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Goals and Objectives. What is bioterrorism?What are the biological agents of terror?What's my role?. Bioterrorism. The use of organisms or toxins to kill or sicken people, animals, or plants1346Tartars catapulted corpses over the walls of Kaffa to spread plague1754Blankets used by smallpox pa
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1. Bioterrorism
2. Goals and Objectives What is bioterrorism?
What are the biological agents of terror?
Whats my role?
3. Bioterrorism The use of organisms or toxins to kill or sicken people, animals, or plants
1346
Tartars catapulted corpses over the walls of Kaffa to spread plague
1754
Blankets used by smallpox patients distributed to Native Americans
1939
Japanese army accused of dropping plague-infected fleas over Manchurian China
4. The Makings of a Biological Weapon Infectivity
Stability
Ease of production, dissemination, and transmission
Morbidity and mortality of resultant disease(s)
Ability to cause public panic
5. Smallpox Its smallpox, dont do nothing
Vaccinia immune globulin only given to high-risk populations (pregnant, immunosuppressed)
Cidofovir (used for CMV) has in vitro activity against smallpox, but clinical effectiveness unknown
Smallpox vaccine should be given within 4 days of exposure to provide partial protection
Pt should monitor BID for temp > 38 x 17 days
6. Smallpox Causative agent: Variola virus
dsDNA orthopoxvirus of family Poxviridae
Host: humans
Last case: 1977
Mortality: 30%
Incubation: 7-17 days
Symptoms:
High fever, malaise, vomiting, headache, backache, abdominal pain
7. Smallpox The Rash:
Face and extremities
Same stage
Macules?papules?
pustules?scabs (8 days)
Other forms:
Hemorrhagic
Malignant
Differentiate from:
Chickenpox (varying stages, favors trunk)
Human monkeypox (lymphadenopathy)
8. Smallpox Vaccine Live vaccinia virus
Partial protection if given within 4 days
Lots of complications
Lots of contraindications
Immune globulin available
9. Anthrax Causative agent: Bacillus anthracis
Gram positive aerobic spore-forming bacillus
Inhalational form most likely to be used
Mortality: up to 100%
Incubation: 1-7 days
Up to 43 days
Symptoms: phase-dependent
10. Anthrax Prodrome
Flu-like, without coryza
Second phase
Severe dyspnea, respiratory distress, shock
Meningitis (50%)
Enlarged hilar/mediastinal nodes
Widened mediastinum
Pleural effusions
11. Anthrax Other forms
Cutaneous
Gastrointestinal
Treatment
Fluoroquinolone/Doxycycline x 60 days, plus
One or two additional agents until sensitivities
Vaccination
Isolation: none
12. Plague Causative agent: Yersinia pestis
Gram negative rod
Forms:
Bubonic plague
Septicemic plague
Pneumonic plague
Mortality: 100%
If not treated within 24 hrs of symptom onset
13. Bubonic Plague Inoculation: flea bite
Incubation: 2-7 days
Symptoms:
Fever, chills, weakness, headache
Findings:
Buboes, papules, vesicles
DIC
14. Pneumonic Plague Inoculation: aerosolized Y.pestis
Incubation: 2-4 days
Symptoms:
High fevers, headache, myalgias, dyspnea, hemoptysis, sepsis
Findings:
Watery, blood-tinged sputum, patchy bronchopneumonia on CXR
Stridor, cyanosis, death
15. Plague Treatment:
Streptomycin x 7-10 days
Alternatives Gentamicin, Doxycycline
Prophylaxis:
Fluoroquinolone/Doxycycline
Isolation:
Bubonic standard precautions
Pneumonic droplet/airborne
16. Botulism Causative agent: Clostridium botulinum
Gram positive spore-forming rod
8 different toxins A and B in US
Types:
Foodborne
Wound
Gastrointestinal
Aerosolized
Dr. 90210
17. Botulism Incubation: 12-72 hours
Symptoms:
Diplopia
Dysphonia
Dysarthria
Dysphagia
Descending, symmetric, flaccid paralysis
Findings:
EMG normal conduction with reduced amplitude
18. Botulism Treatment: antitoxin
Isolation: none
19. Tularemia Causative agent: Francisella tularensis
Gram negative, intracellular coccobacillus
Most likely pneumonic form from aerosolization
Incubation: 3-5 days
Up to 21 days
Symptoms:
Fever, headache, malaise, chest pain, sore throat, abd pain, dry cough, coryza
Fever may be relapsing and remitting
20. Tularemia Treatment: Streptomycin/Gentamicin
Vaccination:
Prophylaxis: ???
Isolation: Standard
21. Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Causative agents: small RNA viruses
Category A:
Ebola fever
Marburg fever
Lassa fever
Argentine hemorrhagic fever
Bolivian hemorrhagic fever
22. Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Symptoms:
Fever, myalgias, headache, vomiting, diarrhea (~4 d)
Severe prostration, nondependent edema, hypotension, mental status changes, shock
Petechial hemorrhage, hemorrhage of mucous membranes, DIC
Treatment:
Supportive
Ribavirin
Isolation:
Standard, plus
Contact-droplet
Airborne
23. Lets recap
24. Whats Your Role? Change your underwear
Immediate isolation
Wear personal protective gear
Notify appropriate authorities
Collect necessary specimens
Provide prophylaxis
25. Isolation No human to human transmission in:
Tularemia
Botulism
Anthrax
Droplet:
Pneumonic plague
Airborne/Contact-droplet:
Smallpox
Viral hemorrhagic fever
26. The End.