Toxin
Biological Weapon
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Biological Weapon
, Biological Toxin, Bioterrorism, Germ Warfare
See Also
Biological Neurotoxin
Epidemiology
Bioterrorism attacks number at least 37 between 1981-2018
Five Category A infections had natural outbreaks in 2020 (Ebola, Lass
Fever
,
Anthrax
,
Plague
,
Botulism
)
Definitions
Bioterrorism
Deliberate release of viruses,
Bacteria
, toxins or fungi
Intent to cause panic, mass casualties and socioeconomic disruption
Background
Biological Weapons Convention (1975, UN)
https://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/bwc
Bans development, acquisition, use or stockpiling of
Biological Agent
s
Not ratified by 10 countries: Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Eritrea, Israel, Kiribati, Micronesia, Namibia, South Sudan, Tuvalu
Historical Examples
Diseased Livestock (14th century B.C.E., ancient Egypt)
Hittites drove diseased cattle into their enemies camps
Decomposed human bodies (1155, Italy)
Water wells were poisoned by throwing dead bodies into the well
Plague
(1346, Crimean Peninsula)
Mongols catapulted bodies of
Plague
victims over the city walls of Caffa
Leprosy
(1495, Italy)
Spanish mixed blood from
Leprosy
patients with wine and sold the wine to their french enemies
Smallpox
(1754 to 1763, North America)
Transmitted to native americans via infected blankets during the French and Indian War
Smallpox
and
Yellow Fever
(1863, U.S.)
Confederates sold to union forces the clothing from patients with
Yellow Fever
and
Smallpox
Anthrax
(2001, U.S.)
Anthrax
spores sent via U.S. postal service to congressional offices
References
Frischknecht (2003) EMBO Rep (Suppl 1):S47-52 +PMID: 12789407 [PubMed]
Types
CDC Category A: High public health impact
Characteristics
Easily disseminated
High morbidity and mortality rates
Causes widespread fear and disruption
Requires greatest preparation and surveillance
Viral Agents
Smallpox
(
Variola major
)
Filovirus hemorrhagic fever agents
Ebola (
Ebola Virus
)
Marburg (Marburg
Virus
)
Arenavirus hemorrhagic fever agents
Lassa Fever
(Lassa
Virus
)
Bolivian hemorrhagic fever (Machupo
Virus
)
Argentine hemorrhagic fever (Junin
Virus
)
Bacteria
l Agents
Anthrax
(
Bacillus anthracis
)
Plague
(
Yersinia pestis
)
Tularemia
(
Francisella tularensis
)
Preformed Biological Toxins
Botulism
(
Clostridium botulinum
Toxin)
Types
CDC Category B: Moderate public health impact
Characteristics
Moderately easy to disseminate
Moerate morbidity and low mortality rates
Causes widespread fear and disruption
Requires specialized diagnostic testing and disease surveillance
Viral Agents
Alphaviruses
Venezuelan Equine
Encephalitis
(VEE)
Eastern Equine Encephalitis
Western Equine
Encephalitis
Bacteria
l Agents
Q Fever
(
Coxiella
burnetti)
Brucellosis
(
Brucella
)
Glanders
(Burkholderia mallei)
Melioidosis (Burkholderia pseudomallei)
Psittacosis
(
Chlamydia psittaci
)
Typhus
Fever
(
Rickettsia
powazekii)
Foodborne Illness
Salmonella
Shigella
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
(
E. coli 0157
)
Waterborne Illness
Vibrio Cholerae
Cryptosporidium parvum
Preformed Biological Toxins
Ricin
(
Ricin
us communis or
Castor Oil
extract)
Epsilon toxin (
Clostridium
perfringes)
T-2
Mycotoxin
Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B
(SEB)
Types
CDC Category C: Emerging Risks
Characteristics
Emerging agents with a potential for mass dissemination
Potentially high morbidity and mortality rates
Viral Agents
Nipah
Virus
Hanta Virus
Tickborne hemorrhagic fever viruses
Tickborne
Encephalitis
viruses
Yellow Fever
(
Yellow Fever
virus)
Bacteria
l Agents
Multi-drug resistant
Tuberculosis
Signs
Red Flags suggestive of Biological Weapon exposure
Single case of an uncommon or rare disease (e.g.
Smallpox
)
Uncommon disease presentation (season or geographic region), population (e.g. age cohort) or vector (route of exposure)
Severe disease with high
Infectivity
Large acute patient cohort with similar symptoms or same disease
Unusual clinical presentation of symptoms and signs, or atypical response to standard treatments
Cluster of unexplained deaths in humans or animals
Resources
CDC Emergency Preparedness - Bioterrorism
http://emergency.cdc.gov/bioterrorism/index.asp
US Army Research Institute of Infectious Disease (USAMRIID)
https://www.usamriid.army.mil/education/instruct.htm
WHO Bioterrorism
https://www.who.int/health-topics/biological-weapons
References
Seeyave (2015) Crit Dec Emerg Med 29(5): 13-21
Rathjen (2021) Am Fam Physician 104(4): 376-85 [PubMed]
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