Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBeatrice Gray Modified over 8 years ago
1
Botulinum Toxin By: Micah Streety, Carson Lougheed, Zachary Maschmann
2
Poison C 6760 H 10447 N 1743 O 2010 S 32 C H N O S Very difficult to synthesize Occurs naturally from Clostridium botulinum Bacteria broken into 7 subtypes, depending upon physical characteristics
3
Symptoms Botulism leads to nausea, vomiting, blurry vision, general weakness, paralysis, double vision, and ultimately failure of skeletal and soft muscle tissues
4
Use As a poison, Botulinum Toxin must be applied to the blood stream In Botox or Dysport injections, it is applied to a single muscle Can be applied Intramuscularly, Intravenously and Subcutaneously (fatal applications), and into glands No permanent effects…
5
Discovery and Cure It was discovered in 1895 my Emile Van Ermengem in an old ham as the source of a local botulinum toxin outbreak It can be treated with either Trivalent Botulinum Anti-toxin (antibodies), or a Heptavalent antibody found in Zebras
6
Case Study Black Tar Heroin, Subcutaneously, or “Skin Popping” Increasingly common First “Skin Popping” Botulinum in New York 1982 ¾ of Botulinum cases in california due to black tar
7
Case Study Sara, 21 went to thanksgiving at her grandparent’s farm Ate her grandmother’s own canned vegitables Blurred vision, difficulty swallowing, while driving a car Rushed to hospital and treated with Trivalent Botulinum Anti-Toxin
8
Works Cited Neuromuscular.wustl.edu/nother/bot.htm www.gillettechildrens.org/ default. www.wikipedia.org www.wikipedia.org www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.