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Chemical Weapons Part 1
Nerve Agents, G-series: Tabun, Sarin, Soman
Background: The
organophosphate nerve agents tabun (GA), sarin (GB), soman (GD), and
cyclosarin (GF) are among the most toxic chemical warfare agents known.
Together they comprise the G-series nerve agents, thus named because
German scientists first synthesized them, beginning with GA in 1936. GB
was discovered next in 1938, followed by GD in 1944 and finally the more
obscure GF in 1949. The only other known nerve agent, O-ethyl
S-(2-diisopropylaminoethyl) methylphosphonothioate (VX), is discussed in a
separate article of this journal.
G-series nerve agents share a number of common physical and chemical
properties. At room temperature, the G-series nerve agents are volatile
liquids, making them a serious risk for 2 types of exposure: dermal
contact with liquid nerve agent or inhalation of nerve agent vapor. GB is
the most volatile of these agents and evaporates at the same rate as
water; GD is the next most volatile. Dispersal devices or an explosive
blast also can aerosolize nerve agents. Nerve agent vapors are denser than
air, making them particularly hazardous for persons in low areas or
underground shelters. GB and GD are colorless, while GA ranges from
colorless to brown. GB is odorless, while GA and GD smell fruity.
Because nerve agents are soluble in fat and water, they are absorbed
readily through the eyes, respiratory tract, and skin. Vapor agents
penetrate the eyes first, producing localized effects, then pass into the
respiratory tract, with more generalized effects when the exposure is
greater. Liquid agents penetrate the skin at the point of contact,
producing localized effects followed by deeper penetration and generalized
effects if the dose is large enough. Accordingly, the lethality of these
agents varies with the route of exposure. For inhalational exposures to
GB, the lethal concentration time product in 50% of the exposed population
is 75-100 mg?min/m3. For dermal exposures, the lethal dose in
50% of the exposed population is 1700 mg.
Pathophysiology: Nerve agents act by first binding and
then irreversibly inactivating acetylcholinesterase (AChE), producing a
toxic accumulation of acetylcholine (ACh) at muscarinic, nicotinic, and
CNS synapses. Excessive ACh at these cholinergic receptors may account for
the spectrum of clinical effects observed in nerve agent exposure. At
muscarinic receptors, nerve agents cause miosis, glandular hypersecretion
(salivary, bronchial, lacrimal, bronchoconstriction, vomiting, diarrhea,
urinary and fecal incontinence, bradycardia). At nicotinic receptors in
skin, nerve agents cause sweating, and on skeletal muscle, they cause
initial defasciculation followed by weakness and flaccid paralysis. At CNS
cholinergic receptors, nerve agents produce irritability, giddiness,
fatigue, lethargy, amnesia, ataxia, seizures, coma, and respiratory
depression.
Nerve agents also cause tachycardia and hypertension via stimulation of
the adrenal medulla. They also appear to bind nicotinic, cardiac
muscarinic, and glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors
directly, suggesting that they may have additional mechanisms of action
yet to be defined. Nerve agents also antagonize gamma-aminobutyric acid
(GABA) neurotransmission, which in part may mediate seizures and CNS
neuropathology.
Clinical effects of nerve agents depend on the route and amount of
exposure. The effect of inhalational exposure to nerve agent vapor in turn
depends on the vapor concentration and the time of exposure. Exposure to
low concentrations of nerve agent vapor produces immediate ocular
symptoms, rhinorrhea, and in some patients, dyspnea. These ocular effects
are secondary to the localized absorption of GB vapor across the outermost
layers of the eye, causing lacrimal gland stimulation (tearing), pupillary
sphincter contraction (miosis), and ciliary body spasm (ocular pain). As
the exposure increases, dyspnea and gastrointestinal symptoms ensue.
Exposure to high concentrations of nerve agent vapor causes immediate
loss of consciousness, followed shortly by convulsions, flaccid paralysis,
and respiratory failure. These generalized effects are caused by the rapid
absorption of nerve agent vapor across the respiratory tract, producing
maximal inhibition of AChE within seconds to minutes of exposure. Nerve
agent vapor is expected to have had its full effect by the time victims
present to the emergency care system.
The effect of dermal exposure to liquid nerve agent depends on the
anatomic site exposed, ambient temperature, and dose of nerve agent.
Percutaneous absorption of nerve agent typically results in localized
sweating caused by direct nicotinic effect on the skin, followed by
muscular fasciculations and weakness as the agent penetrates deeper and a
nicotinic effect is exerted on underlying muscle. In moderate dermal
exposures, vomiting and/or diarrhea occur. Vomiting and/or diarrhea soon
after exposure are ominous signs. With further absorption, full-blown
systemic or remote effects occur.
Because percutaneous absorption takes time, the onset of symptoms in
dermal exposures usually is delayed. Even with thorough decontamination,
symptoms may not occur until several hours have elapsed if some agent was
absorbed prior to decontamination. A small droplet of GB liquid on the
skin may not produce any clinical effects for as long as 18 hours
postexposure. A large droplet of GB liquid rapidly causes loss of
consciousness, seizures, paralysis, and apnea but only after a brief
asymptomatic period typically lasting 10-30 minutes.
Miosis cannot be used as a marker for the severity of nerve agent
exposure, because it depends on the route and time course of exposure. In
inhalational exposures, miosis occurs early and frequently. In such
exposures, normal pupil size is predictive of nontoxicity. However, in
dermal exposures at sites distinct from the eye, miosis occurs later in
the progression of toxicity and depends on whether significant systemic
absorption has occurred.
Nerve agents cause death via respiratory failure, which in turn is
caused by increased airway resistance (bronchorrhea, bronchoconstriction),
respiratory muscle paralysis, and most importantly, loss of central
respiratory drive.
Two chemical properties of nerve agents also provide the rationale for
effective measures against them. First, nerve agents are hydrolyzed
readily by alkaline solutions, which explains why soap and water or
hypochlorite solutions are effective skin decontaminants. Second, the bond
between the nerve agent and AChE takes time to chemically mature and
become a stable covalent bond. During the period immediately after nerve
agent binding to enzyme, the bond is vulnerable to disruption by agents
called oximes. This aging phenomenon forms the pharmacologic basis for the
effective use of the antidote, pralidoxime, during this early window of
opportunity before the bond becomes permanent.
Frequency:
- In the US: Nerve agent exposure is extremely rare
in the US.
- Internationally: Despite international attempts to
control the proliferation of chemical weapons, nerve agents reportedly
still are stockpiled by the militaries of several countries.
To date, no large-scale military deployment of a nerve agent has
occurred during war, although indirect evidence exists that the Iraqi
military used GB against Kurdish villagers in 1988 as well as during the
Iraq-Iran War.
In 1994, the Japanese terrorist cult, Aum Shinrikyo, synthesized and
then deployed GB against civilians at Matsumoto, Japan, killing 8
people. The following year, the same terrorist group released GB again
in the infamous Tokyo Subway sarin attack, killing 13 and sending 5500
persons to local hospitals.
CLINICAL
History:
Symptoms of nerve
agent toxicity vary with the type of cholinergic receptor affected,
muscarinic, nicotinic, or CNS.
- Respiratory - Dyspnea, cough, chest tightness, wheezing
- Neurologic - Headache, weakness, fasciculations, extremity numbness,
decreased level of consciousness (LOC), vertigo, dizziness,
convulsions
- Ophthalmic - Eye pain, blurred vision, dim vision, conjunctival
injection, tearing
- Ear, nose, throat - Rhinorrhea
- Gastrointestinal - Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, tenesmus, fecal
incontinence
- Genitourinary - Urinary incontinence
- Psychological - Agitation
Physical: Signs of nerve agent toxicity also vary with
the type of cholinergic receptor affected.
- Respiratory - Tachypnea, wheezing, respiratory failure
- Cardiovascular - Bradycardia, tachycardia
- Neurologic - Decreased LOC, weakness, fasciculations,
seizure
- Ophthalmic - Miosis, tearing, conjunctival injection
Causes: Nerve agent exposure may occur as a result of
an industrial accident involving nerve agent production, accidental
release from a military stockpile, chemical warfare, and chemical
terrorism.
Lab Studies:
- RBC cholinesterase and plasma cholinesterase
(pseudocholinesterase) appear to have a physiologic role as buffers
for the tissue AChEs found in the nervous system. These 2 enzymes are
clinically important, because their activities can be assayed directly
in blood, whereas the tissue cholinesterases cannot. Activity of RBC
cholinesterase is considered a more sensitive indicator of nerve agent
toxicity than that of plasma cholinesterase.
- Despite the clinical use of RBC cholinesterase, keep certain
limitations in mind when using the activity of RBC cholinesterase to
interpret nerve agent effects.
- Activity of RBC cholinesterase is subject to some individual
variation.
- Without establishing the baseline value of RBC cholinesterase in
individuals, measuring the percent reduction in enzyme activity is
difficult.
- Poor correlation exists between clinical effects of nerve agents
and the percent reduction of RBC cholinesterase activity at low-dose
exposures. Accordingly, RBC cholinesterase activity always must be
correlated with the patient's clinical status and never should
determine patient disposition alone.
- A good guideline is that severe clinical effects tend to correlate
with a 20-25% reduction in RBC cholinesterase activity.
- A rising RBC cholinesterase level indicates that no further nerve
agent absorption is occurring and that the enzyme is regenerating. RBC
cholinesterase is replaced fully every 120 days at the natural
regeneration rate of RBCs (approximately 1%/d).
- Draw blood for RBC cholinesterase activity level prior to
administering oxime antidotes.
- Respiratory impairment in nerve agent intoxication produces expected
derangement in arterial blood gas values, including a reduction in
PaO2.
- Hypokalemia has been reported in GB intoxication, although the
mechanism is unclear.
Imaging Studies:
- Chest x-ray may be helpful in treating patients with significant
pulmonary symptoms.
Other Tests:
- A number of electrocardiographic changes have been reported in nerve
agent intoxication, including bradycardia and varying degrees of
atrioventricular block (first through third degree) from the direct
muscarinic effect on the heart and tachycardia and ventricular
dysrhythmias from hypoxia. Nerve agent toxicity has been associated with
PR interval prolongation, QT prolongation, and torsade de
pointes.
- Bedside EEG monitoring is recommended for patients paralyzed from
nerve agent exposure, because paralysis from nicotinic effects of these
agents may mask seizures from CNS effects.
TREATMENT
Prehospital Care:
- Personal protective equipment
- A key consideration in prehospital care is protection of emergency
medical service personnel from exposure to the nerve agent until
victims are decontaminated thoroughly or the need for decontamination
is excluded.
- Personnel should wear personal protective equipment including
protective suits, heavy butyl rubber gloves, and air-supplied
respirators (eg, self-contained breathing apparatus) when entering a
scene posing a nerve agent vapor risk or when treating victims exposed
to liquid nerve agents.
- Goals of decontamination are to prevent further absorption of
nerve agents by victims and to prevent the spread of nerve agents to
others. If possible, decontamination should take place at the site of
exposure.
- Decontamination of liquid nerve agent exposure consists of
removing all clothing, copiously irrigating with water to physically
remove the nerve agent, and then washing the skin with an alkaline
solution of soap and water or 0.5% hypochlorite solution (made by
diluting household bleach 1:10) to chemically neutralize the nerve
agent. Avoid hot water, strong detergents, and vigorous scrubbing,
since they tend to enhance nerve agent absorption.
- Exposure to nerve agent vapor does not require
decontamination.
- Airway, breathing, and circulation
- Patients with signs and symptoms of moderate nerve agent toxicity
require supplemental oxygen, pulse oximetry, cardiac monitoring, and
intravenous (IV) access.
- Early endotracheal intubation and ventilatory support are critical
in patients with manifestations of severe toxicity (eg,
unconsciousness, seizures, paralysis, apnea), since respiratory
failure is the principle cause of death in nerve agent exposure.
Emergency Department Care:
- Personal protective equipment: Emergency department (ED) personnel
should wear personal protective equipment similar to that worn by
prehospital care personnel until adequate decontamination of victims is
assured or the need for decontamination is eliminated.
- Goals of decontamination are to prevent further absorption of
nerve agent by victims and to prevent the introduction of nerve agent
into the clean ED environment.
- Liquid nerve agent exposure requires formal decontamination as
outlined in Prehospital
Care before victims enter the ED.
- No decontamination is necessary in vapor exposure.
- Previously reported terrorist episodes have demonstrated that
victims who physically can flee the scene frequently bypass emergency
medical services (EMS) and go directly to the nearest ED.
- Airway, breathing, and circulation
- The rapidity with which nerve agents act necessitates rapid
medical response.
- Moderately symptomatic patients require supplemental oxygen, pulse
oximetry, cardiac monitoring, and early IV access.
- Early endotracheal intubation and ventilatory support is paramount
in treating patients with manifestations of severe toxicity.
- Suction is an important adjunct to airway management, since airway
secretions may be profuse in these patients.
- Rapid sequence intubation may be required for airway treatment of
patients with respiratory failure caused by nerve agent exposure. If
rapid sequence intubation is used, avoid succinylcholine, since it is
metabolized by plasma cholinesterase, leading to markedly prolonged
paralysis.
- Because atropine administered to hypoxic patients is associated
with an increased risk of ventricular fibrillation, administer it
after initial oxygenation and ventilation if possible.
Consultations: Consultation with a toxicologist via a
regional poison control center may be helpful.
MEDICATION
Reversal of nerve agent toxicity depends
on the prompt parenteral administration of the 2 antidotes, atropine and
pralidoxime. Although IV administration of these antidotes is
preferred, this may not be practical in combat situations or civilian mass
casualty incidents. The US military Mark I kit contains 2 IM Autoinjectors, 1 with atropine 2 mg and the other with pralidoxime 600 mg,
to be administered simultaneously in the event of nerve gas exposure. The
recommended number of MARK I kits to be administered varies from 1-3 and
depends on the route of exposure, severity of clinical effects, and
elapsed time after exposure. US military personnel deployed during the
Persian Gulf War carried 3 Mark I kits per person. While seizures
complicating nerve agent exposure often respond to IV atropine and
pralidoxime, they also may require IV benzodiazepines titrated to
effect. Another common complication of vapor nerve agent exposure
is ocular pain, which may be treated effectively with a mild,
mydriatic-cycloplegic ophthalmic solution (eg, 0.5% tropicamide). Atropine
or homatropine ophthalmic solution also can be used to treat ocular pain,
but these agents tend to exacerbate visual impairment. Pretreatment
with pyridostigmine before exposure to GA, GD, and GF may improve
survival. No evidence supports the chemoprophylactic use of pyridostigmine
against GB or VX. A number of other novel treatments currently are
under investigation. Newer H-series oximes and dioximes (HI-6, HLo7) have
greater ability to reactivate phosphorylated AChE. These agents
demonstrate greater efficacy against all nerve agents (particularly GD) in
animal studies and have direct antimuscarinic and antinicotinic actions to
antagonize the effects of nerve agents. Other promising treatments
currently under investigation include exogenous cholinesterase and the use
of human monoclonal antibodies against nerve agents, both of which
scavenge nerve agents and prevent them from binding to tissue AChE.
Drug Category: Anticholinergics -- Act
directly on smooth muscles and secretory glands innervated by cholinergic
nerves to block muscarinic effects of excess ACh.
Drug Name
|
Atropine (Isopto, Atropair,
Atropisol) -- Initial DOC for symptomatic victims of nerve agent
exposure; acts via muscarinic receptors to reverse
bronchoconstriction, bronchorrhea, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting,
and bradycardia; appears to be involved in stopping seizure
activity. Because atropine does not act on nicotinic receptors, has
no effect on muscle weakness or paralysis. The most important
therapeutic endpoints are drying of respiratory secretions, reversal
of bronchoconstriction, and reversal of bradycardia; pupillary
response and tachycardia are not useful measures of adequate
atropinization; >20 mg rarely is needed in first 24 h, unlike in
organophosphate insecticide poisoning where up to 200 mg may be
required; atropine almost never is required beyond 24 h
postexposure.
|
| Adult Dose |
2 mg IV q2-5min, titrated to
effect; although IV is preferred, also may be administered IM/ETT in
similar doses
|
| Pediatric Dose |
0.02 mg/kg IV q2-5min, titrated to
effect; 0.1 mg minimum dose
|
| Contraindications |
Documented hypersensitivity
|
| Interactions |
Coadministration with other
anticholinergics or TCAs may have an additive anticholinergic effect
|
| Pregnancy |
C - Safety for use during pregnancy
has not been established.
|
| Precautions |
Caution in patients with coronary
artery disease, dysrhythmias, congestive heart failure,
hypertension, peritonitis, ulcerative colitis, hiatal hernia with
reflux esophagitis, prostatic hypertrophy, and Down syndrome In
setting of true nerve agent toxicity, benefits of antidotal atropine
are expected to outweigh any risks | Drug
Category: Oximes -- Reactivate AChEs, which have been
inactivated from phosphorylation by nerve agents (or other compounds, such
as organophosphate pesticides).
Drug Name
|
Pralidoxime chloride (2-PAM Cl,
Protopam) -- Reverses skeletal muscle weakness by reactivating AChE;
acts by disrupting covalent bond between nerve agent and AChE before
it becomes permanent. Bonds between different nerve agents and AChE
have various aging periods. The half-time of the aging reaction for
GD is approximately 2 min, for GB it is 5 h, and for GA it is 13 h.
Accordingly, administer pralidoxime IV as early as possible (ideally
concurrently with atropine). Excreted rapidly and almost completely
unchanged by the kidneys. Administration over 30-40 min
minimizes adverse effects (eg, hypertension, headache, blurred
vision, epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting).
| Adult Dose |
1-2 g IV; although absorption is
slower, also may administer IM
|
| Pediatric Dose |
15-25 mg/kg IV
|
| Contraindications |
Documented hypersensitivity
|
| Interactions |
Use barbiturates with caution
because action of barbiturates is potentiated by AChE inhibitors;
antagonism with neostigmine, pyridostigmine, and edrophonium;
morphine, theophylline, aminophylline, succinylcholine, reserpine,
and phenothiazines can worsen condition of patients poisoned by
organophosphate insecticides or nerve agents (do not administer)
|
| Pregnancy |
C - Safety for use during pregnancy
has not been established.
|
| Precautions |
Rapid injection can cause
tachycardia, laryngospasm, muscle rigidity, pain at injection site,
blurred vision, diplopia, impaired accommodation, dizziness,
drowsiness, nausea, tachycardia, hypertension, and hyperventilation;
can precipitate myasthenia crisis in patients with myasthenia gravis
and muscle rigidity in normal volunteers; decrease in renal function
increases drug levels in blood because 2-PAM is excreted in urine;
can produce transient elevation in creatine phosphokinase; 1 of 6
patients has an elevation in SGOT and/or SGPT | | Drug Category: Benzodiazepines -- Believed to exert
antiseizure effect by enhancing binding of the major CNS inhibitory
neurotransmitter, GABA, to A-type GABA receptors in the CNS, reducing
depolarization of neurons and preventing generation and spread of
seizures.
Drug Name
|
Diazepam (Valium, Diazemuls,
Diastat) -- Indicated for treatment of seizures associated with
nerve agent toxicity. Depresses all levels of CNS function by
increasing activity of the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA.
|
| Adult Dose |
5-10 mg IV q10-20min, titrated to
effect; may repeat in 2-4 h prn; not to exceed 30 mg/8 h
|
| Pediatric Dose |
0.05-0.3 mg IV over 2-3 min
q15-30min, titrated to effect; may repeat in 2-4 h prn; not to
exceed 10 mg
|
| Contraindications |
Documented hypersensitivity
|
| Interactions |
Coadministration with alcohol,
barbiturates, phenothiazines, and MAOIs increases CNS toxicity and
respiratory depression
|
| Pregnancy |
D - Unsafe in pregnancy
|
| Precautions |
Use diazepam with caution in
setting of nerve agent toxicity or CNS depressants, since may lead
to further respiratory depression; caution in hepatic failure or
hypoalbuminemia, since may result in toxic diazepam
levels | Drug Category:
Mydriatic-cycloplegics -- Dilate iris and relax ciliary
muscle, reversing ocular pain and miosis of nerve agent toxicity.
Drug Name
|
Tropicamide (Mydriacyl, Tropicacyl)
-- Anticholinergic compound that reverses miosis and relieves ocular
pain in nerve agent toxicity. Acts by blocking cholinergic
stimulation of sphincter muscle of iris and ciliary muscle. When
applied as weaker preparation (0.5%), causes pupillary dilation
(mydriasis); when applied as stronger preparation (1%), results in
loss of accommodation (cycloplegia). Acts rapidly; effect is
relatively short lasting.
|
| Adult Dose |
1-2 gtt of 0.5% solution to eye;
may repeat in 5 min; patients with heavily pigmented irides may
require larger doses
|
| Pediatric Dose |
Not established
|
| Contraindications |
Documented hypersensitivity; in
patients with primary glaucoma or patients with narrow anterior
chamber angles
|
| Interactions |
None reported
|
| Pregnancy |
C - Safety for use during pregnancy
has not been established.
|
| Precautions |
Caution in older patients, since
increased intraocular pressure is more likely to be encountered in
this age group; estimate depth of angle of anterior chamber before
administration; advise patients not to engage in hazardous activity
(ie, driving) while pupils are dilated; anticholinergic effects may
cause CNS disturbances in infants and children; compression of
lacrimal sac with a finger for 2-3 min after administration
decreases systemic absorption | Drug
Category: Cholinesterase inhibitors -- Temporarily bind
and inhibit AChE, thus blocking subsequent binding of certain nerve agents
to AChE. Although usually used to treat myasthenia gravis or reverse
nondepolarizing neuromuscular blockade, also may be useful as
chemoprophylactic agents when administered before exposure to certain
nerve agents.
Drug Name
|
Pyridostigmine (Mestinon, Regonol)
-- Orally available cholinesterase inhibitor, which may be useful as
chemoprophylactic agent when administered prior to exposure to GA,
GD, and GF. This recommendation is based on animal studies; little
information is available regarding the efficacy of pyridostigmine
chemoprophylaxis in humans. Only effective in preventing peripheral
(non-CNS) effects of nerve agents; since it exists in an ionized
form (quaternary amine), does not readily pass into CNS and thus
cannot prevent nerve agent?induced CNS injury; no evidence
demonstrates that pretreatment before exposure to GB or VX is
effective.
|
| Adult Dose |
30 mg PO q8h prior to nerve agent
exposure for 3 wk total
|
| Pediatric Dose |
Not established
|
| Contraindications |
Documented hypersensitivity;
bronchial asthma; mechanical intestinal obstructions; mechanical
urinary obstructions
|
| Interactions |
Increases effects of depolarizing
neuromuscular blockers; increases toxicity of edrophonium
|
| Pregnancy |
C - Safety for use during pregnancy
has not been established.
|
| Precautions |
Inhibits breakdown of ACh;
resulting cholinergic excess may lead to muscarinic and nicotinic
adverse effects in dose-dependent manner, similar to spectrum of
toxicity observed with nerve agents; muscarinic adverse effects
include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramping,
hypersalivation, bronchorrhea, and miosis; approximately 50% of
military personnel taking prophylactic pyridostigmine during the
Gulf War at the dose listed above experienced flatus, loose stools,
and abdominal cramping; 5-30% experienced urinary frequency and
urgency; <5% suffered headaches, rhinorrhea, diaphoresis, and
paresthesias; muscarinic adverse effects are reversible with
atropine; potential nicotinic adverse effects include diaphoresis,
muscle cramps, fasciculations, and weakness; effects of cholinergic
excess can be controlled to some extent by careful selection of
dose; bromide component may cause skin rash; long-term effects of
pyridostigmine administration to healthy individuals is
unclear |
Further Inpatient Care:
- Severely poisoned patients in respiratory arrest may need
ventilatory assistance for several hours despite aggressive antidotal
therapy. Patients in critical condition caused by complications of nerve
agent poisoning, such as hypoxic brain injury, may require prolonged
intensive care.
Further Outpatient Care:
- Toxic effects of GB usually peak within minutes to hours and resolve
within 24 hours.
- Patients who inhale nerve agent vapor suffer peak toxic effects
before arriving in the ED.
- Patients who present to the ED with only ocular findings following
vapor exposure can be discharged home safely. Refer patients
discharged home with miosis or other eye complaints to an
ophthalmologist.
- Onset of signs and symptoms in patients with dermal exposure to
liquid GB may be delayed for as long as 18 hours.
- Observe these patients in the ED or hospital for at least 18
hours.
- As discussed in Lab
Studies, RBC or plasma cholinesterase activity alone never should
determine disposition and always must be correlated with the patient's
clinical status.
- A variety of neurobehavioral symptoms may persist in patients
exposed to nerve agents. Such patients may benefit from neurologic
consultation.
Transfer:
- Transfer patients only after performing appropriate decontamination
and appropriately addressing the need for an airway and
ventilation.
Complications:
- Little data are available describing long-term effects of nerve
agent exposure.
- Structural brain damage in animals has been attributed to nerve
agent–induced seizures. A consensus panel of experts concluded that
structural brain damage does not occur until seizures have lasted longer
than 45 minutes.
- Miosis-related visual problems in dim light and mental lapses have
been reported as long as 6-8 months after nerve agent exposure.
- Some information about long-term sequelae has emerged from studies
of victims of the Tokyo Subway GB attack. Postural imbalance has been
reported 8 months after exposure to GB. Fatigue, asthenia, nausea,
shoulder stiffness, and blurred vision have been reported 3 years after
exposure to GB.
Prognosis:
- Patients who survive nerve agent exposure have a good
prognosis.
Patient Education:
- Counsel patients who are discharged home with miosis to avoid
driving at night.
Medical/Legal Pitfalls:
- A number of pitfalls may occur in the assessment and treatment of
patients with exposure to nerve agents.
- The most serious mistake is failure to recognize signs and symptoms
of cholinergic excess as being caused by nerve agent toxicity. This may
lead to further contamination of emergency care personnel and
life-threatening delays in emergency medical care of the primary
victims.
- Once nerve agent poisoning is diagnosed, another pitfall lies in
using the ocular finding of miosis to interpret the severity of exposure
or to guide atropine therapy (except when exposure is clearly via vapor
and miosis is absent). Similarly, overreliance on the reduction in RBC
cholinesterase activity levels can lead to false impressions about the
severity of exposure.
- Another pitfall in assessment may occur when emergency care
personnel fail to suspect occult seizures in paralyzed patients. Since
prolonged seizures lead to structural brain injury, these patients
require bedside EEG monitoring.
- Major mistakes also may occur in treatment. The most devastating
error is for first responders to fail to adequately protect themselves
from nerve agent exposure before entering the scene, turning these
individuals into victims. EMS personnel always must follow the edict of
first ensuring that the scene is safe.
- Failure to adequately decontaminate victims of liquid nerve agent
exposure at the scene can lead to contamination of both prehospital and
hospital personnel and equipment.
- When emergency care personnel fail to recognize the rapidity with
which nerve agents act, critical interventions (eg, airway management)
may be delayed.
- Another potential error occurs when emergency care providers fail to
appreciate the time course of liquid nerve agent exposure. They may fail
to recognize that in low-dose exposure to liquid nerve agent, signs and
symptoms of cholinergic excess may not appear for up to 18 hours.
Conversely, in high-dose liquid nerve agent exposure, a brief
asymptomatic period after exposure of 10-30 minutes may occur before the
patient acutely deteriorates.
- Administration of the antidote atropine before hypoxemia is treated
may cause ventricular fibrillation. Administration of succinylcholine as
part of a rapid sequence intubation protocol may lead to markedly
prolonged paralysis. Always administer the antidote pralidoxime as early
as possible, since it is ineffective after the aging period has
elapsed.
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