Title:
1Preparing Our Communities
2Faculty Disclosure
- For Continuing Medical Education (CME) purposes
as required by the American Medical Association
(AMA) and other continuing education credit
authorizing organizations - In order to assure the highest quality of CME
programming, the AMA requires that faculty
disclose any information relating to a conflict
of interest or potential conflict of interest
prior to the start of an educational activity. - The teaching faculty for the BDLS course offered
today have no relationships / affiliations
relating to a possible conflict of interest to
disclose. Nor will there be any discussion of
off label usage during this course.
3Chemical Events
4Overview
- Examples of chemical disasters / terrorism
- Review Classes of Chemical Weapons
- D-I-S-A-S-T-E-R Paradigm for chemicals
5Industrial Accidents
- Bophal, Indial 1984
- 40 Tons of Methyl Isocyanate released
- Population of 900,000
- 6,000-10,000 immediate problems
- Up to 400,000 delayed health issues
6Transportation Events
- Releases of Hazardous Material occur almost daily
in the USA - Events requiring patient decontamination are less
frequent
7Chemicals as Weapons
- First large-scale use in World War I
- Ypres, Belgium
- April 1915
- Chlorine, 168 tons
- 5,000 deaths
- 5 mile front
8Chemical Casualties in WWI
9Terrorist Use of Chemical Weapons
- Tokyo Subway 1995
- Sarin Nerve Agent
- 5,500 victims
- 11 Dead
- 641_at_ St. Lukes International Hospital
- Poor decontamination
- Limited EMS involvement
10Agents of Opportunity
- Toxic industrial chemicals
- Available
- Easier to obtain/target
- Poisoning consumer products
- Examples
- Chlorine Tank Bombs in Iraq
- 1982 Tylenol tampering incident
11Chemical Weapons
12Nerve Agents
- Organophosphate chemicals
- Similar to common insecticides
- Very high lethality
- Liquids that are vaporized to disseminate
- Rapidly toxic if inhaled
- Slower onset with dermal exposure
13Nerve Agent Properties
Sarin Soman Tabun VX Household Insecticide
Aging 5 hours 5 minutes 14 hours 48 hours 12-24 hours
Dermal LD 50 1700 mg 100 mg 1000 mg 10 mg gt 35,000 mg
Inhaled LCt 50 100 mg/m3 50 mg/m3 400 mg/m3 10 mg/m3 gt 250 mg/m3
Volatility High High High Low Very Low
Persistence Low Low Low High Intermediate
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15Acetylcholine Metabolism
16Acetylcholine
Cholinesterase
Organophosphate
17Organophosphate Poisoning Signs and Symptoms
Muscarinic effects
- D defecation
- U urination
- M miosis
- B BRONCHORRHEA,
- BRONCHOSPASM
- E emesis
- L lacrimation
- S secretions/ seizures
Nicotinic effects
M mydriasis T tachycardia W weakness tH
hypertension F fasciculation S seizures
18Acetylcholinesterase Inhibition
19Nerve Agent Exposure
- Low exposure
- Miosis, dim vision, eye pain
- Rhinorrhea
- Dyspnea
- Localized sweating fasiciulation (liquids)
- High exposure
- Immediate loss of consciousness
- Seizures
- Apnea
- Flaccid paralysis
- Vapor effects occur within seconds
- Liquids onset may be delayed
20Nerve Agents Treatment
- ABCs, supportive care
- Antidotes
- Atropine
- 2 mg IV, IM or ET
- Pralidoxine (2-PAM)
- 1 gram slow IV or Autoinjector IM (600 mg)
- Benzodiazepines, PRN for seizures
21Acetylcholine
Cholinesterase
Organophosphate
Atropine
2 PAM
Receptors
Muscarinic
Nicotinic
22Atropine Dosing
- Starting dose - 2 mg
- Maximum cumulative dose - 20 mg
- Insecticide poisoning may require more
- Atropine How much to give?
- Until secretions are drying or dry
- Until ventilation is easy
- If conscious or comfortable
- Do not rely on heart rate or pupil size
23Irritant Gasses
- Common industrial chemicals
- Agent of opportunity
- Combine with moisture to form acids or bases
- Low concentration Minor irritation
- High concentration or prolonged exposure
Chemical burns
24Irritant Gas Site of Injury
Highly water soluble
Ammonia
Moderately water soluble
Chlorine
Poorly water soluble
Phosgene
25Irritant Gases Triage
- Majority Worried well?
- Airway compromise P1, immediate
- Severe shortness of breath- P1, immediate
- Mild SOB, No airway compromise P2, delayed
- Mild mucous membrane symptoms P3, minimal
- Respiratory arrest P4, expectant
26Irritant Gases Treatment
- Dry decontamination usually adequate
- Water for mucous membrane irritation
- ABCs Oxygen PRN
- Early airway management
- highly and moderately water soluble exposures
- Inhaled beta agonist PRN wheezing
- Observation and support
- phosgene 12- 24 hrs?
27Cyanide Compounds
- Widely used in Industry
- Cyanide gas is rapidly lethal
- Oral poisoning is slower
- Odor bitter almonds? musty smell
- Odor not a reliable indicator
28Cyanide in Smoke
- Burning wool, plastic and other materials
releases cyanide gas - May play a significant role in smoke inhalation
and fire-related deaths
29Cyanide Blocks Use of Oxygen
Cyt a cyt a3 Cu
Cyt c
Metabolic Acidosis
30Cyanide - Sources
- Pits of many plants
- Cherries, peaches, almonds, lima beans
- Cassava plant root
- Combustion of carbon -gt cyanide
- Plastics- acrylonitriles
- U.S. sources manufacture 300,000 tons of hydrogen
cyanide annually
31Cyanide Triage
- M-A-S-S Triage
- Likely few critical victims
- Most either dead
- Others with minor exposure
- Good supportive care may save many in absence of
antidote
32Cyanide Treatment
- Remove to Fresh Air
- Oxygen, supportive care
- Antidotes ?
- 3 Drug Antidote Kit
- Hydroxocobalamin
33Fe3 Cyt a3
Amyl Nitrite Inhale for 30 sec
Sodium Nitrite 300mg IV
Sodium Thiosulfate 12.5g IV
34Hydroxocobalamin
- Hydroxocobalamin 5 g IV
- Vit. B12a
- Chelates Cyanide
- Need 501 ratio
- Cyanocobalamin
- Vit. B12 nontoxic!
CN
35Blister Agents/Vesicants
- Sulfur Mustard
- Also - Lewisite, Phosgene oxime
36Mustard
- Most widely used chemical weapon
- Morbidity is higher than mortality
- Garlic odor
- Freezes at 57 F
- Penetrates rubber gloves
37Mustard Mechanism
- Penetrates cells and generates toxic intermediate
- Alkylates
- DNA/RNA, Proteins
- Rapidly dividing cells most susceptible
38Vesicant Symptoms
- Onset of symptoms ?
- High vs low dose
- Topical Eyes, Airway, Skin
- Binds Irreversibly within minutes Fixing
- Systemic effects ?
39Mustard - Skin
- Erythema 2-24 hours
- Small vesicles may coalesce to form bullae
- High dose exposure central zone of coagulation
necrosis
40Vesicant Treatment
- Immediate decontamination (2 minutes)
- Victim may not undergo decontamination since
symptoms delayed - Remove clothes and wash skin with soap and water
- Avoid overhydration fluid losses less than with
thermal burns - Possible antidotes
- N-acetylcystiene (NAC) for Mustard
- Dimercaperol (BAL) for Lewisite
41Incapacitating Agents
- Not meant to be lethal
- Inability to perform ones mission
- BZ (quinuclidinyl benzilate)
- Aerosolized Anticholinergic
- 25x more potent than atropine
- Others possible
- Benzodiazepines
- Opiate derivatives
- Psychedelics
42BZ Treatment
- Control patient
- Consider benzodiazepines
- KEEP VICTIM COOL
- Physostigmine
- 1-2 mg IV
- atropine at bedside
- seizures and cardiac arrhythmias rare
43- D Detection
- I Incident Command
- S Safety Security
- A Assess Hazards
- S Support
- T Triage Treatment
- E Evacuation
- R Recovery
44D Detection
- Clinical presentation
- Detection devices
- Information sources
45Clinical Detection
- Rapid symptom onset
- Multiple victims and civilian panic
- Similar signs and symptoms
- Present at same time
- History of similar site exposure
- Absence of traumatic injuries
- Toxidromes
- will guide treatment at hospital
- Unusual or irritating odors
-
46Chemical Detection Tools
- All have limited ranges of substances
- Chemical Detection Papers
- Concentrated vapors or liquids
- Air Sampling Devices
- Vapors or gasses in low concentration
47Shipping Papers Placarding
- ANY hazardous material being transported must
have documents identifying the HazMat - Large shipments are placarded
- Placard identifies the type of chemical
- Emergency Response Guidebook
- Decodes ID and provides information
- Health and fire hazards
- Protective Equipment needed
- Containment Evacuation
- First aid Emergency response
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49Material Safety Data Sheet
- Required for chemical used in a workplace
- Chemical Name
- Hazard Identification
- Physical Chemical Properties
50NFPA Labels
- Flammability
- Health Hazard
- Instability
- 0 Good
- 4 Very Bad
- Special Hazards
- Oxidizer
- Water Reactive
- Radiation
51NIOSH Guide
- Chemical Name, synonyms
- Chemical and physical properties
- Toxic concentrations in air
- PPE Recommendation
- Information on Health Hazards
52Poison Control Centers
- In depth information about health effects
- In depth treatment information
- Antidote availability
- Toxicologist Consultation
53I Incident Management
- Critical information
- Time of the incident and incident site
- Substances involved
- Method of contamination (vapor or liquid)
- Hazards to health care providers
- Need for PPE decontamination
54S Security
- Scene must be secured to prevent more casualties
- Most (4/5) victims will go to the hospital by
private/ public transportation vehicle!!! - PREVENT THE HOSPITAL FROM BECOMING CONTAMINATED
- all personnel involved in triage
decontamination must wear PPE
55A Assess Hazards
- Ongoing threat of contamination to other
individuals - Secondary devices?
- Several cyanide gas bombs found in subway
restrooms after sarin attack
56S Support
- Know your capabilities/limitations
- Take protective measures
- Isolate
- Evacuate
- Perimeter/site control
- Call in other resources as needed.
57T Treatment
- Decontamination
- A B Cs
- Symptom driven supportive care and antidote
selection
58E Evacuation
- Most victims will self transport
- Consider school buses for minimal pts
- Caution
- Contaminated pts
- Off-gassing
- Open windows
- Use vents
59R Recovery
- Most difficult aspect of a chemical event
- All potentially contaminated areas must be
checked for persistence of chemicals - Psychological sequelae
60Questions?