CBRN emergency preparedness
hematopoietic syndrome
- total body dose of 2.5-5 Gy death in 30-60 days - get prodromal syndrome and then a latent period where theyare symptom free - at ~3 wks, chills, fatigeu, petehiae, epilation - death due to infection (neutropenia), bleeding (thrombocytopenia), anemia secondary to bleeding but not b/c of decreased production
it's cyanide vapor is released
1. Wear your protective mask to. move to fresh air 3. provide an immediate support of care -secure airway, and intubate if necessary -obtain intravenous access and begin cardiac monitoring -correct significant acidemia (pH <7.15) by administration of sodium bicarbonate
cyanide detoxification regimen
1. crush amyl nitrite ampoule in gauze 2. place in nostril or bag valve mask bag 3. give 300 mg IV of sodium nitrite 4. inject slowly 5. immediately administer sodium thiosulfate IV 6. May tree again I up to half the original dose
two step cyanide detoxification
1. mitochondria with nitrites or hydroxocobalamin 2. the body with sodium thiosulfate
Anthrax
Bacillus anthracis contracted by handling hides, flush, or blood, ingesting products such as bone meal or contaminated meat, biological warfare dissemination resistant to UV light and environmental decay, May remain in the soil for many years
how does cyanide cause cell death in the body?
Interferes with anaerobic metabolism of the cell
a group of people is presenting with a delayed onset of blisters and a dry productive cough that later turns productive. what is the likely culprit?
Mustard
neutropenic
Pertaining to an abnormally small number of neutrophils in the blood (from radiation for example)
a patient is exhibiting the following symptoms of fever, cough, dyspnea, prominent gastrointestinal symptoms, absence of buboes. which form of plague is responsible?
Pneumonic
what bacterial disease produces a non specific illness that may produce a prolonged disability but is rarely fatal?
Q Fever
4 toxins likely to be used as bio-agents
Ricin Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) Botulism toxin T-2 Mycotoxins
Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS)
Symptoms of short term radiation effects after a massive dose of ionizing radiation 3 subcategories hematopoietic gastrointestinal neurovascular
the amount of radiation in individual absorbs depends on three things
Time Distance Shielding
which type of nerve agent is most persistent?
VX
a patient presents to the hospital. he has been feeling ill since his return from Safari in Africa a few days ago. he exhibits symptoms of fever, mild hypotension, flushing, conjunctival injection, and now a bad rash has appeared that is bleeding in spots. what type of viral infection do you suspect?
Viral hemorrhagic fever
radiation Burns, which causes delayed, irreversible damage has of the skin, can be caused by high doses of what form of ionizing radiation?
beta
what method is used to estimate a radiation dose by measuring the biological response to and absorbed dose of ionizing radiation?
biodosimetry
what is used in life-threatening situations with the gold to remove contaminant as quickly as possible?
immediate decontamination
incubation period
interval between initial infection and first signs and symptoms
Pralidoxime Cl (2-PAM)
this oxime breaks the bond that attaches nerve agents to acetylcholinesterase. each auto-injector contains 600 milligrams, and after each of the first three atropine injections, a corresponding injection of 2 Pam chloride is given.
what type of decontamination is carried out by a unit to reduce contamination equal to natural background or to the lowest level possible?
thorough
treatment of the central compartment
treat local irritating effects of the skin and eyes early intubation warm, humidify. Oxygen aggressive pulmonary toilet bronchoscopy bronchodilators anti-inflammatory agents careful selection of antibiotics
types of tularemia
typhoidal type ulceroglandular type oropharyngeal type oculoglandular type pleuropulmonary type
ATNAA (Antidote Treatment Nerve Agent Auto injector)
used to treat cyanide exposure
decontamination should be conducted in the ___________ hazards zone
warm
cutaneous radiation syndrome
worsens prognosis, tx w/ anti-inflammatories and antimicrobials or surgical debridement and grafting will progress over time in stages
what illnesses is the mosquito a possible vector of?
yellow fever, Western equine encephalitis, dengue fever
assuming possible anthrax poisoning, what would be the most likely course of action with the presumptive diagnosis?
2 week course of cyprofloxacin
Prehospital care for nerve agents
3 auto injectors atropine sulfate, pralidoxime chloride (2-PAM chloride) diazepam
alpha particle
A cluster of 2 protons and 2 neutrons emitted from a nucleus in one type of radioactivity least penetrating
plague
Yersinia pestis can live in water, moist soil, dry sputum, flea feces, grains, buried bodies, near freezing temperatures dies after exposure to it's 55 degrees Celsius or sunlight
plague is detected by
a presumptive diagnosis identified from coccobacillus bacteria has a safety pin appearance can identify with immunofluorescence staining and fatty acid analysis diagnosis relies on cultures identify using enhanced chemiluminescence, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, polymerase chain reaction
Pyridostigmine bromide
a pretreatment for soman nerve agents. reversibly binds to 20% of acetylcholinesterase receptors, minimizing damage
a patient who works at an insecticide manufacturing plant is admitted to the emergency room. he states he was splashed with a large quantity of fluid and is now exhibiting symptoms of vomiting, diarrhea, difficulty breathing, body twitching and is generally very weak. what is the preferred treatment to block the effects of excessive ACH
administer additional 2-PAM Cl
what are the physical requirements of those expected to wear PPE?
agility, good physical condition, cardiovascular conditioning
Types of radiation
alpha, beta, neutron (particulate) photon (electromagnetic)
what are the three components, in correct order of administration, utilized in the treatment for cyanide exposure?
amyl nitrite, sodium nitrite, sodium thiosulfate
Brucellosis
an infection caused by brucella bacteria highly infectious via aerosol exposure low mortality rate
Bacterial Agents
anthrax, plague, tularemia, brucellosis, Q fever delivered as infectious aerosoft treated with antibiotics difficult to diagnose
diazepam
benzodiazepines increase the brain's seizure threshold
Atropine Sulfate
blocks effects of ACH at muscarinic receptors. administer up to 3 auto-injectors
anthrax is detectable by
blood augur cultures pleural and cerebrospinal fluid smears of mediastinal lymph nodes and spleen Immunoassays nasal swabs polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
ways to diagnose Q fever
chest radiographs presence of leukocytosis elevation of hepatic transaminase levels serological tests complement fixation test is most common
diagnosis of brucellosis may be determined by
chest x-rays, low leukocyte count, anemia and thrombocytopenia, blood cultures, bone marrow cultures, a biphasic culture method, a serum aguila tenacion test, ELISA, ESL, PCR
what industries are cyanide compounds widely used during?
classic production gold and silver extraction hide tanning
smallpox types
classic smallpox (variola major) milder disease (variola minor)
Q fever is caused by
contaminated aerosol inhalation, ingestion of contaminated dairy products
blank occurs when people come in direct contact with a harmful agent at or near an incident
contamination
what agent is fast-acting and attacks oxygen dependence tissues known to be particularly sensitive to these compounds?
cyanide compounds
damage to the respiratory tract
death of epithelial cells in the large airways obstruction of large airways fluid leakage from capillaries pulmonary edema recognize and treat the damage, not the agent!
a group of victims has been admitted to your triage unit. all victims have recently been in an area where canisters exploded spraying them with an amber colored liquid that smells like flowers and burns intensely. you suspect lewisite. what are the considerations during treatment of the victims?
decontaminate victims by washing, flush eyes for at least 5 minutes aggressive fluid management it's available, administer antidote BAL
patients with concurrent surgical injuries and radiation exposure should either be operated on expeditiously or ___________
delayed until past the time of bone marrow suppression and delayed wound healing
delayed/stochastic effects
effects of radiation-induced cancers taking up to 10 to 15 years or more to appear
Cyanide chloride (CK)
evaporates at a slower rate than AC. In high concentrations it can kill rapidly by paralyzing the respiratory system's nerve center
how is the victim of a pulmonary agent exposure presenting with respiratory distress less than 4 hours after exposure classified?
expectant
Beta particles are
fast moving electrons. 8,000 times faster than alpha particles. can cause burns Shielding materials: plastic, glass, light metals
Tularemia (rabbit/ deer fever)
francisella tularensis contracted from tissue contact, infected animals, insects buys, aerosol exposure resistant to freezing temperatures. killed by heat and disinfectants
photon radiation
gamma or xray radiation, from the electromagnetic spectrum potentially lethal, and often frequented with alpha and beta radiation shielding materials: Lead, concrete, earth
four types of anthrax
gastrointestinal inhalational injection cutaneous
q fever symptoms
headaches, fatigue, myalgia half of patients with pneumonia will exhibit non-productive cough or rails pleuritic chest pain occurs in about one-fourth of patients 33% of Q fever patients will develop acute hepatitis, with fever and abnormal liver function tests and the absence of pulmonary signs and symptoms
prompt/deterministic effect
high doses of radiation delivered to the whole body of healthy adults within a short. Of time produce effects such as blood component changes, fatigue, diarrhea, nausea, and death.
Variola major
highly virulent, caused toxemia, shock, and intravascular coagulation 30% fatality rate, but 3% fatality rate in immunized populations.
how is the victim of nerve agent exposure presenting with convulsions classified?
immediate
a patient was admitted to the hospital suffering from the following symptoms for the past five days. fever, malaise, fatigue, and non-productive cough. chest x-rays reveal a widened mediastinum and the patient white blood cell count is elevated. which type of anthrax is responsible for the patient's symptoms?
inhalational
pulmonary agent main targets
large airways small airways
neutron particle
large doses can kill a human shielding: concrete, water, polyethylene, oil
what phase is characterized by improvement of symptoms but becomes shorter with increasing doses?
latent
hydrogen cyanide (AC)
lethal vapor dispersed quickly
what level of civilian chemical equipment would healthcare providers don when providing initial medical treatment after an incident but not involved with decontamination?
level C
what are the symptoms for ingested cyanide?
metallic taste in mouth, epigastric distress, and possible nausea and vomiting
the primary toxicity of pulmonary agents is to the ____________ and follows ___________ of smoke, articles, vapors, or gases
mucous membranes, inhalation
vesicant blister agents include all of the following
nitrogen mustard lewisite phosgene oxime
choking agents contain
phosgene (CG) chlorine (CL)
what form of ionizing radiation can penetrate deeply into body tissue?
photon
chemical agents categories
physical state physiological effects use
your unit has responded within minutes to a suspected seaburn incident. select the important steps that you should take
practice protective measures of time, distance, and shielding
Cyanide agent
prevents diffusion of O2 to cells
ARS four phases
prodromal phase. symptoms will include burning sensations of the skin, extreme nervousness, and confusion. May include severe nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea, loss of coordination of muscular movement, respiratory distress, disorientation, lapses in consciousness, and convulsive seizures. symptoms May last from several minutes to several hours Latent phase. it is possible for a victim to regain some functionality for a very brief time, at the most several hours manifest phase. within 6 hours of initial exposure, the victim will become disoriented, lose the coordination of muscular movement, and suffer respiratory distress, diarrhea, convulsive seizures, coma, and finally death. recovery phase. circulatory complications such as cerebral edema and increased intracranial pressure can bring death within 2 days
prophylactic treatment of radiation exposure
protactinium iodide Prussian Blue (PB) (ferric hexacyanoferr DTPA Radioprotectants Androstenediol Filgtastim
chemical agent categories
pulmonary agents cyanide agents Nerve agents vesicant agents incapacitating agents riot control agents
lewisite shock
pulmonary edema and hypotension in results to lewisite vesicant agent exposure
what should treatment of patients suffering from pulmonary agent exposure focus on?
recognizing which compartments are damaged and minimizing that damage
what are properties described by spores produced by bacillus anthracis, causative agent of anthrax?
remains viable in soil for years resistant to environmental decay can be found in animal hides
what decontamination methods are recommended for removing vesicants from casualties?
remove patients clothing, ensure agent does not contact skin during removal use a stick to remove large globs of agent off the skin. use the M291 decontamination kit to absorb the agent
pulmonary agent signs and symptoms
shortness of breath difficulty breathing sudden laryngeal spasms pulmonary edema vomiting abnormally low blood pressure possible death
a patient presents with five day old blisters/rash mostly on the arm, face, and hands. no scabs are present. patient reports fever started several days before blisters appear. based on the information would you suspect chickenpox or smallpox?
smallpox, because the rash is centrifugal on the patient
potential viral bio agents
smallpox, encephalitis viruses, hemorrhagic fever viruses
processed foods and temperature abused foods are most commonly associated with _______ poisoning
staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB)
a patient presents to the emergency room all exhibiting the following symptoms. nausea, vomiting, problems with eye movement, dry mouth, sore throat, difficulty swallowing, no gag reflex, and extreme weakness. patient is alert and oriented during the exam. what toxin do you suspect and how do you treat it?
staphylococcal enterotoxin B, supportive care and observe for pulmonary edema
a patient has a scab what is your course of action for this patient?
swap the area under the scab and of the area under the vesicle without cleansing the skin first
symptoms of cyanide
tachypnia and tachycardia dizziness headache vomiting weakness and restlessness rapid deep breathing loss of consciousness convulsions respiratory failure cardiac arrest death