Literature DB >> 17119144

Botulism in 4 adults following cosmetic injections with an unlicensed, highly concentrated botulinum preparation.

Daniel S Chertow1, Esther T Tan, Susan E Maslanka, Joann Schulte, Eddy A Bresnitz, Richard S Weisman, Jeffrey Bernstein, Steven M Marcus, Savita Kumar, Jean Malecki, Jeremy Sobel, Christopher R Braden.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Botulism is a potentially lethal paralytic disease caused primarily by toxins of the anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium Clostridium botulinum. Although botulinum toxin A is available by prescription for cosmetic and therapeutic use, no cases of botulism with detectable serum toxin have previously been attributed to cosmetic or therapeutic botulinum toxin injections. On November 27, 2004, 4 suspected botulism case-patients with a link to cosmetic botulinum toxin injections were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory aspects of 4 suspected cases of iatrogenic botulism. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Case series on 4 botulism case-patients. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical characteristics of the 4 case-patients, epidemiological associations, and mouse bioassay neutralization test results from case-patient specimens and a toxin sample.
RESULTS: Clinical characteristics of the 4 case-patients were consistent with those of naturally occurring botulism. All case-patients had been injected with a highly concentrated, unlicensed preparation of botulinum toxin A and may have received doses 2857 times the estimated human lethal dose by injection. Pretreatment serum toxin levels in 3 of the 4 case-patients were equivalent to 21 to 43 times the estimated human lethal dose; pretreatment serum from the fourth epidemiologically linked case-patient was not available. A 100-microg vial of toxin taken from the same manufacturer's lot as toxin administered to the case-patients contained a toxin amount sufficient to kill approximately 14,286 adults by injection if disseminated evenly.
CONCLUSIONS: These laboratory-confirmed cases of botulism demonstrate that clinical use of unlicensed botulinum toxin A can result in severe, life-threatening illness. Further education and regulation are needed to prevent the inappropriate marketing, sale, and clinical use of unlicensed botulinum toxin products.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17119144     DOI: 10.1001/jama.296.20.2476

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  31 in total

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2.  Substrates and controls for the quantitative detection of active botulinum neurotoxin in protease-containing samples.

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5.  Constipation and poor feeding in an infant with botulism.

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Review 8.  Image-guided botulinum toxin injection in the lateral abdominal wall prior to abdominal wall reconstruction surgery: review of techniques and results.

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9.  DNA electroporation in rabbits as a method for generation of high-titer neutralizing antisera: examples of the botulinum toxins types A, B, and E.

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10.  Effects of enzymatically inactive recombinant botulinum neurotoxin type A at the mouse neuromuscular junctions.

Authors:  Padmamalini Baskaran; Teresa E Lehmann; Elena Topchiy; Nagarajan Thirunavukkarasu; Shuowei Cai; Bal Ram Singh; Sharad Deshpande; Baskaran Thyagarajan
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