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Lewisite medical management

Medical Management It is essential to remove the mustard and/or Lewisite agents as quickly as possible. Vesicants rapidly penetrate the skin causing both localized cellular... [Pg.253]

Similar to the mustard agents, exposure prevention is the first line of defense against lewisite. Rapid decontamination is especially relevant to lewisite exposure due to the rapid development of pain (1-2 min) associated with lewisite exposure. Unlike other vesicants, an effective antidote for lewisite toxicity exists in the form of British anti-lewisite (BAL 2,3-dimercaptopropanol) which binds with arsenicals, thereby countering the lewisite-induced damage. Such chelation therapy is associated with notable side effects (e.g. renal effects) and requires carefiil medical management. More effective analogs of BAL have been developed with less significant side effects. [Pg.104]

The second exception is that while an antidote is available for systemic effects of Lewisite exposure, there are no antidotes for nitrogen mustard or sulfur mustard toxicity, with one minor caveat if given within minutes after exposure, intravenous sodium thiosulfate may prevent death due to sulfur mustard exposure (25). Otherwise, the medical management for skin, ocular, and respiratory exposure is only supportive. One guideline physicians can follow is to keep skin, eye, and airway lesions free from infection. [Pg.135]

Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Medical Management Guidelines. Blister Agents Lewisite (L) (C H AsClj) Mustard-Lewisite Mixture (HL) http //www.atsdr.cdc.gov/ MHMI/mmgl63.html. Last accessed 4/15/06... [Pg.156]

Medical personnel should follow the same principles for managing Lewisite skin, eye, and airway lesions that they follow for managing mustard lesions. A specific antidote, BAL (dimercaprol), will prevent or greatly decrease the severity of skin and eye lesions if applied topically within minutes after the exposure and decontamination (however, preparations of BAL for use in the eyes and on the skin are no longer available). Given intramuscularly, BAL will reduce the severity of systemic effects. BAL binds to the arsenic of... [Pg.220]


See other pages where Lewisite medical management is mentioned: [Pg.254]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.309]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.242 , Pg.253 ]




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