Biological Warfare History, Definition, Statistics, Facts on Bioterrorism

Biological Warfare

Reviewed on 6/1/2022

What Is the History of Biological Warfare?

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Biological Warfare: Biological weapons include any organism (such as bacteria, viruses, or fungi) or toxin found in nature that can be used to kill or injure people.

Biological weapons include any microorganism (such as bacteria, viruses, or fungi) or toxin (poisonous compounds produced by microorganisms) found in nature that can be used to kill or injure people.

The act of bioterrorism can range from a simple hoax to the actual use of these biological weapons, also referred to as agents. Several nations have or are seeking to acquire biological warfare agents, and there are concerns that terrorist groups or individuals may acquire the technologies and expertise to use these destructive agents. Biological agents may be used for an isolated assassination, as well as to cause incapacitation or death to thousands. If the environment is contaminated, a long-term threat to the population could be created.

  • History: The use of biological agents is not a new concept, and history is filled with examples of their use.
    • Attempts to use biological warfare agents date back to antiquity. Scythian archers infected their arrows by dipping them in decomposing bodies or blood mixed with manure as far back as 400 BC. Persian, Greek, and Roman literature from 300 BC quote examples of dead animals used to contaminate wells and other sources of water. In the Battle of Eurymedon in 190 BC, Hannibal won a naval victory over King Eumenes II of Pergamon by firing earthen vessels full of venomous snakes into the enemy ships.
    • During the battle of Tortona in the 12th century AD, Barbarossa used the bodies of dead and decomposing soldiers to poison wells. During the siege of Kaffa in the 14th century AD, the attacking Tatar forces hurled plague-infected corpses into the city in an attempt to cause an epidemic within enemy forces. This was repeated in 1710 when the Russians besieging Swedish forces at Reval in Estonia catapulted bodies of people who had died from the plague.
    • During the French and Indian War in the 18th century AD, British forces under the direction of Sir Jeffrey Amherst gave blankets that had been used by smallpox victims to the Native Americans in a plan to spread the disease.
    • Allegations were made during the American Civil War by both sides, but especially against the Confederate Army, of the attempted use of smallpox to cause disease among enemy forces.
  • Modern times: Biological warfare reached sophistication during the 1900s.
    • During World War I, the German Army developed anthrax, glanders, cholera, and a wheat fungus specifically for use as biological weapons. They allegedly spread plague in St. Petersburg, Russia, infected mules with glanders in Mesopotamia, and attempted to do the same with the horses of the French Cavalry.
    • The Geneva Protocol of 1925 was signed by 108 nations. This was the first multilateral agreement that extended the prohibition of chemical agents to biological agents. Unfortunately, no method for verification of compliance was addressed.
    • During World War II, Japanese forces operated a secret biological warfare research facility (Unit 731) in Manchuria that carried out human experiments on prisoners. They exposed more than 3,000 victims to plague, anthrax, syphilis, and other agents in an attempt to develop and observe the disease. Some victims were executed or died from their infections. Autopsies were also performed for a greater understanding of the effects on the human body.
    • In 1942, the United States formed the War Research Service. Anthrax and botulinum toxin initially were investigated for use as weapons. Sufficient quantities of botulinum toxin and anthrax were stockpiled by June 1944 to allow unlimited retaliation if the German forces first used biological agents. The British also tested anthrax bombs on Gruinard Island off the northwest coast of Scotland in 1942 and 1943 and then prepared and stockpiled anthrax-laced cattle cakes for the same reason.
    • The United States continued research on various offensive biological weapons during the 1950s and 1960s. From 1951-1954, harmless organisms were released off both coasts of the United States to demonstrate the vulnerability of American cities to biological attacks. This weakness was tested again in 1966 when a test substance was released in the New York City subway system.
    • During the Vietnam War, Viet Cong guerrillas used needle-sharp punji sticks dipped in feces to cause severe infections after an enemy soldier had been stabbed.
    • In 1979, an accidental release of anthrax from a weapons facility in Sverdlovsk, USSR, killed at least 66 people. The Russian government claimed these deaths were due to infected meat and maintained this position until 1992 when Russian President Boris Yeltsin finally admitted to the accident.

Facts on Bioterrorism and Biowarfare Today

  • Bioterrorism and biowarfare today: A number of countries have continued offensive biological weapons research and use. Additionally, since the 1980s, terrorist organizations have become users of biological agents. Usually, these cases amount only to hoaxes. However, the following exceptions have been noted:
    • In 1985, Iraq began an offensive biological weapons program producing anthrax, botulinum toxin, and aflatoxin. During Operation Desert Storm, the coalition of allied forces faced the threat of chemical and biological agents. Following the Persian Gulf War, Iraq disclosed that it had bombs, Scud missiles, 122-mm rockets, and artillery shells armed with botulinum toxin, anthrax, and aflatoxin. They also had spray tanks fitted to aircraft that could distribute agents over a specific target.
    • In September and October of 1984, 751 people were intentionally infected with Salmonella, an agent that causes food poisoning, when followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh contaminated restaurant salad bars in Oregon.
    • In 1994, a Japanese sect of the Aum Shinrikyo cult attempted an aerosolized (sprayed into the air) release of anthrax from the tops of buildings in Tokyo.
    • In 1995, two members of a Minnesota militia group were convicted of possession of ricin, which they had produced themselves for use in retaliation against local government officials.
    • In 1996, an Ohio man attempted to obtain bubonic plague cultures through the mail.
    • In 2001, anthrax was delivered by mail to U.S. media and government offices. There were five deaths as a result.
    • In December 2002, six terrorist suspects were arrested in Manchester, England; their apartment was serving as a "ricin laboratory." Among them was a 27-year-old chemist who was producing the toxin. Later, on Jan. 5, 2003, British police raided two residences around London and found traces of ricin, which led to an investigation of a possible Chechen separatist plan to attack the Russian embassy with the toxin; several arrests were made.
    • On Feb. 3, 2004, three U.S. Senate office buildings were closed after the toxin ricin was found in a mailroom that serves Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist's office.

The threat that biological agents will be used on both military forces and civilian populations is now more likely than it was at any other point in history.

How Are Biological Agents Delivered and Detected?

Although there are more than 1,200 biological agents that could be used to cause illness or death, relatively few possess the necessary characteristics to make them ideal candidates for biological warfare or terrorism agents. The ideal biological agents are relatively easy to acquire, process, and use. Only small amounts (on the order of pounds and often less) would be needed to kill or incapacitate hundreds of thousands of people in a metropolitan area. Biological warfare agents are easy to hide and difficult to detect or protect against. They are invisible, odorless, tasteless, and can be spread silently.

Delivery

Biological warfare agents can be disseminated in various ways.

  • Through the air by aerosol sprays: To be an effective biological weapon, airborne germs must be dispersed as fine particles. To be infected, a person must breathe a sufficient quantity of particles into the lungs to cause illness.
  • Used in explosives (artillery, missiles, detonated bombs): The use of an explosive device to deliver and spread biological agents is not as effective as the delivery by aerosol. This is because agents tend to be destroyed by the blast, typically leaving less than 5% of the agent capable of causing disease.
  • Put into food or water: Contamination of a city's water supplies requires an unrealistically large amount of an agent as well as an introduction into the water after it passes through a regional treatment facility.
  • Absorbed through or injected into the skin: This method might be ideal for assassination but is not likely to be used to cause mass casualties.

Detection

Biological agents could either be found in the environment using advanced detection devices, after specific testing, or by a doctor reporting a medical diagnosis of an illness caused by an agent. Animals may also be early victims and shouldn't be overlooked.

  • Early detection of a biological agent in the environment allows for early and specific treatment and time enough to treat others who were exposed to protective medications. Currently, the U.S. Department of Defense is evaluating devices to detect clouds of biological warfare agents in the air.
  • Doctors must be able to identify early victims and recognize patterns of disease. If unusual symptoms, a large number of people with symptoms, dead animals, or other inconsistent medical findings are noted, a biological warfare attack should be suspected. Doctors report these patterns to public health officials.

Protective Measures

Protective measures can be taken against biological warfare agents. These should be started early (if enough warning is received) but definitely once it is suspected that a biological agent has been used. To read more about protective clothing, see Personal Protective Equipment.

  • Masks: Currently, available masks such as the military gas mask or high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter masks used for tuberculosis exposure filter out most biological warfare particles delivered through the air. However, the face seals on ill-fitting masks often leak. For a mask to fit properly, it must be fitted to a person's face.
  • Clothing: Most biological agents in the air do not penetrate unbroken skin, and few organisms stick to skin or clothing. After an aerosol attack, the simple removal of clothing eliminates a great majority of surface contamination. Thorough showering with soap and water removes 99.99% of the few organisms that may be left on the victim's skin.
  • Medical protection: Health care professionals treating victims of biological warfare may not need special suits but should use latex gloves and take other precautions such as wearing gowns and masks with protective eye shields. Victims would be isolated in private rooms while receiving treatment.
  • Antibiotics: Victims of biological warfare might be given antibiotics orally (pills) or through an IV, even before the specific agent is identified.
  • Vaccinations: Currently, protective vaccines (given as shots) are available for anthrax, Q fever, yellow fever, and smallpox. The widespread immunization of nonmilitary personnel has not been recommended by any governmental agency so far. Immune protection against ricin and staphylococcal toxins may also be possible in the near future.

Anthrax Exposure Symptoms, Signs, and Diagnosis

Anthrax bacteria occur worldwide. The United States Working Group on Civilian Biodefense and the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) have identified anthrax as one of a few biological agents capable of causing death and disease in sufficient numbers to cripple a developed region or urban setting. The organisms known as Bacillus anthracis may ordinarily produce disease in domesticated as well as wild animals such as goats, sheep, cattle, horses, and swine. Humans become infected by contact with infected animals or contaminated animal products. Infection occurs mainly through the skin and rarely by breathing spores or swallowing them. Spores exist in the soil and become aerosolized when the microorganisms are released into the air by excavation, plowing, or other disruptive actions.

Apart from biological warfare, anthrax in humans is rare. In the United States, only 127 cases of anthrax appeared in the early years of the 20th century and dropped to about one per year during the 1990s.

Signs and Symptoms

Skin anthrax (cutaneous): Infection begins when the spores enter the skin through small cuts or abrasions. Spores then become active in the host (human or animal) and produce poisonous toxins. Swelling, bleeding, and tissue death may occur at the site of infection.

  • Most of the cases of anthrax involve the skin. After a person is exposed, the disease first appears in 1-5 days as a small pimple-looking sore that progresses over the next 1-2 days to contain fluid-filled with many organisms. The sore is usually painless, and it may have to swell around it. Sometimes the swelling affects a person's entire face or limb.
  • Victims may have a fever, feel tired, and have a headache. Once the sore open, it forms a black area of tissue. The black appearance of the tissue injury gives anthrax its name from the Greek word anthracosis, meaning coal. After a period of 2-3 weeks, the black tissue separates, often leaving a scar. With adequate treatment, less than 1% of people infected with skin anthrax die.

Inhalation anthrax: In inhalation anthrax, the spores are inhaled into the lungs where they become active and multiply. There they produce massive bleeding and swelling inside the chest cavity. The germs can spread to the blood, leading to shock and blood poisoning, which may lead to death.

  • Historically known as woolsorter's disease (because it affected people who work around sheep), inhalation anthrax can appear anywhere within 1-6 days, or as long as 60 days after exposure. Initial symptoms are general and can include headache, tiredness, body aches, and fever. The victim may have a nonproductive cough and mild chest pain. These symptoms usually last for 2-3 days.
  • Some people show a short period of improvement. This is followed by the sudden onset of increased trouble breathing, shortness of breath, bluish skin color, increased chest pain, and sweating. Swelling of the chest and neck may also occur. Shock and death may follow within 24-36 hours in most people with this type of infection.
  • Anthrax is not spread from person to person. Inhalation anthrax is the most likely form of the disease to follow a military or terrorist attack. Such an attack likely will involve the aerosolized delivery of anthrax spores.

Mouth, throat, GI tract (oropharyngeal and gastrointestinal): These cases result when someone eats infected meat that has not been cooked sufficiently. After an incubation period of 2-5 days, victims with the oropharyngeal disease develop a severe sore throat or sores in the mouth or on a tonsil. Fever and neck swelling may occur. The victim may have trouble breathing. GI anthrax begins with nonspecific symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and fever. These are followed in most victims by severe abdominal pain. The victim may also vomit blood and have diarrhea.

Diagnosis

Doctors will perform various tests, especially if anthrax is suspected.

  • With skin anthrax, a biopsy is taken of the sore (lesion), and lab tests are performed to look at the organism under a microscope and confirm the diagnosis of anthrax.
  • The diagnosis of inhalation anthrax is difficult to make. A chest X-ray may show certain signs in the chest cavity. A CT scan of the chest may be very helpful when there is suspected inhalational anthrax. Early in the process, when the chest X-ray is still normal, the CT scan may show pleural, pericardial, and mediastinal fluid collections, enlarged hemorrhagic mediastinal lymph nodes, and bronchial airway edema. Cultures (growing the bacteria in a lab and then examining them under a microscope) are minimally helpful in making the diagnosis. Blood tests may also be performed.
  • GI anthrax also is difficult to diagnose because the disease is rare and symptoms are not always obvious. Diagnosis usually is confirmed only if the victim has a history of eating contaminated meat in the setting of an outbreak. Once again, cultures generally are not helpful in making the diagnosis.
  • Meningitis (brain swelling) from anthrax is difficult to distinguish from meningitis due to other causes. A spinal tap may be performed to look at the person's spinal fluid in identifying the organism.

The most useful microbiologic test is the standard blood culture, which is almost always positive in victims with anthrax throughout their bodies. Blood cultures should show growth in six to 24 hours and if the laboratory has been alerted to the possibility of anthrax, biochemical testing should provide a preliminary diagnosis 12-24 hours later. However, if the laboratory has not been alerted to the possibility of anthrax, there is the chance that the organism may not be identified correctly.

Rapid diagnostic tests for anthrax and its proteins include polymerase chain reaction (PCR), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) testing. Currently, these tests are only available at national reference laboratories.

Anthrax Exposure Treatment, Prevention, and Postexposure Prophylaxis

Treatment

  • Inhalation anthrax: As previously stated because inhalation anthrax moves quickly throughout the body, doctors will begin antibiotic treatment right away even before a firm diagnosis is made through lab testing.
    • Ciprofloxacin (Cipro), doxycycline (Vibramycin), and penicillin are FDA-approved antibiotics for the treatment of anthrax. Experts currently recommend ciprofloxacin or other drugs in the same class for adults who are assumed to have inhalation anthrax infection. Penicillin and doxycycline may be used once organism culture sensitivities are known.
    • Traditionally, ciprofloxacin and other antibiotics in that class are not recommended for use in children younger than 16-18 years of age because of a weak theoretical link to permanent joint disorders. Balancing these small risks against the risk of death and the possibility of infection with a resistant strain of anthrax, experts recommend that ciprofloxacin nonetheless be given to children in appropriate doses.
    • Because there is a risk the infection will recur, victims are treated with antibiotics for at least 60 days.
  • Skin anthrax: Treatment of skin anthrax with antibiotics generally prevents the disease from progressing to the entire body although the black tissue and scar continue to form. Although previous guidelines have suggested treating skin anthrax with 7-10 days of therapy, recent recommendations suggest treatment for 60 days in the setting of bioterrorism, thus assuming the person may also have been exposed to inhalational anthrax.
  • In pregnant women, experts recommend that ciprofloxacin be given after exposure as a preventive medication following exposure to an anthrax attack.

Prevention

A vaccination series to protect against anthrax consists of five IM doses administered at day 0, week 4, and months 6, 12, and 18, followed by annual boosters. The CDC does not recommend vaccination for the general public, health care workers, or even people working with animals. The only groups that are recommended to receive routine vaccination are military personnel and investigators and remediation workers who are likely to enter an area with B. anthracis spores.

Postexposure Prophylaxis

When unvaccinated people are exposed to anthrax, it is now recommended that they receive antibiotics for 60 days and be vaccinated. The common antibiotics used for postexposure prophylaxis are ciprofloxacin or doxycycline. The vaccine is Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA), and it is given in three subcutaneous doses (administered at 0, 2, and 4 weeks postexposure). These recommendations are for everyone and include pregnant women and children (although the recommendation for children will be reviewed on an event-by-event basis). The government has stockpiles of drugs and vaccines available and can deliver them to an affected area very quickly.

Plague

Plague is another infection that can strike humans and animals. It is caused by the bacteria Yersinia pestis, which has been the cause of three great human pandemics in the sixth, 14th, and 20th centuries. Throughout history, the oriental rat flea has been largely responsible for spreading bubonic plague. After the flea bites an infected animal, the organisms can multiply inside the flea. When an infected flea attempts to bite again, it vomits clotted blood and bacteria into the victim's bloodstream and passes the infection on to the next victim, whether small mammals (usually rodents) or humans.

Although the largest outbreaks of plague have been associated with the rat flea, all fleas should be considered dangerous in areas where plague may be found. The most important vector (a vector is an animal that can transmit the disease) in the United States is the most prevalent flea of rock squirrels and California ground squirrels. The black rat has been most responsible worldwide for the continuing spread of plague in urban epidemics.

Signs and Symptoms

People infected with plague may suddenly develop high a fever, painful lymph nodes, and have bacteria in their blood. Some victims with the bubonic form of the disease may develop secondary pneumonic plague (a disease similar to pneumonia). Plague is contagious, and when the victim coughs, plague can spread. Pneumonic plague is the most severe form of the disease and if untreated, most people die.

As few as one to 10 organisms are enough to infect humans or other animals including rodents. During the early phase, the germs usually spread to lymph nodes near the bite, where swelling occurs. The infection then spreads to other organs such as the spleen, liver, lungs, skin, mucous membranes, and later, the brain.

In the United States, most victims of human plague have the bubonic form. If the organisms were used as a biological warfare agent, it most likely would be spread through the air and inhaled by victims. The result would be primary pneumonic plague (epidemic pneumonia). If fleas were used as carriers of disease, bubonic or septicemic (blood infection) plague would result.

  • Bubonic plague: Swollen lymph nodes (called buboes) develop 1-8 days after exposure. Their appearance is associated with the onset of sudden fever, chills, and headache, which often are followed by nausea and vomiting several hours later. The buboes become visible within 24 hours and cause severe pain. Untreated, septicemia (blood poisoning) develops in 2-6 days. Up to 15% of bubonic plague victims develop secondary pneumonic plague and thus can spread illness from person to person by coughing.
  • Septicemia plague: Septicemia plague may occur with bubonic plague. The signs and symptoms of primary septicemic plague include fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Later, bleeding in the skin may develop, hands and feet may lose circulation, and tissue may die.
  • Pneumonic plague: Pneumonic plague may occur primarily from inhaling organisms in the air or from exposure to infected blood. Victims typically have a productive cough with blood-tinged sputum within 24 hours of symptom onset.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of bubonic plague may be made if the victim has painful lymph glands and other common symptoms, especially if the victim has been exposed to rodents or fleas. But if the victim is not in an area where plague is present and symptoms are typical of other illnesses, the diagnosis may be difficult.

The doctor may view under a microscope a sample of sputum from a productive cough or the fluid from a swollen lymph gland.

Samples may grow in the laboratory and indicate plague within 48 hours and blood tests may also be performed.

Treatment

Treatment should not be delayed for confirmatory testing. Victims of suspected plague will be isolated for the first 48 hours after treatment begins. If pneumonic plague is present, isolation may last for 4 more days. In 2021, the CDC significantly updated their guidelines for the treatment of plague. Ciprofloxacin is the recommended treatment now, but other fluoroquinolone antibiotics (levofloxacin and moxifloxacin) and gentamycin are also acceptable alternatives. Streptomycin, while still an approved treatment, is frequently not available. Duration of treatment is 10-14 days, but treatment can be extended for people with ongoing fever or other concerning signs. The antibiotics may be given either by mouth or intravenously, depending on severity of illness and other clinical factors.

If treated with antibiotics, buboes typically become smaller in 10-14 days and do not require drainage. Victims are unlikely to survive primary pneumonic plague if antibiotic therapy is not begun within 18 hours of the beginning of symptoms. Without treatment, 60% of people with bubonic plague die, and 100% with pneumonic and septicemic forms die.

Prevention

Fleas always must be targeted for destruction before the rodents, because killing rodents may release into the environment massive amounts of infected fleas, which will be hungry for a blood meal and, in the absence of rodents, the fleas will seek out any warm-blooded animal, including humans and infect them. Pesticides have been successful in getting rid of rats and other animal hosts. Public education about how plague spreads is an important part of prevention.

People who have been exposed to pneumonic plague and those who have been exposed to organisms in the air may be treated with antibiotics. Currently recommended antibiotics are streptomycin or gentamycin IM for 10 days, or until 2 days after the fever subsides. Alternative medications include doxycycline, ciprofloxacin, and chloramphenicol.

Contacts with victims who have bubonic plague do not need preventive medication. But people who were in the same environment as those who are infected may need preventive antibiotics. A previously FDA-approved plague vaccine is no longer manufactured. It was useful against the bubonic form of plague but not the more serious pneumonia (lung) form of plague, which is the kind most often expected in a terrorist incident. A new vaccine effective against all varieties of plague is under development.

Cholera

Cholera is an acute and potentially severe gastrointestinal disease (stomach and intestines) caused by the bacteria Vibrio cholera. This agent has been investigated in the past as a biological weapon. Cholera does not spread easily from human to human, so it appears that major drinking water supplies would have to be profusely contaminated for this agent to be effective as a biological weapon.

Cholera normally can infect water or food that becomes contaminated by human bowel waste. The organism can survive for up to 24 hours in sewage and as long as 6 weeks in certain types of relatively impure water containing organic matter. It can withstand freezing for 3-4 days, but it is killed readily by dry heat, steam, boiling, short-term exposure to ordinary disinfectants, and chlorination of water.

The toxin causes a person's intestines to create massive amounts of fluid that then produces thin, grayish-brown diarrhea.

Signs and Symptoms

Depending on how many organisms a person drinks or eats, the illness could begin within 12-72 hours. The symptoms start suddenly with intestinal cramps and painless (rice-water appearing) diarrhea. Vomiting, feeling ill, and headache often accompany diarrhea, especially early in the illness.

Cholera
Cholera normally can infect water or food that becomes contaminated by human bowel waste. The organism can survive for up to 24 hours in sewage and as long as 6 weeks in certain types of relatively impure water containing organic matter.

Fever is rare. If untreated, the disease generally lasts 1-7 days. During the illness, the body loses great amounts of fluid, so it is important during recovery to replace fluids and balance electrolytes (such as sodium and potassium).

Children may experience seizures and cardiovascular imbalances severe enough to cause heart problems. The rapid loss of body fluids often leads to more severe illness. If not treated, up to half of the children with cholera may die.

Diagnosis

Although cholera can be suspected in patients with a large volume of watery diarrhea, physicians make a definitive diagnosis through stool culture on specialized culture media (thiosulfate citrate bile sucrose (TCBS) agar or taurocholate tellurite gelatin agar (TTGA). There are rapid tests that are also available for diagnosis. However, the tests lack specificity and are usually not recommended at this time.

Treatment

Fluids and electrolytes need to be replaced because the body has lost large amounts of fluids through vomiting and diarrhea. Doctors may encourage the person to drink, but if someone continues to vomit or has frequent stools, an IV may be used to replace the fluid lost.

Antibiotics are recommended if there is severe dehydration or some dehydration with continued stool loss during rehydration therapy. Antibiotics are also recommended for pregnant women and immunocompromised people (for example, severe malnutrition or HIV). Antibiotics such as tetracycline or doxycycline shorten the duration of diarrhea and reduce fluid losses. The currently recommended treatment is a single 300 mg oral dose of doxycycline for adults, pregnant women, and children. The antibiotics ciprofloxacin or erythromycin also may be used for a few days but are not routinely recommended.

Prevention

The FDA recently approved a new single-dose live oral cholera vaccine called Vaxchora (lyophilized CVD 103-HgR). The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommends the vaccine's use for adults 18-64 years old who are traveling to an area of active cholera transmission. It is not recommended for routine travelers.

Tularemia

Tularemia is an infection that can strike humans and animals. It is caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis. The disease causes fever, localized skin or mucous membrane ulcerations, regional swelling of lymph glands, and occasionally pneumonia.

G.W. McCay discovered the disease in Tulare County, Calif., in 1911. The first confirmed case of human disease was reported in 1914. Edward Francis, who described transmission by deer flies via infected blood, coined the term tularemia in 1921. It has been considered an important biological warfare agent because it can infect many people if dispersed by the aerosol route.

Rabbits and ticks most commonly spread tularemia in North America. In other areas of the world, tularemia is transmitted by water rats and other aquatic animals.

The bacteria are usually introduced into the victim through breaks in the skin or through the mucous membranes of the eye, respiratory tract, or GI tract. Ten virulent organisms injected under the skin from a bite or 10-50 organisms breathed into the lungs can cause infection in humans. Hunters may contract this disease by trapping and skinning rabbits in some parts of the country.

Signs and Symptoms

Tularemia has six major forms:

  • Ulceroglandular tularemia
  • Glandular tularemia
  • Oculoglandular tularemia
  • Pharyngeal (oropharyngeal) tularemia
  • Typhoidal tularemia
  • Pneumonic tularemia

Victims with the most common form, ulceroglandular type, typically have a single papule-ulcerative lesion with a central scar (often at the site of a tick bite) and associated tender regional lymphadenopathy (swollen lymph nodes). A sore up to 1 inch across may appear on the skin in a majority of people and is the most common sign of tularemia. If the bite associated with infection was from an animal carrying the disease, the sore is usually on the upper part of a person's body, such as on the arm. If the infection came from an insect bite, the sore might appear on the lower part of the body, such as on the leg.

Enlarged lymph nodes are seen in a majority of victims and maybe the initial or the only sign of infection. Although enlarged lymph nodes usually occur as single lesions, they may appear in groups. Enlarged lymph nodes may come and go and last for as long as three years. When swollen, they may be confused with buboes of bubonic plague.

The glandular form of the disease has tender regional lymphadenopathy but no identifiable skin lesion.

Oculoglandular tularemia presents as conjunctivitis (white of the eyes are red and inflamed), increased tearing, photophobia, and tender enlarged lymph nodes in the head and neck region. Pharyngeal tularemia presents with a sore throat, fever, and swelling in the neck.

The most serious forms of tularemia are typhoidal and pneumonic diseases. Patients with typhoidal disease can have fever, chills, anorexia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, headache, myalgias, sore throat, and cough. Patients with pneumonic tularemia have mostly pulmonary findings. Many patients with pulmonary findings have underlying typhoidal tularemia.

Diagnosis

Tularemia can be diagnosed by growing the bacteria in the laboratory from samples taken of blood, ulcers, sputum, and other body fluids. Serological tests (done to detect antibodies against tularemia), direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) staining of clinical specimens, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test on clinical specimens are available from specialized labs.

Treatment

Victims with tularemia who do not receive appropriate antibiotics may have a prolonged illness with weakness and weight loss. Treated properly, very few people with tularemia die. If a patient has severe disease, it is recommended to give them a 14-day course of streptomycin or gentamicin. For patients with mild to moderate disease, oral ciprofloxacin or doxycycline is recommended. In children with mild to moderate disease, gentamycin is often recommended. However, despite the concerns over side effects in children, some clinicians may recommend oral treatment with ciprofloxacin or doxycycline.

Although laboratory-related infections with this organism are common, the human-to-human spread is unusual. Victims do not need to be isolated from others.

Prevention

There is no recommendation for prophylactic treatment of people going into areas where tularemia is more common. In fact, in the case of low-risk exposure, observation without antibiotics is recommended.

There no longer exists a vaccine against tularemia. New vaccines are under development.

Postexposure Prophylaxis

In the event of a biological attack using Francisella tularensis, the recommendation is to treat exposed people who are not yet ill with 14 days of oral doxycycline or ciprofloxacin.

Brucellosis

Brucellosis is an infection of domesticated and wild animals that can be transmitted to humans. It is caused by an organism of the genus Brucella. The organism infects mainly cattle, sheep, goats, and other similar animals, causing death of developing fetuses and genital infection. Humans, who usually are infected incidentally by contact with infected animals, may develop numerous symptoms in addition to the usual ones of fever, general illness, and muscle pain.

The disease often becomes long-term and may return, even with appropriate treatment. The ease of transmission through the air suggests that these organisms may be useful in biological warfare.

Each of six different strains of the bacteria infect certain animal species. Four are known to cause illness in humans. Animals may transmit organisms during a miscarriage, at the time of slaughter, and in their milk. Brucellosis is rarely, if ever, transmitted from human to human.

Certain species can enter animal hosts through skin abrasions or cuts, the eye membranes, the respiratory tract, and the GI tract. Organisms grow rapidly and eventually go to the lymph nodes, liver, spleen, joints, kidneys, and bone marrow.

Signs and Symptoms

Victims may have a fever or a long-term infection or just a local inflammation. The disease may appear suddenly or develop slowly anywhere from 3 days to several weeks after exposure. Symptoms include fever, sweats, fatigue, loss of appetite, and muscle or joint aches. Depression, headache, and irritability occur frequently. In addition, infection of bones, joints, or the genitourinary tract may cause pain. Cough and chest pain also may be present.

Symptoms often last 3-6 months and occasionally for longer than a year. Different species of the organism can cause different symptoms from skin sores to low back pain to liver disease.

Diagnosis

The doctor will want to know about any exposure to animals, animal products, or environmental exposures in making the diagnosis. Those who drink unpasteurized milk are at higher risk of infection. Military troops exposed to a biological attack and who have fever are likely candidates for this illness. Environmental samples may show the presence of this organism in the attack area. Laboratory tests and cultures of blood or body fluid samples including bone marrow may be performed.

Treatment

Therapy with a single drug has resulted in a high relapse rate, so a combination of antibiotics should be prescribed. A 6-week course of doxycycline and rifampin is effective in most adults with most forms of brucellosis, but there are other alternative antibiotic options.

Prevention

Animal handlers should wear appropriate protective clothing when working with infected animals. Meat should be well cooked, and milk should be pasteurized. Laboratory workers need to take appropriate cautions in handling the organism.

Postexposure Prophylaxis

In the event of a biological attack, the standard gas mask should protect adequately from airborne species. No commercially available vaccine exists for humans. If the exposure is considered high risk, the CDC recommends treating with doxycycline and rifampin for 3 weeks.

Q Fever

Q fever is a disease that also affects animals and humans. It is caused by the bacteria Coxiella burnetii. A spore-like form of the organism is extremely resistant to heat, pressure, and many cleaning solutions. This allows the germs to live in the environment for long periods under harsh conditions. In contrast, the disease it causes in humans is usually not harmful, although it can be temporarily disabling. Even without treatment, most people recover.

The organism is extremely infectious. The potential of the organism as a biological warfare agent is related directly to its ability to infect people easily. A single organism is capable of producing infection and disease in humans. Different strains have been identified worldwide.

  • Humans have been infected most commonly by contact with domestic livestock, particularly goats, cattle, and sheep. The risk of infection is increased greatly if humans are exposed while these animals are giving birth to young. Large numbers of the germs may be released into the air as an animal gives birth. Survival of the organism on surfaces, such as straw, hay, or clothing, allows for transmission to other people who are not in direct contact with infected animals.
  • People can become infected by breathing the organisms.

Signs and Symptoms

Humans are the only hosts that commonly develop an illness as a result of the infection. The illness may begin within 10-40 days. There is no typical pattern of symptoms, and some people show none at all. Most people appear mildly to moderately ill.

Fever (can go up and down and last up to 13 days), chills, and headache are the most common signs and symptoms. Sweating, aches, fatigue, and loss of appetite are also common. Cough often occurs later in the illness. Chest pain occurs in a few people. Sometimes there is a rash. Other symptoms such as headache, facial pain, and hallucinations have been reported.

Sometimes problems in the lungs are seen on chest X-rays. And some people may seem to have acute hepatitis because of their liver involvement. Others may develop a heart condition called endocarditis.

Diagnosis

Blood tests may help in making the diagnosis of Q fever.

Treatment

The drug of choice for treatment of Q fever is doxycycline. There are several alternative antibiotic options that may be preferred under different circumstances.

People with chronic Q fever who develop endocarditis may die, even with appropriate treatment.

Prevention

Although an effective vaccine (Q-Vax) is licensed in Australia, all Q fever vaccines used in the United States are under study. Q fever can be prevented by immunization.

Postexposure Prophylaxis

In the case of bioterror attack, postexposure prophylaxis is recommended using oral doxycycline.

Smallpox

Smallpox
Smallpox was an important cause of illness and death in the developing world until recent times. Variola represents a significant threat as a biological warfare agent.

Variola (the virus that causes smallpox) is the most notorious of the poxviruses. Smallpox was an important cause of illness and death in the developing world until recent times. In 1980, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that smallpox had been completely wiped out. The last case was noted in Somalia in 1977.

Variola represents a significant threat as a biological warfare agent. Variola is highly infectious and is associated with a high death rate and secondary spread. Currently, the majority of the U.S. population has no immunity, the vaccine is in short supply, and no effective treatment exists for the disease. Two WHO-approved and inspected repositories remain: One is at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States and the other at Vector Laboratories in Russia. It is widely believed that clandestine stockpiles exist in other countries such as Iraq and North Korea.

Variola virus is highly infectious when released into the air. It is environmentally stable and can retain its ability to infect people for long periods. Infection through contaminated objects such as clothing is infrequent. After a person is exposed to the aerosolized virus, the virus multiplies in the person's respiratory tract. After a period of 7-17 days, variola is spread through the bloodstream to lymph nodes where it continues to multiply.

Variola then moves into smaller blood vessels near the surface of the skin where the inflammatory changes occur. The classic smallpox rash then begins. Two types of smallpox generally are recognized.

  • Variola major, the most severe form, may cause death in up to 30% of unvaccinated people who develop it (3% of people vaccinated people may also develop variola major).
  • Variola minor, a milder form of smallpox, produces death in 1% of unvaccinated people.

Signs and Symptoms

The symptoms of variola major occur after a seven- to the 17-day incubation period. They begin acutely with high fever, headache, chills, aches, vomiting, abdominal pain, and back pain. During the initial phase, some people develop delirium (hallucinations), and a portion of light-skinned people may develop a fleeting rash.

After two to three days, the rash develops on the face, hands, and forearms and extends gradually to the trunk and lower part of the body. The sores progress all at once into fluid-filled sacs. The distribution of the rash is important in making the diagnosis of smallpox. A greater number of lesions will appear on the face arms and legs compared to the trunk. People with smallpox are most infectious on days three through six after the fever begins. The virus is spread to others through coughing and sneezing or by direct contact.

With the milder form of smallpox, variola minor, the skin sores are similar but smaller and fewer in number. People are not as ill as those who have variola majors.

Diagnosis

Most doctors have never seen a case of smallpox and may have difficulty diagnosing it. Other viral illnesses with rash, such as chickenpox or allergic contact dermatitis, can look similar. Smallpox is different from chickenpox because of the distribution of the lesions and because they are all at the same stage of development everywhere on the body. With chickenpox, sores may be forming while others are scabbing over.

The failure to recognize mild cases of smallpox in people with partial immunity permits rapid person-to-person transmission. Exposed people may shed viruses through coughing without ever showing the signs and symptoms of the disease.

The doctor may look at scrapings of tissue under a microscope but will be unable to tell the difference between smallpox and monkeypox or cowpox. Advanced PCR techniques have been developed and may provide for a more accurate diagnosis shortly.

Treatment

People with smallpox are usually isolated from people without smallpox for 17 days. Anyone exposed to either weaponized variola or people infected with smallpox must be vaccinated immediately; this may lessen or prevent the illness if done within four or five days of infection.

The FDA has approved two antiviral medications for the treatment of smallpox (tecovirimat and brincidofovir). The antiviral agent cidofovir may be effective, but it is not FDA approved. Tecovirimat and cidofovir are both included in the Strategic National Stockpile in case of a public health emergency or terrorist attack.

Prevention

The smallpox vaccine is used to prevent people from getting smallpox. The vaccine is given as a type of shot, but a two-pronged needle is used to place the medication into the skin. This leaves a permanent scar, which many adults may still have from smallpox inoculations given to them when they were babies. Currently, the U.S. government has enough vaccine stockpiled to immunize every person in the United States should there be an outbreak or terrorist attack.

Once the shot is given, a small fluid-filled pimple usually appears 5-7 days later. A scab forms over the site during the next 1-2 weeks. Common side effects include low-grade fever and swollen lymph glands. People with weakened immune systems should not have the smallpox vaccination. This includes people with HIV, anyone with a history of eczema, and pregnant women.

Postexposure Prophylaxis

In the case of a bioterror attack, it is recommended that all people who were exposed be immunized using the vaccine as soon as possible, but at least within 4 days. Again, the use of the vaccine is not recommended in people with skin diseases like eczema, immunocompromised individuals (like HIV), or in pregnant women.

Monkeypox

The monkeypox virus, which is found in Africa, is a naturally occurring relative of variola. The first case of human monkeypox was identified in 1970, but fewer than 400 cases have been diagnosed since. Some concern exists that monkeypox may be weaponized, however, human monkeypox is not as potent as smallpox. Pneumonia due to monkeypox may cause death in about half of people who develop it.

Arboviral Encephalitides

The arboviral encephalitides with high fatality rates include the Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) virus, western equine encephalitis (WEE) virus, and eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) virus. They are members of the Alphavirus genus and are regularly associated with encephalitis. These viruses were recovered from horses during the 1930s. VEE was isolated in the Guajira peninsula of Venezuela in 1930, WEE in the San Joaquin Valley of California in 1930, and EEE in Virginia and New Jersey in 1933. A more common, but milder arboviral disease, is West Nile, which is caused by a flavivirus.

Although natural infections with these viruses occur following bites from mosquitoes, the viruses are also highly infectious when spread through the air. If intentionally released as a small particle aerosol, this virus may be expected to infect a high percentage of people exposed within a few miles.

VEE virus has the capacity to produce epidemics. Outcomes are significantly worse for the very young and the very old. Up to 35% of people infected may die. WEE and EEE typically produce less severe and widespread disease but are associated with death rates as high as 50%-75% in those with severe illness.

Signs and Symptoms

  • VEE: After an incubation period of 2-6 days, people with VEE develop fevers, chills, headaches, aches, sore throat, and sensitivity to light (eyes). They may become mildly confused, have seizures or paralysis, or go into a coma. For those who survive, their nervous system functions usually recover completely.
  • EEE: The incubation period for EEE varies from 5-15 days. Adults may have certain early symptoms up to 11 days before the onset of nervous system problems such as mild confusion, seizures, and paralysis. Signs and symptoms include fever, chills, vomiting, muscle rigidity, lethargy, slight paralysis, excess salivation, and difficulty breathing. Children frequently develop swelling on their faces and near their eyes. A significant percentage of survivors of severe disease have permanent nervous system problems such as seizures and various degrees of confusion (dementia).
  • WEE: The incubation period is 5-10 days. Most people have no symptoms, or they might develop a fever. Other symptoms include nausea, vomiting, headache, a stiff neck, and drowsiness. Up to a majority of victims, younger than 1 year of age have seizures. Typically, adults recover completely. Children, especially newborns, may have lasting nervous system problems.

Diagnosis

Laboratory tests, including nasal swab samples, may show any of the three viruses.

Treatment

No specific treatment is available. Doctors will help control symptoms. For some people, that may include medications to control fever and seizures or help to breathe.

Prevention

There are no commercially available vaccines against any of the arboviral encephalitides. They are experimental and only available for researchers who work with the virus.

Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers

Viral hemorrhagic fevers are caused by four families of viruses.

  • Arenaviridae (Lassa, Lujo, Guanarito, Machupo, Junin, Sabia, and Chapare viruses)
  • Bunyaviridae (Rift Valley, Crimean-Congo, Hantaan)
  • Filoviridae (Marburg, Ebola)
  • Flaviviridae (Yellow, Dengue, Kyasanur Forest, Alkhurma, Omsk HFs)

The best known of viral hemorrhagic fevers is the Ebola virus. First recognized in Zaire in 1976, the virus has been linked to at least 20 outbreaks in Africa. Earlier outbreaks in central Africa, with the Zaire species of the Ebola virus, had very high mortality rates (80%-90%). However, the most recent outbreaks with the same virus in Western Africa have had lower mortality rates (approximately 50%). The largest outbreak of the Ebola virus in history began in 2014, located primarily in the Western African countries of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia. In June 2016, the WHO reported that there were 28,616 confirmed or probable cases and 11,323 deaths in those three countries, including 500 healthcare workers. The World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone Ebola-free in November 2015, and in June 2016, the WHO declared Liberia and Guinea Ebola-free. However, there could be more cases identified, and there will be continued surveillance. During the outbreak, there were four cases diagnosed in the United States: One in a Liberian man who was visiting in Texas, two nurses who took care of that man, and one physician who had just returned from treating Ebola patients in Guinea.

These viruses are each characterized by an acute generalized illness that includes feeling quite ill (flulike illness) with profound exhaustion and is sometimes associated with internal bleeding. The West African Ebola outbreak was characterized more by severe gastrointestinal illness with vomiting and large-volume diarrhea. This leads to severe volume depletion, metabolic abnormalities, and hypovolemic shock. Other symptoms include fever, body and joint pain, profound and progressive weakness, loss of appetite, sore throat, headache, and fatigue.

Most agents are highly infectious via the aerosol route, and most are stable as respiratory aerosols. Thus, they possess characteristics that may make them attractive for use by terrorists.

However, the Ebola virus has not been demonstrated to be contagious person-to-person through an aerosol route. It is spread through direct contact with the blood or other body fluids of an infected person, including a corpse.

The agents that produce viral hemorrhagic fever are all simple RNA viruses. They are able to survive in blood for long periods, which means they can infect people who are around animals slaughtered domestically. These viruses are linked to the rodents, bats, or insects that help to spread them, which helps in searching for a diagnosis.

The specific viral hemorrhagic fever manifestations that develop depend on many factors such as the strength of the virus, its strain, and the route of exposure.

Signs and Symptoms

The incubation period (time from exposure to onset of symptoms) ranges from 2-21 days. Although initially, a classic symptom of all of the viral hemorrhagic fevers is bleeding, it actually only occurred in about 20% of Ebola patients in the most recent outbreak. Humans are not infectious until symptoms develop.

The incubation period is the time interval from infection with the virus to onset of symptoms is 2-21 days. Humans are not infectious until they develop symptoms. The first symptoms seen are fever, muscle aches, headaches, and sore throat. Patients then go on to develop vomiting and large-volume diarrhea. This leads to severe dehydration and results in impaired kidney and liver function. Some patients develop internal and external bleeding (blood in stools and oozing from the gums).

Diagnosis

It is important for the doctor to know a person's travel history in making a diagnosis of viral hemorrhagic fever. These agents are linked tightly with their natural geographic area and the ecology of the species and vectors found in that specific locale. Victims often recall exposures to rodents (Arenavirus, Hantavirus), mosquitoes (Valley fever virus, yellow and dengue fever viruses), or even slaughtered horses (Rift Valley fever virus, Crimean-Congo virus).

Laboratory tests may be helpful. Testing of whole blood or serum includes antibody-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), antigen-capture detection tests, and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. Testing can be conducted at the CDC in Atlanta or the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Disease (USAMRIID) at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md.

Treatment

Treatment for viral hemorrhagic fevers is largely directed at easing the discomfort of the symptoms. Victims benefit from being placed in a hospital setting immediately. Air transport is not advised. Sedative and pain-relieving medications are helpful, but aspirin and similar drugs should not be given because of their tendency to make bleeding worse.

There has been a lot of controversy surrounding the use of IV fluids for victims. At the beginning of the outbreak, the medical community was divided on the topic. However, both the CDC and WHO recommend IV rehydration to treat patients with dehydration and bleeding problems. The improved survival in the recent outbreak was likely due to the extensive use of IV hydration. The treatment for bleeding is controversial. Generally, mild bleeding is not usually treated, but severe bleeding requires appropriate replacement therapy (blood transfusions through an IV line).

Specific treatment with ribavirin has been used and is currently under investigation as a therapy for Lassa fever, hantavirus, Crimean-Congo, and Rift Valley fever. Treatment is most effective if begun within 7 days. Ribavirin has poor activity against the filoviruses and flaviviruses.

Prevention

The only established and licensed virus-specific vaccine against any of these viruses is the yellow fever vaccine. It is mandatory for those traveling into areas of Africa and South America where the disease is commonly found. Current trials are underway for further vaccines and antibody therapies. There are ongoing trials of at least two Ebola vaccines.

Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B

Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) is one of the best-studied and, therefore, best-understood toxins.

Staphylococcal enterotoxin is one of the most common causes of food poisoning. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea normally occur after someone eats or drinks contaminated food.

The toxin creates different symptoms when exposure is through the air in a biological warfare situation. Only a small, inhaled dose is necessary to harm people within 24 hours of inhalation.

Signs and Symptoms

After exposure, signs, and symptoms begin in two to 12 hours. Mild-to-moderate exposure to SEB produces fever, chills, headache, nausea, vomiting, shortness of breath, chest pain, body aches, and a nonproductive cough. Severe exposures can lead to a toxic shock-type picture and even death. Depending on the severity of exposure, the illness may last 3-10 days.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of SEB can be difficult. Laboratory tests and a chest X-ray may be performed. Nasal swabs may show the toxin for 12-24 hours after exposure.

Treatment

Doctors provide care to relieve symptoms. Close attention to oxygenation and hydration are important. People with severe SEB may need help breathing with a ventilator. Most victims are expected to do well after the initial phase, but the time to full recovery may belong.

Prevention

No approved human vaccine exists for SEB, although human trials are ongoing. Passive immunotherapy agents have demonstrated some promise when given within four hours of exposure, but such therapy is still being tested.

Ricin

Ricin
The toxicity of ricin varies greatly with the way it is given. Ricin is extremely toxic to cells and acts by inhibiting protein synthesis. Inhalation exposure causes primarily breathing and lung problems.

Ricin, a plant protein toxin derived from the beans of the castor plant, is one of the most toxic and easily produced plant toxins. Although the lethal toxicity of ricin is about 1,000-fold less than botulinum toxin, the worldwide ready availability of castor beans and the ease with which the toxin can be produced give it significant potential as a biological weapon.

Since ancient times, more than 750 cases of ricin intoxication have been described. Ricin may have been used in the highly published killing of Bulgarian exile Georgi Markov in London in 1978. He was attacked with a device in an umbrella that implanted a ricin-containing pellet into his thigh.

Signs and Symptoms

The toxicity of ricin varies greatly with the way it is given. Ricin is extremely toxic to cells and acts by inhibiting protein synthesis. Inhalation exposure causes primarily breathing and lung problems. If eaten, ricin causes symptoms in the GI tract. If injected, the reaction takes place in that area.

  • Following inhalation exposure of ricin, toxicity is characterized by the sudden onset of nasal and throat congestion, nausea and vomiting, itching of the eyes, itching, and tightness in the chest. If exposure is significant, after 12-24 hours severe breathing problems may set in. In animal studies, death occurs 36-48 hours after severe exposure.
  • Ingestion of ricin is generally less toxic because it is not absorbed well and may degrade in the digestive tract. Out of 751 ingestions recorded, only 14 resulted in a death.
  • At low doses, injection exposures produce flulike symptoms, body aches, nausea, vomiting, and localized pain and swelling at the injection site. Severe exposure results in tissue death and GI bleeding, as well as widespread liver, spleen, and kidney problems.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of ricin poisoning is made on the basis of symptoms and whether exposure is possible. In biological warfare, exposure is likely to occur by inhalation of a toxin aerosol.

Victims may have certain signs on a chest X-ray. The diagnosis can be confirmed by lab tests on samples from a nasal swab. Ricin can be identified for up to 24 hours after exposure.

Treatment

Treatment is mainly to relieve symptoms. If exposure was by inhalation, the person may need help breathing. Those who ingested the poison may need to have their stomachs pumped (gastric lavage), or they might be given charcoal to soak up the material.

Prevention

Currently, no vaccine is available for ricin exposure. Test vaccines have proven effective in animals. Other drugs are being studied as well.

Botulinum Toxin

Botulinum toxins are the most deadly toxins known. Because botulinum toxin is so lethal and easy to manufacture and weaponize, it represents a credible threat as a biological warfare agent. When used in this manner, exposure is likely to occur following inhalation of aerosolized toxin or ingestion of food contaminated with the toxin or its microbial spores. Iraq admitted to active research on the offensive use of botulinum toxins and to weaponizing and deploying more than 100 munitions with botulinum toxins in 1995.

All seven subtypes (A-G) of botulinum toxin act in similar ways. The toxin produces similar effects whether ingested, inhaled, or via a wound. The time course and severity of illness vary with route of exposure and dose received. Symptom onset is slower after inhalation exposure.

Signs and Symptoms

Symptoms may occur hours to several days after exposure. Initial signs and symptoms include blurred vision, dilated pupils, difficulty swallowing, difficulty speaking, an altered voice, and muscle weakness. After 24-48 hours, muscle weakness and paralysis may cause the person to be unable to breathe. Varying degrees of muscular weakness may occur.

Diagnosis

Paralysis may indicate the presence of this exposure. Typical laboratory tests generally are not helpful, although special tests of nerve conduction and muscle response may be useful. Infection by inhalation can be diagnosed from nasal swabs up to 24 hours after exposure.

Treatment

The most serious complication is respiratory failure. With attention to symptoms and help breathing, sometimes with a ventilator, death occurs in fewer than 5% of cases. For confirmed exposures, an antitoxin is available from the CDC. This antitoxin has all of the disadvantages of horse serum products, including the risks for shock and serum sickness. Skin testing is performed first by injecting a small amount of the antitoxin into the skin and then monitoring the person for 20 minutes.

Prevention

The only botulinum vaccine was discontinued by the CDC in 2011.

Mycotoxins

The trichothecene mycotoxins are highly toxic compounds produced by certain species of fungi. Because these mycotoxins can cause massive organ damage, and because they are fairly easy to produce and can be dispersed by various methods (dust, droplets, aerosols, smoke, rockets, artillery mines, portable sprays), mycotoxins have an excellent potential for weaponization.

Strong evidence suggests that trichothecenes ("yellow rain") have been used as a biological warfare agent in Southwest Asia and Afghanistan. From 1974-1981, numerous attacks resulted in a minimum of 6,310 deaths in Laos, 981 deaths in Cambodia, and 3,042 deaths in Afghanistan. When taken from fungal cultures, the mycotoxins yield a yellow-brown liquid that evaporates into a yellow crystalline product (thus, the "yellow rain" appearance). These toxins require certain solutions and high heat to be completely inactivated.

Signs and Symptoms

After exposure to the mycotoxins, early symptoms begin within five minutes. Full effects take 60 minutes.

  • If skin exposure occurs, the skin burns, becomes tender, swollen, and blisters. In lethal cases, large areas of skin die and slough (fall off).
  • Respiratory exposure results in nasal itching, pain, sneezing, a bloody nose, shortness of breath, wheezing, cough, and blood-tinged saliva and sputum.
  • If ingested, the person feels nausea and vomits, loses appetite, feels abdominal cramping, and has watery and/or bloody diarrhea.
  • Following the entry into the eyes, pain, tearing, redness, and blurred vision occur.
  • Systemic toxicity may occur and includes weakness, exhaustion, dizziness, inability to coordinate muscles, heart problems, low or high temperature, diffuse bleeding, and low blood pressure. Death may occur within minutes to days depending on the dose and route of exposure.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of an attack of trichothecene mycotoxin depends on the symptoms and identifying the toxin from biological and environmental samples. Many people with these symptoms may report being in a yellow rain or smoke attack.

Initial laboratory tests are not always helpful. Currently, a rapid identification kit for any of the trichothecene mycotoxins does not exist. Gas-liquid chromatography has been used in the past with great success. However, chromatographic methods lack great sensitivity, and present alternative methods of detection are under investigation.

Treatment

Treatment is mainly to help with symptoms. The immediate use of protective clothing and mask during a mycotoxin aerosol attack should prevent illness. If a soldier is unprotected during an attack, the outer clothing should be removed within four to six hours and decontaminated with 5% sodium hydroxide for six to 10 hours. The skin should be washed with copious amounts of soap and uncontaminated water. The eyes, if exposed, should be washed out with large amounts of normal saline or sterile water. U.S. military personnel can use a skin decontamination kit effectively against most chemical warfare agents, including mycotoxins.

No specific therapy exists for trichothecene exposure. After appropriate skin decontamination, victims of inhalation and oral exposures may be given super activated charcoal orally. Activated charcoal removes mycotoxins from the GI tract. Some victims may need help breathing with a ventilator. Early use of steroids increases survival time by decreasing the primary injury and shock-like state that follows significant poisoning.

Prevention

No vaccine exists for trichothecene mycotoxin exposure.

Glanders

Glanders is a disease mainly in horses and is caused by the bacterium Burkholderia mallei. It can be transmitted to humans and other domestic animals. However, it is only rarely seen in humans. It has been intermittently used by governments in World War I and II and by Russia in the 1980s. In humans, it causes a flu-like illness. In 2000, there was a case in a U.S. military microbiologist who recovered completely with treatment.

Typhus

Typhus is an acute febrile illness caused by Rickettsia typhi and Rickettsia prowazkeii. This should not be confused with typhoid fever, which is a gastrointestinal illness caused by Salmonella typhi bacteria. There are endemic and epidemic forms of the disease. The epidemic form is caused by Rickettsia prowazkeii. This is typically transmitted via lice. Rats, mice, and flying squirrels, which are asymptomatic carriers, carry the disease. The disease is spread to the human population through ticks, chiggers, fleas, and lice. There have been natural outbreaks throughout history that were usually associated with wars and famine. Poor living conditions and squalor allow the spread of the disease. The typhus spread by ticks causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has categorized typhus as a category B biological weapons agent. While Rickettsia prowazekii is highly infectious, it cannot be passed from person to person. A number of governments have experimented with weaponizing typhus, but typhus does not appear to have ever been successfully used in a military setting.

Anti-Crop Biological Agents

There have been a number of agents developed during the last century to cause destruction of crops. These include wheat stem rust, rye stem rust, rice blast, cereal rust, wheat smut, and potato blight. A number of governments have experimented with using these agents, but there does not appear to have ever been a use of these agents in a military setting.

Likelihood of a Wide Scale Anthrax Attack

Although there is great fear about a bioterror attack with anthrax, it is most likely to be seen in small attacks like the one seen in 2001 in the United States. Only 22 people were infected, and five died. While this is a tragedy, it is unlikely that anyone, other than a government, would have the resources to produce large quantities of weapons-grade anthrax. Even if the anthrax is produced in large quantities, it is hard to deliver it against a population.

Can anthrax be transmitted from person to person?

Anthrax infection cannot be transmitted from person to person. However, the spores can be transmitted on contaminated clothing.

Reviewed on 6/1/2022
References
Medically reviewed by Robert Cox, MD; American Board of Internal Medicine with subspecialty in Infectious Disease

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