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CYANIDE
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OBJECTIVES Recognize the physical and chemical properties Describe the mechanism of action Identify routes of exposure Describe the clinical presentation Discuss proper treatment modalities
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CYANIDE Rapidly acting chemical poison CW agents Hydrogen cyanide (AC) Cyanogen chloride (CK) Naturally occurring chemical Found in most living organisms Man: < 0. 3 mcg / mL in blood CN -
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OTHER CYANIDE SOURCES Foods and other plants Lima beans, cassava root, peach pits Combustion Plastics, synthetic fibers Nitriles (acrylic and nylon manufacture) Cigarette smoke Fumigant / pest killer
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NONMILITARY USES Poisonings Terrorists, Executions, Homicides, Suicides Industry Electroplating Plastics processing Gold and Silver extraction Fumigation Photography Metallurgy
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HISTORY AND MILITARY USE Scheele: Isolated in (1782) Napoleon: Troops dipped bayonets WW I: French Nazi Germany: Zyklon B Japan: Against the Chinese in WW II Stockpiled by U.S. in WW II Chemical agent identification kits
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CYANIDE CHARACTERISTICS Liquid, gas, or salt Volatile: boiling point 60-80 0 F Non-persistent Bitter almond to biting, pungent odor Cyanogen chloride (CK) Chlorine smell Strong affinity for metals, especially ferric iron (Fe 3+ ) Cytochrome oxidase (Fe 3+ ) Methemoglobin (Fe 3+ )
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DOSE: Toxicity Relationship General Principle Bigger exposure Means Worse injury and sooner onset
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SITE OF ACTION Primary site of action: Cells rather than blood Organelles affected: Mitochondria
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CLASSICAL MECHANISM OF ACTION Cyanide binds to hemoprotein in mitochondria Cytochrome oxidase hemoprotein (cyt a 3 ) has Fe 3+ (Cell energy producer) Stable but reversible binding CN - has higher affinity for Fe 3+ in cyt a 3 than Fe 2+ in hemoglobin Cyanide interrupts oxidative phosphorylation …
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HOW CYANIDE INTERFERES WITH OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION
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EFFECTS OF CYANIDE IN THE CELLS AND BLOOD No aerobic generation of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This blocks cell’s ability to use oxygen (aerobic metabolism) causing cell death Aerobic metabolism stops and shifts to anaerobic metabolism, causing rapid lactic acidosis No extraction of Oxygen from blood; venous blood oxygen increases to near arterial levels
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MANIFESTATIONS OF TOXICITY Rapid onset (inhalation) Brief period of tachypnea Loss of consciousness Convulsions Apnea without cyanosis Asystole Death
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HIGH DOSE INHALATIONAL CYANIDE TIMELINE Convulsions Inhalation Hyperpnea LOC Apnea Heart stops Death 15 sec 30 sec 3-5 mins 5-8 mins 60 sec
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HIGH DOSE INGESTION CYANIDE TIMELINE Ingestion Hyperpnea Anxiety Convulsions Heart stops Death 7 min 10 min 20 min 30 min LOC 15 min Weakness Apnea 25 min
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DIAGNOSIS History of exposure Rapid onset of symptoms “Cherry red” skin; odor of bitter almonds Respiratory depression Laboratory Methemoglobin level Whole blood or tissue cyanide or thiocyanate level Metabolic acidosis
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THE BOTTOM LINE Cyanide blocks aerobic metabolism and energy production causing cellular hypoxia Normally body metabolizes cyanide by enzymatic reaction mediated by mitochondrial enzyme rhodanese in the liver. This reaction forms thiocyanate which is excreted in the urine Toxic dose overwhelms the normal metabolic processes Treat cyanide overdose by enhancing normal metabolic mechanisms
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MEDICAL MANAGEMENT Protect yourself! Eliminate further exposure General supportive therapy Specific antidotal therapy
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GENERAL SUPPORTIVE THERAPY Termination of exposure Removal of patient: Physical removal, masking Removal of agent Decontamination (soap and water) Gastric lavage with activated charcoal, 5% sodium thiosulfate, 0.1% potassium permanganate, or 1.5% hydrogen peroxide (ingestion) Airway, Breathing, and Circulation (but beware unprotected mouth-to-mouth respiration) 100% oxygen Correct metabolic acidosis / manage seizures Observation for at least 24 to 48 hours
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GOALS OF SPECIFIC ANTIDOTAL THERAPY Displace cyanide from cytochrome a 3 Use Nitrites to form methemoglobin, Ferric iron (Fe 3+ ) Eliminate cyanide from the body Administer sulfane (e.g., sodium thiosulfate) as a sulfur donor Convert cyanide to thiocyanate nitrite thiosulfate metHb (Fe 3+ ) HbO 2 (Fe 2+ )
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ANTIDOTE THERAPY Cyanide Antidote Kit Methemoglobin Formers Amyl Nitrite Sodium Nitrite Sulfur Donor Sodium Thiosulfate
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AMYL NITRITE: (C 5 H 11 NO 2 ) Therapeutic effect noted as early as 1888 Generates methemoglobin (variable levels) Casualty must inhale - give by ambu bag Causes marked vasodilation, orthostatic hypotension, dizziness, and headache Use your judgment if casualty is conscious and able to stand
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CYANIDE IS IN THE BODY: Where Will it Bind? HbO 2 (Fe 2+ ) CN - (Fe 3+ ) cyt a 3
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BOUND CYANIDE INACTIVATES CYTOCHROME OXIDASE CN - cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ ) cyt a 3 HbO 2 (Fe 2+ )
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NITRITE PRODUCES METHEMOGLOBIN: What Will Cyanide Do? HbO 2 (Fe 2+ ) metHb (Fe 3+ ) nitrite ? ? ? CN - cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ )
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CYANIDE RELEASES CYTOCHROME OXIDASE … CN - metHb (Fe 3+ ) cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ )
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AND FORMS CYANOMETHEMOGLOBIN CN - metHb (Fe 3+ ) A stable, but reversible, bond cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ )
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OVER TIME CYANIDE WILL MOVE OUT OF THE BOND WITH METHEMOGLOBIN … metHb (Fe 3+ ) CN - cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ )
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SODIUM NITRITE (NaNO 2 ) Forms methemoglobin Beneficial effects rapid Single dose raises metHb level to 20% Adverse effects Headache Nausea Orthostatic hypotension Methemoglobinemia (maintain less than 40% metHb)
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SODIUM NITRITE: Administration 10 mL IV of a 3% soln (30 mg / mL) = 300 mg Administer over a 5 to 15 minute period Vasodilatory affects STOP if systolic BP drops below 80 Give half original dose if signs recur
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SODIUM NITRITE: CAUTION! In children – USE CAUTION! 0.33 mL per kilogram of body weight 10% solution Fire victims – USE CAUTION! Should not be given methemoglobin-inducing substances Alternative therapy administer oxygen, thiosulfate, hydroxicobalamin, or other supportive measures
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SODIUM THIOSULFATE (Na 2 S 2 O 3 ) Normally rhodanese enzyme (primarily in liver) metabolizes sulfur and cyanide to produce thiocyanate Thiosulfate is the sulfur donor to help rhodanese enzymatic reactions that form thiocyanate (SCN - ) and sulfite (SO 3 2- ) Irreversible reaction; thiocyanate excreted by kidney Adverse effects few and usually not serious Nausea, vomiting, arthralgias, psychosis only with levels greater than 10 mg / dL
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SODIUM THIOSULFATE: Administration 50 mL IV of a 25% soln (250 mg / mL) = 12.5 g Administer over a 10- minute period beginning immediately after nitrite administration Give half original dose if signs recur Pediatric Dose: 1.65 mL / kg
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IN THE LIVER, FREE CYANIDE IS TRANSFORMED INTO THIOCYANATE WHICH IS THEN EXCRETED IN THE URINE metHb (Fe 3+ ) CN - thiosulfate rhodanese urine Liver thiocyanate
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REVIEW OF THE ANTIDOTE STEPS thiocyanate CN - thiosulfate rhodanese urine Liver CN - metHb (Fe 3+ ) HbO 2 (Fe 2+ ) metHb (Fe 3+ ) nitrite1.2. cyt a 3 (Fe 3+ )
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OTHER METHEMOGLOBIN FORMERS 4-Dimethylaminophenol (4-DMAP) Forms metHb more rapidly than do nitrites No hypotension, but metHb levels often too high Local necrosis may occur after IM injection (give IV only) Used in Germany
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COBALT COMPOUNDS Dicobalt edetate (Co 2 EDTA, Kelocyanor) Chelates CN - Adverse effects Angina pectoris, ventricular dysrhythmias, periorbital and laryngeal edema, convulsions Used in the U.K., France, and the Netherlands
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COBALT COMPOUNDS Hydroxocobalamin (vitamin B 12a ) Reacts with CN - to form cyanocobalamin (vitamin B 12 ) Difficult to administer adequate amounts Used in France
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SUMMARY Killed millions throughout history. Top terrorist consideration Battlefield or terrorist use probably as a vapor (enclosed area) Variable potency (LCt 50 ) because of body’s natural metabolism, but rapidly acting in high concentrations Cellular poison, NOT a “blood” agent Nitrites generate metHb, which “pulls” cyanide from cyt a 3 temporarily Thiosulfate provides sulfides to help liver enzyme rhodanese form thiocyanate which is excreted in the urine CN -
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