Title: NERVE AGENT EXPOSURE
1NERVE AGENT EXPOSURE
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2OBJECTIVE
- Identify the specific signs and symptoms of nerve
agent exposure
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3HOW NERVE AGENTS WORK
- Attack nervous system
- nervous system controls body functions through
use of chemicals which act as instructions to
nerves, muscles and glands - Nerve agents interfere with normal chemical
instructions
Nerve synapse
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4NORMAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
- At nerve ending, acetylcholine is released
- Acetylcholine crosses synapse between nerve
endings - if junction with skeletal muscle, muscles cells
contract - if junction with smooth muscles, muscles move
rhythmically - if junction with gland, glandular cells secrete
- Acetylcholine is inactivated by
acetylcholinesterase
Normal activity at nerve synapse
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5HOW NERVE AGENTS WORK
- Nerve agents block acetylcholinesterase so it
cannot destroy acetylcholine - acetylcholine accumulates and continue to
stimulate target nerve - muscles twitch uncontrollably and repetitively
- excess secretions of glands
Nerve agent interferes with normal synapse
activity
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6ROUTES OF EXPOSURE
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7INHALATION
- Nerve agents enter through respiratory system
- Rapidly and effectively enter into blood stream
Respiratory failure chief cause of death after
severe exposure
Nerve agent inhaled into respiratory system
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8DIRECT CONTACT
- Skin or eyes are touched with agent vapor or
liquid - Nerve agents absorbed through skin
- VX remains on skin and absorbed more completely
- GB evaporates quickly, but still a threat
- Scrapes, cuts or other skin damage offer direct
entry points - freshly shaven skin, sunburn, insect bites,
rashes - Eyes most sensitive organ for nerve agent vapor
effects
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9INGESTION
- Ingestion of contaminated food or drink,
incidental hand to mouth or eye contact, smoking - Unlikely that agent will contaminate food or drink
Gastrointestinal system
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10SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Signs are objective evidence of a medical
condition - Signs are observed (runny nose, drooling)
- Symptoms are subjective evidence
- Symptoms are verbally communicated (headache,
eye pain)
Not all signs and symptoms may appear . .
. Dose, duration, and route of exposure make a
difference
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11SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OFNERVE AGENT EXPOSURE
- Miosis
- Dim or blurred vision
- Respiratory trouble
- Difficulty in breathing
- Increased oral/nasal secretions
- Localized sweating
- Nausea and vomiting
- Abdominal cramping
- Involuntary urination or bowel movements
- Heartbeat irregularities
- Generalized weakness
- Twitching or muscles spasms
- Convulsions and coma
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12 OTHER SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OFNERVE AGENT EXPOSURE
- May result from early or mild exposure
- headache
- anxiety
- restlessness
- giddiness
- irritability
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13FACTORS AFFECTING NERVE AGENT SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Signs and symptoms may appear immediately or be
delayed - Reaction time depends on
- type of agent
- amount of agent person has been exposed to
- dose (how much a person has absorbed)
- duration of exposure
- route of exposure
- sensitivity of persons system
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14FACTORS AFFECTING NERVEAGENT SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Immediate if moderate to large amounts
are inhaled if moderate to large amounts are
spilled onto the skin - Delayed if small amounts are involved if agent
has been absorbed through skin in small
localized area
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15INHALATION PEAK EFFECTSFROM NERVE AGENT
- Effects can occur after single breath
- Immediate response within seconds
- Peak effects usually within 15 - 20 minutes
- After about 20 minutes, effects usually
maximized and will not worsen
Respiratory system
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16DIRECT CONTACT PEAK EFFECTSFROM NERVE AGENT
- Absorption may continue for hours even after
decontamination - Effects may not occur for 1 to 18 hours
- effects usually not lethal
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17OTHER POSSIBLE CAUSES
- Signs and symptoms may also be caused by
- epilepsy
- gastroenteritis
- exposure to agricultural insecticides
- emphysema
- strokes
- head trauma
- drug overdose
- heat illnesses
- allergies
- upper respiratory illnesses
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18INITIAL FIRST AID TREATMENT
- Immediate removal from source of exposure
- severity directly proportional to absorbed dose
- Decontamination
- preferred decontamination solution is undiluted
household bleach - Antidote administration with airway management
support as necessary - Must be provided by properly trained and equipped
personnel
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19NERVE AGENT ANTIDOTE
- Atropine
- administered to block receptor sites of
acetylcholine - 2-PAM Chloride
- restores acetylcholinesterase
Two-part nerve agent antidote
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