Sulfur Mustard Medical Countermeasures in a Nuclear Environment

2002 ◽  
Vol 167 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 101-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Smith ◽  
Clark L. Gross
2022 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Ye ◽  
Yan Sai ◽  
Zhongmin Zou

: Sulfur mustard (SM), a classic chemical weapon in the vesicant category, can induce severe damage, for which the therapy is still limited even today. Laboratory work is essential in unveiling toxicological effects and developing medical countermeasures. Sulfur mustard analog 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (CEES), is employed in the lab for less toxicity. However, due to its similar characteristics to SM (being oily, hydrophobic, and volatile), the manipulation of CEES still needs special attention to avoid personnel injury and laboratory pollution. Here, to clear the chemical safety concerns in the laboratory study of CEES, the working procedure and experimental data are summarized, which might help educate new researchers to be skilled and professional.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satyanarayana Achanta ◽  
Narendranath Reddy Chintagari ◽  
Shrilatha Balakrishna ◽  
Boyi Liu ◽  
Sven-Eric Jordt

AbstractChemical exposure to vesicants such as sulfur mustard (SM), and electrophilic riot control agents such as 2-chlorobenzalmalononitrile (CS) tear gas agent, cause strong cutaneous inflammation. Classical anti-inflammatory treatments have focused on interference with target initiation and maintenance of inflammation, with mixed outcomes. Inflammation is broadly classified into three temporal phases, initiation, amplification and maintenance, and resolution. Resolution of inflammation was thought to be a passive process but the recent body of literature shows that resolution is an active process and is mediated by fatty acid-derived mediators (specialized pro-resolving mediators, SPMs). We hypothesized that accelerating resolution phase of inflammation may attenuate the exaggerated inflammatory response following chemical threat exposure, leading to decreased morbidity and improved recovery. In this study, SPMs, such as Resolvin D1 (RvD1) and Resolvin D2 (RvD2), were administered to mice at nanogram doses post-exposure to an SM analog, 2-chloroethyl-ethyl-sulfide (CEES) or CS tear gas agent. SPMs decreased edema (ear thickness and punch biopsy weights), pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, CXCL1/KC, MIP2) and protease marker (MMP-9), and vascular leakage (determined by IRDye 800 CW PEG) while improving histopathology in cutaneous chemical injury mouse models. These results support our hypothesis and pave the way for SPMs for further development as potential medical countermeasures for chemical threat agents-induced skin injuries.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daxue Li ◽  
Hailing Xi ◽  
Shitong Han ◽  
Sanping Zhao

Sulfur mustard (SM) is recognized as one of the most lethal warfare agents. It has the potential to seriously affect public health and safety. To employ appropriate medical countermeasures and...


Author(s):  
William Smith ◽  
Michael Babin ◽  
Robyn Kiser ◽  
Robert Casillas

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phillip H Beske ◽  
Christina M Wilhelm ◽  
Jill A Harvilchuck ◽  
Gennady E Platoff Jr. ◽  
David T Yeung

ABSTRACT Introduction While exposure to sulfur mustard (SM) is commonly associated with the production of vesicating dermal, ocular, and respiratory injuries, systemic damage to bone marrow and lymphatic tissue can decrease critical immune cell populations leading to higher susceptibility to life-threatening infection and septicemia. There are currently no approved medical countermeasures for SM-induced myelosuppression. An intravenous SM challenge model was developed in adult rats as a preliminary proof-of-principle platform to evaluate the efficacy of candidate immunostimulants. Materials and Methods Adult male and female Sprague Dawley rats were exposed to SM through tail vein injection. Toxicity progression was monitored through clinical observations, body weights, body temperatures, hematology, serum clinical chemistry, and flow cytometry of blood and bone marrow samples. Results Following SM exposure, overt toxicity progression was characterized by weight loss, changes in body temperature, and manifestation of toxic clinical signs (diarrhea, lethargy, hunched posture, rough hair coat, respiratory distress, and death). Drastic alterations in complete blood cell profiles included an early-onset lymphopenia followed by a delayed-onset neutropenia and thrombocytopenia. Only transient changes in serum clinical chemistry parameters were observed. Flow cytometry analysis of circulating blood revealed that B-cells were more predominantly affected by SM exposure than T-cells. Challenge with SM resulted in loss of hematopoietic and mesenchymal stem cell populations in the bone marrow. Conclusions The small animal model developed in this study replicates many key aspects of human SM exposures and should serve as a relevant, rapid, and cost-effective platform to screen candidate medical countermeasures for SM-induced hematologic toxicity.


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