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化学战剂芥子气的毒理学与药理学

Toxicology and pharmacology of the chemical warfare agent sulfur mustard.

作者信息

Dacre J C, Goldman M

机构信息

United States Army Biomedical Research and Development Laboratory, Fort Detrick, Frederick, Maryland, USA.

出版信息

Pharmacol Rev. 1996 Jun;48(2):289-326.

PMID:8804107
Abstract

There have been reports of chemical attacks in which sulfur mustard might have been used (a) on Iranian soldiers and civilians during the Gulf War in 1984 and 1985 and (b) in an Iraqi chemical attack on the Iranian-occupied village of Halbja in 1988, resulting in many civilian casualties. Heavy use of chemical warfare in Afghanistan by the Soviet military is a recent innovation in military tactics that has been highly successful and may ensure further use of chemical agents in future military conflicts and terrorist attacks as a profitable adjunct to conventional military arms. Mustard is a poisonous chemical agent that exerts a local action on the eyes, skin, and respiratory tissue, with subsequent systemic action on the nervous, cardiac, and digestive systems in humans and laboratory animals, causing lacrimation, malaise, anorexia, salivation, respiratory distress, vomiting, hyperexcitability, and cardiac distress. Under extreme circumstances, dependent upon the dose and length of exposure to the agent, necrosis of the skin and mucous membranes of the respiratory system, bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, intestinal lesions, hemoconcentration, leucopenia, convulsions with systemic distress, and death occur. Severe mustard poisoning in humans is associated with systemic injury, which is manifested as headache, epigastric distresses, anorexia, diarrhea, and cachexia and is usually observed at mustard doses of 1000 mg/min/m3 with damage to hematopoietic tissues and progressive leucopenia. Sulfur mustard is a cell poison that causes disruption and impairment of a variety of cellular activities that are dependent upon a very specific integral relationship. These cytotoxic effects are manifested in widespread metabolic disturbances whose variable characteristics are observed in enzymatic deficiencies, vesicant action, abnormal mitotic activity and cell division, bone marrow disruption, disturbances in hematopoietic activity, and systemic poisoning. Indeed, mustard gas readily combines with various components of the cell such as amino acids, amines, and proteins. Although evidence of an association between lung cancer and mustard gas encountered on the battlefields of World War I is at best suggestive if not problematical (Case and Lea, 1955; Beebe, 1960; Norman, 1975), the epidemiological data accumulated from the poison gas factories in Japan (Yamada et al., 1953; Wada et al., 1968; Inada et al., 1978; Shigenobu, 1980; Nishimoto et al., 1983; Hirono et al., 1984; Takuoka et al., 1986), in Germany (Weiss, 1958; Hellmann, 1970a; Weiss and Weiss, 1975; Klehr, 1984) and in England (Manning et al., 1981; Easton et al., 1988) are substantial (International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1975). Unfortunately, attempts to seek confirmatory and substantial evidence in laboratory animals such as mice (Boyland and Horning, 1949; Heston, 1950; Heston, 1953a; McNamara et al., 1975) and rats (Griffin et al., 1951; McNamara et al., 1975; Sasser et al., 1996) have not been consistent. Sulfur mustard has been shown to be mutagenic in a variety of different species using many different laboratory techniques from fruit flies, microorganisms and mammalian cell cultures (Fox and Scott, 1980). Evidence is slowly accumulating from human data (Hellmann, 1970a; Lohs, 1975; Wulf et al., 1985). Evidence for the teratogenicity of mustard has been negative in assessment of fetotoxicity and adverse effects of mustard on the reproductive potential of both human and animal studies. Indeed, investigations of women adversely affected by mustard are minimal because most of the studies have been performed on former men employees of poison gas factories and have been negative or questionable. We have recently emphasized the need to assess the affect of a suspected teratogen on maternal toxicity in laboratory animals before any conclusions can be made.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

有报告称发生了可能使用了硫芥的化学袭击事件

(a) 1984年和1985年海湾战争期间,硫芥被用于伊朗士兵和平民;(b) 1988年伊拉克对被伊朗占领的哈尔布贾村发动化学袭击,造成许多平民伤亡。苏联军队在阿富汗大量使用化学战是军事战术上的一项新举措,非常成功,可能会确保未来军事冲突和恐怖袭击中进一步使用化学制剂,作为常规军事武器的一种有利可图的辅助手段。芥子气是一种有毒化学制剂,对眼睛、皮肤和呼吸组织产生局部作用,随后对人类和实验动物的神经、心脏和消化系统产生全身作用,导致流泪、不适、厌食、流涎、呼吸窘迫、呕吐、过度兴奋和心脏不适。在极端情况下,取决于接触该制剂的剂量和时间长短,会出现皮肤和呼吸系统黏膜坏死、支气管炎、支气管肺炎、肠道病变、血液浓缩、白细胞减少、伴有全身不适的抽搐以及死亡。人类严重芥子气中毒与全身损伤有关,表现为头痛、上腹部不适、厌食、腹泻和恶病质,通常在芥子气剂量为1000毫克/分钟/立方米时出现,伴有造血组织损伤和进行性白细胞减少。硫芥是一种细胞毒物,会导致各种细胞活动的紊乱和损害,这些活动依赖于非常特定的整体关系。这些细胞毒性作用表现为广泛的代谢紊乱,其可变特征表现为酶缺乏、发泡作用、异常有丝分裂活动和细胞分裂、骨髓破坏、造血活动紊乱以及全身中毒。事实上,芥子气很容易与细胞的各种成分如氨基酸、胺和蛋白质结合。虽然第一次世界大战战场上接触芥子气与肺癌之间的关联证据充其量只是暗示性的,甚至存在问题(凯斯和利阿,1955年;比贝,1960年;诺曼,1975年),但从日本(山田等人,1953年;和田等人,1968年;稻田等人,1978年;重信,1980年;西本等人,1983年;广野等人,1984年;高冈等人,1986年)、德国(魏斯,1958年;赫尔曼,1970a;魏斯和魏斯,1975年;克莱尔,1984年)和英国(曼宁等人,1981年;伊斯顿等人,1988年)的毒气工厂积累的流行病学数据是大量的(国际癌症研究机构,1975年)。不幸的是,在小鼠(博伊兰和霍宁,1949年;赫斯顿,1950年;赫斯顿,1953a;麦克纳马拉等人,1975年)和大鼠(格里芬等人,1951年;麦克纳马拉等人,1975年;萨瑟等人,1996年)等实验动物中寻求确凿和大量证据的尝试并不一致。使用多种不同实验室技术,从果蝇、微生物和哺乳动物细胞培养物中已证明硫芥在多种不同物种中具有致突变性(福克斯和斯科特,1980年)。来自人类数据的证据正在缓慢积累(赫尔曼,1970a;洛斯,1975年;伍尔夫等人,1985年)。在对芥子气的胚胎毒性以及对人类和动物生殖潜能的不良影响的评估中,芥子气致畸性的证据为阴性。事实上,对受芥子气不利影响的女性的研究很少,因为大多数研究是针对毒气工厂的前男性员工进行的,结果为阴性或存在疑问。我们最近强调,在得出任何结论之前,有必要在实验动物中评估疑似致畸剂对母体毒性的影响。(摘要截断)

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