaminated
    garments.
  • The most important and most effective
    decontamination is done within the first minute
    or two after exposure.
  • Effective early decontamination can mean the
    difference between survival and death.

28
Summary
  • Chemical agents have frequently been used in
    warfare by many nations.
  • There are many civilian situations that may
    result in a chemical community health emergency.
  • There are six general classes of chemical agents,
    each with its own toxidrome, decontamination
    procedure, and clinical management.
  • Preparation is the best defense against a
    terrorist attack with chemical agents.

29
Acknowledgements
  • This presentations borrows heavily from
  • The Medical Management of Chemical Casualties
    Handbook, Third Edition, produced by the U.S.
    Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical
    Defense.
  • Emergency Medicine, Fourth Edition, produced by
    the American College of Emergency Physicians and
    edited by Judith Tintinalli, M.D.

30
  • Questions?

31
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