| Literature DB >> 35274605 |
Stephane Bourassa1,2,3,4, Emmanuelle Paquette-Raynard5, Daniel Noebert4, Marc Dauphin4,6, Pelumi Samuel Akinola7,8, Jason Marseilles7, Philippe Jouvet1,2, Jacinthe Leclerc6,7,9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The survivability of mass casualties exposed to a chemical attack is dependent on clinical knowledge, evidence-based practice, as well as protection and decontamination capabilities. The aim of this systematic review was to identify the knowledge gaps that relate to an efficient extraction and care of mass casualties caused by exposure to chemicals.Entities:
Keywords: acute settings; biological; chemical; chemical attack; decontamination; explosive (CBRNE); nuclear; prehospital settings; protection; radiological; respiratory insults; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35274605 PMCID: PMC8948487 DOI: 10.1017/S1049023X22000401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prehosp Disaster Med ISSN: 1049-023X Impact factor: 2.040
Figure 1.Illustration of the Field of Clinical Practice in Acute or Prehospital Settings in Contaminated Environments.
Note: This is a summary of the zone of interest of this study (ie, from the incident site to the transfer of the patient in a clean zone, after being transported through the contamination environment, and then fully decontaminated). During a medical extraction from the contaminated environment (ie, hot and warm zones), the ideal mitigation measure against contaminants is facing upwind. Ideally, a very light decontamination process, called immediate decontamination, will be performed immediately after an attack/exposure to slow the agent’s absorption into the body. Thorough decontamination is a specialized process that occurs later, ideally prior to admission to a medical facility. Number 1 – Clinical process occurring from the moment the patient is handled until decontamination is completed; Number 2 – Continuity of care happening at the patient’s transfer, admission, and beyond within a medical facility (eg, emergency room or intensive care unit).
Figure 2.PRISMA Diagram.
Abbreviations: PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; ICU, intensive care unit.
Summary of Included Studies
| Study | Attack (s) | n (acute cases) | Method | Main Results & Outcome(s) | Protection | First-Aid | Means of Decontamination & Existence of Specialized Assets (Ambulatory and Medical: Yes/No) | Clinical Treatments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nozaki, | 1995 Tokyo Subway (Terrorism: Aum Shinrikyo; CWA: Sarin) | 15 | Design & Source of data: Retrospective-Observational study in which medical records were used. | Main Result(s): Secondary exposures caused mainly by contaminated patients (ie, vector). Main outcome(s): Recommendation for prompt decontamination and treatments. | Not reported | Not reported | Means used: Partially reported. Specialized assets (Ambulatory and Medical): No. | Partially reported |
| Okumura, et al | 1995 Tokyo Subway (Terrorism: Aum Shinrikyo; CWA: Sarin) | 640 | Design & Source of data: Retrospective-Observational study in which medical records were used. | Main Result(s): 111 of 640 cases were characterized as moderate to severe. Main outcome(s): Mass casualty response capability for future disaster plans along with improvements to on-call resources were suggested. | Not reported | Partially reported, except for one CPR case. | Means used: Partially reported. Specialized assets (Ambulatory and Medical): No. | Partially reported |
| Rosman, | 2014 Syrian population attacked in Damascus (Civil war: Air strike by Assad; CWA: Sarin). | 130 | Design & Source of data: Retrospective-Observational study based on YouTube footage revealing clinical information about patients. | Main Result(s): 91.5% of cases were defined as moderate or worse; most suffered from dyspnea. A severe lack of antidotes and medical resources was observed. Main outcome(s): social media footage may improve future preparedness and readiness of health systems for various disasters; particularly in dealing with mass casualty events. | Partially reported | Not reported | Means used: Partially reported. Specialized assets (Ambulatory and Medical): No. | Partially reported |
| Yanagisawa, et al | 1994 Suburban Matsumoto & 1995 Tokyo Subway (Terrorism: Aum Shinrikyo; CWA: Sarin). | >1203 | Design & Source of data: It was a mixed study design (Retrospective-Observational for acute effects & Longitudinal-observational for the post-attack health effects). Their data sources were patient interviews and medical records. | Main Result(s): Other long-term effects (physical & psychological) lack of data in acute settings were reported. Main outcome(s): Teams of neurologists equipped with neurotoxic diagnostics and intervention protocols must be developed and included in preparedness plans. | No-information confirmed (M; T) | Not reported (M; T) | Means used: Not-reported (M; T). Specialized assets (Ambulatory and Medical): No. | Partially reported (M; T) |
Abbreviations: CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation; CWA, chemical warfare agents; ED, emergency departments; M, Matsumoto; T, Tokyo.
Unawareness of a CWA attack.
– Design deduced from the paper as authors did not specify their design.
– The source of data is deduced from the paper as it was not provided by the authors.
– Measurement not substantiated in the literature.
– No biostatistics plan and analysis.
– This represents the minimum number of patients managed by medical authorities over the years above the numbers treated in acute settings and reported in this paper.
– Secondary exposures confirmed by authors (ie, expansion of the contamination zone due to contaminated carriers [casualty/vehicle]).
– Signs of secondary exposures (ie, issues with PPE and decontamination capabilities, health care staff, and other rescuers becoming sick or absence of specialized capabilities).
¥ – Visual Analogue Scale Grade (No information confirmed – Absence of information about the topic/category confirmed; Not reported – Uncertainty as to whether the authors might or might not have analyzed this topic/category; Partially – little information available; Detail(s) provided – Disclosure of the information).
Listed Treatments Patients Received Once Admitted
| Study | Chemical Incident | Treatments | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yanagisawa, et al | Matsumoto Incident | 1. Atropine sulfate; 2. Benzodiazepines; 3. Intravenous fluids; 4. Ventilation; 5. Intubation. | Atropine was given in large quantities to treat sarin-induced miosis. |
| Tokyo Area Incident | 1. Pralidoxime iodide (PAM); 2. Intravenous diazepam; 3. Mechanical ventilation. | ||
| Tokyo Area Incident | Atropine sulphate or oximes. | Elsewhere in the paper, authors also indicated that PAM and 2-PAM were administered intravenously from two to six hours after the sarin exposure without specifying to which medical centers they were referring. | |
| Okumara, et al | Tokyo Area Incident | 1. Atropine up to 9 milligrams (mg); 2. Either 2-PAM or up to 800mg of a pralidoxime; 3. Diazepam up to 30mg; 4. Tropicamide; 5. Phenylephrine hypochlorite; 6. Steroidal eye drops; 7. Antidepressants; 8. Intubation; 9. Ventilation. | The entire casualty management effort at St. Luke’s the day of the attack, that are detailed differently than those found in Yanagisawa, et al (2006). |
Note: There was no indication on the use of oxygen found in these studies.
Abbreviations: PAM, pralidoxime iodide; 2-PAM, 2-pyridinealdoxime methiodide.