Sulfur mustard toxicity: Difference between revisions

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==Background<ref> Walls, R., & Rosen, P. (2018). Rosen's emergency medicine: Concepts and clinical practice (9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders. </ref>==
*Abbreviation: H
*2,2,-dichlordiethyl sulfide
*A [[blister chemical agents|blister chemical agent]] (vesicant) type of [[chemical weapon]]
*Mustard vapor exposure greater medical concern than liquid form
*Damage begins at 1-2 minutes post-exposure with irreversible damage within 20 minutes
*Symptoms are visible by 4-8 hours
 
==Clinical Features<ref> Walls, R., & Rosen, P. (2018). Rosen's emergency medicine: Concepts and clinical practice (9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders. </ref>==
[[File:Mustard gas burns.jpg|thumb|[[Chemical burn]] caused by exposure to mustard gas (World War I).]]
[[File:Blister_formation_after_vesicant_exposure_2016-01-07_19-13.jpg|thumbnail|Bullae formation after blister chemical agent exposure (Wikimedia Commons).]]
*Odor of garlic, onion, or horseradish
*Physical symptoms do not occur until approximately 20 minutes but may take up to 4 hours
*Penetrates skin, rubber gloves, clothing
*Causes both local and systemic toxicity
 
===Local toxicity===
*Eye
**Only 1% have permanent eye damage; the majority heal within 2 weeks to 2 months without sequelae
**[[Conjunctivitis]]
**Blepharospasm
*Skin
**Blisters resembling second degree burns
**Within 4-8 hours: erythema + burning → vesicle and bullae formation
*Airway
**Dose-dependent ranging from nasopharyngeal irritation to hemorrhagic necrosis of bronchioles
 
===Systemic toxicity===
*Bone marrow suppression leading to [[neutropenia]] within 3-5 days → development of secondary infections
 
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Chemical weapon DDX}}
 
==Evaluation==
 
==Management==
*Immediate decontamination, 0.5% hypochlorite solution will inactivate sulfur mustard but not appropriate for pediatric patients
*No antidotes for mustard agents
 
==Disposition==
 
==See Also==
*[[Blister chemical agents]]
 
==External Links==
 
==References==
<references/>
 
[[Category:Toxicology]]

Latest revision as of 23:45, 17 November 2021

Background[1]

  • Abbreviation: H
  • 2,2,-dichlordiethyl sulfide
  • A blister chemical agent (vesicant) type of chemical weapon
  • Mustard vapor exposure greater medical concern than liquid form
  • Damage begins at 1-2 minutes post-exposure with irreversible damage within 20 minutes
  • Symptoms are visible by 4-8 hours

Clinical Features[2]

Chemical burn caused by exposure to mustard gas (World War I).
Bullae formation after blister chemical agent exposure (Wikimedia Commons).
  • Odor of garlic, onion, or horseradish
  • Physical symptoms do not occur until approximately 20 minutes but may take up to 4 hours
  • Penetrates skin, rubber gloves, clothing
  • Causes both local and systemic toxicity

Local toxicity

  • Eye
    • Only 1% have permanent eye damage; the majority heal within 2 weeks to 2 months without sequelae
    • Conjunctivitis
    • Blepharospasm
  • Skin
    • Blisters resembling second degree burns
    • Within 4-8 hours: erythema + burning → vesicle and bullae formation
  • Airway
    • Dose-dependent ranging from nasopharyngeal irritation to hemorrhagic necrosis of bronchioles

Systemic toxicity

  • Bone marrow suppression leading to neutropenia within 3-5 days → development of secondary infections

Differential Diagnosis

Chemical weapons

Evaluation

Management

  • Immediate decontamination, 0.5% hypochlorite solution will inactivate sulfur mustard but not appropriate for pediatric patients
  • No antidotes for mustard agents

Disposition

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Walls, R., & Rosen, P. (2018). Rosen's emergency medicine: Concepts and clinical practice (9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders.
  2. Walls, R., & Rosen, P. (2018). Rosen's emergency medicine: Concepts and clinical practice (9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders.