Mustard Agents
Mustard agents are usually classified as "blistering
agents" owing to the similarity of the wounds caused by these substances resembling
burns and blisters. However, since mustard agents also cause severe damage to the eyes,
respiratory system and internal organs, they should preferably be described as
"blistering and tissue-injuring agents". Normal mustard agent,
bis-(2-chloroethyl)sulphide, reacts with a large number of biological molecules. The
effect of mustard agent is delayed and the first symptoms do not occur until between 2-24
hours after exposure.
Mustard agent was produced for the first time in 1822 but its
harmful effects were not discovered until 1860. Mustard agent was first used as a CW agent
during the latter part of the First World War and caused lung and eye injuries to a very
large number of soldiers. Many of them still suffered pain 30-40 years after they had been
exposed, mainly as a result of injuries to the eyes and chronic respiratory disorders.
Towards the end of the Second World War a large number of soldiers
and sailors were injured during a German attack on the Italian port of Bari. A cargoship
loaded with mustard agent ammunition was hit and large amounts of mustard agent became
mixed with the water. The victims swam around in the contaminated water but it was not
realized until too late that a large number of people had been injured by mustard agent.
The Bari Incident served as a macabre illustration of the delayed effect of mustard agent.
During the war between Iran and Iraq in 1979-88, Iraq used large
quantities of chemical agents. About 5 000 Iranian soldiers have been reported killed,
10-20 per cent by mustard agent. In addition, there were 40 000 to 50 000 injured. A
typical result of warfare with mustard agent is that the medical system is loaded with
numerous injured who require long and demanding care.
Incidents are still occurring annually in the neighborhood of Sweden
where people risk injury from mustard agent. This largely involves fishermen who are
exposed to mustard agent brought to the surface by fishing nets. The background is found
in the dumping of chemical weapons after the Second World War in waters off the Danish and
Swedish coasts. Many fishing ports in south Sweden and Denmark have resources to care for
injured people and to decontaminate equipment contaminated by mustard agent. Certain
resources are also available on the fishing vessels.
Mustard agent is very simple to manufacture and can therefore be a
"first choice" when a country decides to build up a capacity for chemical
warfare.
Apart from mustard agent, there are also several other closely
related compounds which have been used as chemical weapons. During the 1930's, several
reports were published on the synthesis of nitrogen mustard agent and its remarkable
blistering effect. The mechanism of action and symptoms largely agree with those described
for mustard agent. Germans and Americans started the military production of nitrogen
mustard agent in 1941 and 1943, respectively, whereas the development in England was
abandoned following an explosion. There is no verified use of nitrogen mustard agents as
chemical weapons and their usefulness is restricted by these types of agents being
unsuitable for storage.
Physical and Chemical Properties
In its pure state, mustard agent is colorless and almost odorless.
The name was given to mustard agent as a result of an earlier production method which
yielded an impure mustard-smelling product. Mustard agent is also claimed to have a
characteristic smell similar to rotten onions. However, the sense of smell is dulled after
only a few breaths so that the smell can no longer be distinguished. In addition, mustard
agent can cause injury to the respiratory system in concentrations which are so low that
the human sense of smell cannot distinguish them.
At room temperature, mustard agent is a liquid with low volatility
and is very stable during storage. The melting-point for pure mustard agent is 14.4C. In
order to be able to effectively use mustard agent at lower temperatures, it has been mixed
with lewisite in some types of ammunition in a ratio of 2:3. This mixture has a
freezing-point of -26C. During the Second World War, a form of mustard agent with high
viscosity was manufactured by means of the addition of a polymer. This is the first known
example of a thickened CW agent.
Mustard agent can easily be dissolved in most organic solvents but
has negligible solubility in water. In aqueous solutions, mustard agent decomposes into
non-poisonous products by means of hydrolysis. This reaction is catalyzed by alkali.
However, only dissolved mustard agent reacts, which means that the decomposition proceeds
very slowly. Bleaching-powder and chloramines, however, react violently with mustard
agent, whereupon non-poisonous oxidation products are formed. Consequently, these
substances are used for the decontamination of mustard agent.
Mechanism of Action
The toxic effects of mustard agent depend on its ability to
covalently bind to other substances. The chlorine atom is spiked off the ethyl group and
the mustard agent is transferred to a reactive sulphonium ion. This ion can bind to a
large number of different biological molecules. Most of all it binds to nucleophiles such
as nitrogen in the base components of nucleic acids and sulphur in SH-groups in proteins
and peptides. Since mustard agent contains two "reactive groups", it can also
form a bridge between or within molecules. Mustard agent can destroy a large number of
different substances in the cell by means of alkylation and thereby influence numerous
processes in living tissue.
Symptoms
In the form of gas or liquid, mustard agent attacks the skin, eyes,
lungs and gastro-intestinal tract. Internal organs may also be injured, mainly
blood-generating organs, as a result of mustard agent being taken up through the skin or
lungs and transported into the body. The delayed effect is a characteristic of mustard
agent. Mustard agent gives no immediate symptoms upon contact and consequently a delay of
between two and twenty-four hours may occur before pain is felt and the victim becomes
aware of what has happened. By then cell damage has already been caused.
Symptoms of mustard agent poisoning extend over a wide range. Mild
injuries consist of aching eyes with abundant flow of tears, inflammation of the skin,
irritation of the mucous membrane, hoarseness, coughing and sneezing. Normally, these
injuries do not require medical treatment. Severe injuries which are incapacitating and
require medical care may involve eye injuries with loss of sight, the formation of
blisters on the skin, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea together with severe respiration
difficulty.
Acute mortality arising from exposure to mustard agent is low. The
dose needed to directly kill a person upon inhalation is, e.g., about 50 times larger than
the dose giving acute mortality upon poisoning with the nerve agent soman. People who die
after exposure to mustard agent usually do so after a few days up to one or more weeks.
Minor skin damage may be caused by mustard agent in the gaseous
state whereas the most severe injuries are caused after contact with liquid mustard agent.
Skin damage first appears as a painful inflammation. Depending on the level of exposure,
the injury may develop into pigmentation, which flakes-off after a couple of weeks, small
surface blisters or deep liquid-filled blisters with subsequent skin necrosis. In extreme
cases, the skin necrosis may be so comprehensive that no blisters occur. Skin injuries are
more severe in humid and warm climates. Similarly, the injuries will be more severe where
the skin is moist and warm, e.g., in the groin and armpits.
Experience has shown that even extremely extensive skin damage,
80-90 %, can be cured if the patient is kept free of infection. However, injuries to the
skin require a very long period of recuperation, much longer than thermal burns, and may
require care and plastic surgery over a period of several months.
Injury to the eyes appear initially as irritation with eye
inflammation and a strong flow of tears. Depending on exposure, the symptoms thereafter
may successively develop to sensitivity to light, swollen eyelids, and injury to the
cornea. Severe damage to the eye may lead to the total loss of vision. Victims suffering
damage to the eyes may encounter problems persisting up to 30-40 years following exposure.
The most common cause of death as a result of mustard agent
poisoning is complications after lung injury caused by inhalation of mustard agent. Lung
injuries become apparent some hours after exposure and will first appear as a pressure
across the chest, sneezing and hoarseness. Severe coughing and respiration difficulties
caused by pulmonary edema will gradually occur and after a couple of days, a
"chemical pneumonia" may develop. Most of the chronic and late effects are also
caused by lung injuries.
The effect on inner organs which is most pronounced is injury to the
bone marrow, spleen and lymphatic tissue. This may cause a drastic reduction in the number
of white blood cells 5-10 days after exposure, a condition very similar to that after
exposure to radiation. This reduction of the immune defense will complicate the already
large risk of infection in people with severe skin and lung injuries.
Antidotes and Methods of Treatment
There is no treatment or antidote which can affect the basic cause
of mustard agent injury. Instead, efforts must be made to treat the symptoms. By far the
most important measure is to rapidly and thoroughly decontaminate the patient and thereby
prevent further exposure. This decontamination will also decrease the risk of exposure to
staff. Clothes are removed, the skin is decontaminated with a suitable decontaminant and
washed with soap and water. If hair is suspected to be contaminated then it must be shaved
off. Eyes are rinsed with water or a physiological salt solution for at least five
minutes.
In medical treatment, efforts are made to control infections by
means of antibiotics. Pain can be eased by local anesthetics. After skin injuries have
healed, it may be necessary to introduce plastic surgery. Lung injuries are treated with
bronchodilatory treatment. Medicine to relieve coughing and also cortisone preparations
may be used. Eye injuries are treated locally with painkillers and with antibiotics if
required. Despite treatment, inflammation and light sensitivity may remain for long
periods.
Modern knowledge on the mechanisms behind mustard agent injuries may
lead mainly to new ways of treatment. The first step, alkylation, takes place extremely
rapidly and is probably very difficult to influence. Future treatment may concentrate on
suppressing and alleviating the development of symptoms and thereby improve the
opportunities for good recovery.
Types of Injury Caused by Mustard Agent
It is impossible to identify a single mechanism for the damage
caused by mustard agent. However, two possible important mechanisms can be mentioned where
the first step in both is the formation of a reactive sulphonium ion. One such mechanism
is the bonding of mustard agent to the base compounds in DNA (alkylation). The bonding may
induce breakages of strands and the formation of bridges between the two strands in the
DNA molecule. Bridges of this kind prevent DNA from functioning normally during cell
division which may lead to severe injury and possibly cell mortality. Damage to the DNA
may also lead to mutations and disturbance to the natural repair mechanisms of DNA. The
influence on DNA can cause the increased frequency of cancer observed after exposure to
mustard agent.
The other mechanism of action is interaction between mustard agent
and intracellular glutathion. Glutathion is a small peptide molecule which, among other
things, takes care of the free radicals formed during cell respiration. If too large an
amount of glutathion is bound by mustard agent, then the regulation of these free radicals
no longer functions. Since free radicals are extremely toxic, this may lead to a number of
processes in the cell being severely disturbed.
Mustard agent can also bind to different proteins in the cell.
However, it is not known how much this contributes to the injuries caused. The binding
takes place at the functional groups, e.g., the sulphydryl or amino groups. If the binding
is made to, for example, the active site of enzymes, then their activity is inhibited
which could lead to metabolic disorders. If, on the other hand, membrane proteins are
bound, the result can be a modified uptake of substances and the inner environment of the
cell will become disturbed.
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