Title: The Chemical Incident
1The Chemical Incident
- Management of Chemical Casualties
2Hospital Provider Management of Chemical Agent
Casualties
3Chemical Warfare AgentsTerminal Objective
- Describe types of chemical warfare agents
- Recognize signs and symptoms of exposure
- Describe management of chemical agent attack
victims
4Chemical Warfare AgentsHistorical Perspective
- Chemicals used in military operations to kill,
injure, or incapacitate - Battlefield use
- World War I and Middle East conflicts
- Terrorist use
- Matsumoto and Tokyo, Japan
5Chemical Agent Terrorist Attacks
- Matsumoto
- Approximately 280 injured
- 7 dead
- Tokyo
- 12 dead
- Approximately 1,000 hospitalized
- 5,500 sought medical care
- 10 of first responders injured
6Chemical Warfare Agents
- Tabun, Sarin, Soman, VX
- Mustard, Lewisite
- Phosgene, Chlorine, Ammonia, Cyanide
- Mace, Pepper Spray
- Nerve Agents
- Vesicants
- Industrial Chemicals
- Riot Control Agents
7Nerve Agents
- Tabun (GA), Sarin (GB), Soman (GD), VX
- Most toxic of the chemical agents
- Penetrate skin, eyes, lungs
- Loss of consciousness, seizures, apnea, death
after large amount - Diagnosis made clinically confirmed in
laboratory (cholinesterase)
8Normal Nerve Function
ACh
9Normal Nerve Function
ACh
10Normal Nerve Function
AChE
ACh
11How Nerve Agents Work
AChE
GB
ACh
12Effects of Nerve Agents
- Organs with cholinergic receptors
- Muscarinic
- Smooth muscles
- Glands
- Nicotinic
- Skeletal muscles
- Ganglia
13Signs and Symptoms of Nerve AgentsMuscarinic
Sites
- Increased secretions
- Saliva
- Tears
- Runny nose
- Secretions in airways
- Secretions in gastrointestinal tract
- Sweating
14Signs and Symptoms of Nerve AgentsMuscarinic
Sites
- Smooth muscle contraction
- Eyes miosis
- Airways bronchoconstriction (shortness of
breath) - Gastrointestinal hyperactivity (nausea,
vomiting, and diarrhea)
15Signs and Symptoms of Nerve AgentsNicotinic Sites
- Skeletal muscles
- Fasciculations
- Twitching
- Weakness
- Flaccid paralysis
- Other (ganglionic)
- Tachycardia
- Hypertension
16Nerve AgentsOther Signs and Symptoms
- Cardiovascular
- Tachycardia, bradycardia
- Heart block, ventricular arrhythmias
- Central Nervous System
- Acute
- Loss of consciousness
- Seizures
- Apnea
- Prolonged (4-6 weeks)
- Psychological effects
17Signs and Symptoms of Nerve Agents Vapor Exposure
- Mild exposure
- Miosis (dim vision, eye pain), rhinorrhea,
dyspnea - Moderate exposure
- Pronounced dyspnea, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
weakness - Severe exposure
- Immediate loss of consciousness, seizures, apnea,
and flaccid paralysis - Vapor effects occur within seconds, peak within
minutes no late onset
18Signs and Symptoms of Nerve Agents Liquid
Exposure
- Mild exposure (to 18 hours)
- Localized sweating
- Fasciculations
- No miosis
- Moderate exposure (ltLD50) (to 18 hours)
- Gastrointestinal effects
- Miosis uncommon
- Severe exposure (LD50) (lt30 minutes)
- Sudden loss of consciousness
- Seizures
- Apnea
- Flaccid paralysis
- Death
19Diagnosis of Nerve Agent Exposure
- Symptomatic
- May be systemic or organ-specific
- Combination of symptoms is more definitive
- Situational
- Multiple casualties with similar symptoms
- Time or location factors in common
20Nerve AgentTreatment
- Airway/ventilation
- High resistance
- Antidotes
- Atropine
- 2-PAMCl
- Diazepam
21Nerve Agent Treatment
- Atropine
- Antagonizes muscarinic effects
- Dries secretions relaxes smooth muscles
- Given IV, IM, ET
- No effect on pupils
- No effect on skeletal muscles
- IV in hypoxic patient Ù ventricular fibrillation
22Nerve AgentTreatment
- Starting dose - 2 mg
- Maximum cumulative dose - 20 mg
- Total dose calculated over time but enough must
be administered to abate severe symptoms if
casualty is to survive - Insecticide poisoning requires much more
- Side effects in normal people
- Mydriasis
- Blurred vision
- Tachycardia
- Decreased secretions and sweating
23Nerve AgentTreatment
- Atropine - How much to give?
- Until secretions are drying or dry
- Until ventilation is easy
- If conscious or casualty is comfortable
- Do not rely on heart rate/pupil size
24Nerve AgentTreatment
- Pralidoxime Chloride (2PAM-Cl)
- Remove nerve agent from AChE in absence of aging
- 1 gram slowly (20-30 minutes) in IV infusion
- Hypertension with
rapid infusion - No effects at muscarinic sites
- Helps at nicotinic sites
25Nerve AgentTreatment - Autoinjectors
26MARK I Injection vs. IM or IV
27Nerve AgentTreatment
- Diazepam
- Decreases seizure activity
- Reduces seizure-induced brain injury
- Give to severely-intoxicated casualties whether
convulsing or not
28Nerve AgentTreatment
- Treatment regimen
- No signs/symptoms
- Reassure
- Observe
- Vapor 1 hour
- Liquid Up to 18 hours
29Nerve AgentTreatment
- Mild vapor exposure
- Miosis, rhinorrhea - observation only
- Increasing SOB - treat
- Mild liquid exposure
- Localized fasiculations sweating - treat
- One MARK I kit (2 mg atropine/ 600 mg 2 -PAMCl)
- OR
- 1 gram 2-PAMCl IV
- 2 mg atropine, IM or IV
- Parenteral atropine will not reverse miosis
30Nerve AgentTreatment
- Moderate vapor or liquid exposure
- One or two MARK I kits
- Or give IV
- 2 to 4 mg atropine
- 1gm 2-PAMCl (infusion)
31Nerve AgentTreatment
- Severe - vapor or liquid
- Give 3 MARK I kits or 6 mg atropine and 1 gram of
2-PAMCl as soon as possible - Airway
- Ventilation/O2
- Consider diazepam 10 mg IM (2 to 5 mg IV)
- Repeat atropine every 5 to10 minutes as needed
- Repeat 2-PAMCl in one hour
32Nerve AgentAge-Related Treatment
- Atropine
- Infant (0 to 2) 0.5 mg IM
- IV for infants and children 0.02 mg/kg
- Child (2 to 10) 1.0 mg IM
- Adolescent (gt 10) 2.0 mg
- Elderly 1.0 mg IM
33Nerve AgentAge-Related Treatment
- 2-PAMCl
- lt 20 kg 15 mg/kg IV
- gt 20 kg 600-mg IM autoinjector
- Elderly 1/2 adult dose (7.5 mg/kg IV)
- 2 PAMCl-induced hypertension
- Phentolamine Adult 5 mg IV
- Child 1 mg IV
34Nerve AgentAge-Related Treatment
- Diazepam
- - Infants gt 30 days old 0.2 - 0.5 mg/kg IV
- to 5 years q 2 to 5 min
- (max 5 mg)
- - Children gt 5 years 1 mg IV
- q 2 to 5 min
- (max 10 mg)
35Nerve Agent Summary
- Vapor exposure
- Symptoms develop suddenly
- Most ambulatory victims require minimal
intervention - Risk of secondary contamination, which is
minimized by removing the victims clothing - Requires immediate access to antidotes
- Liquid exposure
- Symptoms delayed minutes to hours
- Greater need for decontamination
- High risk of secondary contamination victims
require decontamination (clothing removal
washdown) - Requires immediate access to antidotes
36Vesicants (Blister Agents)
- Vesicants
- Sulfur mustard
- Lewisite
37Mustard
- Properties
- Vapor liquid threat
- Latent period between exposure effects
- Systemically toxic - similar to radiation
38Mustard Effects
- Quickly cyclizes in tissue
- Alkylates cell components, including DNA
- DNA damage, cell death
39Mustard EffectsEye Injury
- Mild conjunctivitis
- Moderate/severe conjunctivitis, lid inflammation
and edema, blepharospasm, and corneal roughening - Corneal opacification, ulceration, and/or
perforation - Well over 95 had only mild to moderate
conjunctivitis - Under 1 had permanent damage to cornea
40Mustard EffectsEye Injury
41Mustard EffectsSkin Injury
- Erythema
- Small vesicles later coalesce
- Blisters/bulla
- Possible coagulation necrosis with liquid
42Mustard EffectsAirway Injury
- Upper nose sinuses, pharynx
- (epistaxis, sore throat, hacking cough)
- Mid Larynx (hoarseness)
- Lower Bronchioles (dyspnea, productive cough)
- Pulmonary edema is rare
43Mustard EffectsGI Injury
- Gastrointestinal
- Within 24 hours
- Nausea and vomiting
- Cholinergic effects
- After 3 to 5 days
- Tissue destruction
44Mustard EffectsBone Marrow Damage
- Damages stem cells
- Decreased WBC, RBC, platelets after 3 - 5 days
- Survival rare if WBC lt 200
45Skin Treatment
- Decontamination must be done within minutes to
reduce damage - Delays in decontamination will not prevent
illness, but will prevent cross-contamination - Supportive care - soothing lotions, frequent
irrigation, topical antibiotics, pain medication - Do NOT overhydrate not a thermal burn
46Eye Treatment
- Topical mydriatics
- Topical antibiotics
- Vaseline on lid edges
- Topical steroids (only in the first 24 hrs)
47Airway Treatment
- Cool mist, cough suppressants for mild symptoms
- Oxygen
- Assisted ventilation
- Early intubation
- Bronchodilators (steroids)
- Antibiotics AFTER organism identified
48Lewisite Effects
- Causes severe irritation to eyes, skin, and
airways IMMEDIATELY on exposure (no delay) - Tissue necrosis, pseudomembranes
- Increased capillarypermeability
- No bone marrow effects
49Lewisite - Treatment
- Immediate decontamination
- British anti-Lewisite (BAL) for systemic effects
- Supportive Care
- Oxygen
50Vesicant Agent Summary
- Agents damage eyes, skin, respiratory system
cause additional systemic effects - Mustard
- Fast acting symptoms delayed, no specific
antidote - Lewisite
- Fast acting, symptoms immediate, BAL antidote
available - Decontamination is best initial treatment
51Phosgene
- At high concentrations
- Irritates eyes, nose, upper airways possible
laryngospasm - Toxic to lungs by inhalation
- Carbonyl group damages alveolar-capillary
membrane - Non-cardiac pulmonary edema onset 2 to 12 hours
- Dyspnea, cough with sputum
- Management of non-cardiac pulmonary edema
- Hypoxia, fluid loss requires pulmonary care,
careful fluid replacement - ABSOLUTE REST POST-EXPOSURE
52Chlorine
- High concentration or prolonged exposure
- Pulmonary edema, sudden death
- Eye irritation, cough, dyspnea
- More severe airway and lung
- damage with high concentration
- Management
- Remove from exposure manage airway
- Oxygen, ventilation, PEEP
- Intubation, bronchodilators
53Ammonia
- Anhydrous Ammonia
- pHgt12 (household ammonia pH lt 12)
- Wide industrial use
- Plastics, fertilizer, explosives
- Irritating, corrosive causes necrosis, severe
pain - Serious injury to eyes, lungs, skin, GI tract
- Management
- Remove from exposure, decontaminate
- Symptomatic maintain airway
54Riot Control Agents
- Irritating agents, lacrimators, tear gas
- Cause reaction in
- Eyes burning, tearing, eyelid spasm, redness
- Airways burning, coughing, dyspnea
- Skin burning, erythema
- Eye irrigation and supportive care
55Chemical Agent Summary
- Vapor exposure
- Nerve agent symptoms develop suddenly, mustard
and phosgene symptoms are delayed - Most ambulatory victims require minimal
intervention - Risk of secondary contamination
- Requires airway management antidotes for nerve
agents and Lewisite
56Chemical Agent Summary
- Liquid exposure
- Symptoms delayed minutes to hours
- Greater need for decontamination
- Risk of secondary contamination, victims require
clothing removal decontamination - Requires immediate access to antidotes