Bioterrorism Agents

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Bioterrorism Agents: Introduction - Tiny Terrors Intro

Intentional release of microbes or toxins to cause disease/death in humans, animals, or plants. Aims for mass casualties and social disruption. CDC Bioterrorism Agents Categories A, B, and C

  • CDC Classification (Risk-based):
    • Category A: Highest risk.
      • Easily disseminated/transmitted; high mortality.
      • Public panic; special preparedness (e.g., Anthrax, Plague).
    • Category B: Moderate risk.
      • Moderately easy to spread; moderate morbidity, low mortality (e.g., Q fever, Brucellosis).
    • Category C: Emerging threats.
      • Potential for high morbidity/mortality; ease of production (e.g., Nipah virus, Hantavirus).

⭐ Category A agents are prioritized due to their potential for high mortality and ease of transmission.

Category A Agents - Public Enemy #1s

Easily disseminated/transmitted, high mortality, cause public panic, require special public health preparedness. 📌 Mnemonic: Anthrax Plays Small Tricks Viciously.

  • Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis):
    • Gram +ve spore-forming rod. Toxins: Edema, Lethal.
    • Cutaneous (painless black eschar), Inhalational (hemorrhagic mediastinitis, widened mediastinum), GI.
    • PEP: Ciprofloxacin/Doxycycline for 60 days + vaccine.

    ⭐ Inhalational anthrax: Widened mediastinum on chest X-ray is a hallmark.

  • Plague (Yersinia pestis):
    • Gram -ve coccobacillus, bipolar "safety pin" stain.
    • Bubonic (buboes), Septicemic, Pneumonic (highly contagious aerosol, high mortality).
    • Tx: Streptomycin, Gentamicin.
  • Smallpox (Variola virus):
    • Eradicated. DNA virus. Distinctive centrifugal rash.
    • Lesions synchronous (same stage: macule → papule → vesicle → pustule → scab).
    • Vaccinia vaccine.
  • Tularemia (Francisella tularensis):
    • Gram -ve coccobacillus. Highly infectious (ID50: 10-50 organisms).
    • Ulceroglandular (common), pneumonic. Vector: Ticks. Reservoir: Rabbits.
  • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (VHFs):
    • Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, CCHF. RNA viruses.
    • Fever, capillary leak, hemorrhage, shock.
    • Strict infection control. Ribavirin for Lassa/CCHF.

Category A Bioterrorism Agents Summary

Category B & C Agents, Toxins - The Bad Bunch

  • Category B Agents: Moderate dissemination, morbidity; low mortality.
    • Brucella spp. (Brucellosis): Unpasteurized dairy, aerosols. Undulant fever. Dx: Serology. Rx: Doxycycline + Rifampin.
    • Coxiella burnetii (Q Fever): Livestock aerosols. Flu-like, pneumonia; chronic endocarditis (culture-negative). Dx: Serology (Phase I/II Ab). Rx: Doxycycline.

      Coxiella burnetii: Phase II IgM/IgG high in acute Q fever; Phase I IgG high in chronic Q fever.

    • Ricin Toxin (castor beans): Inhibits protein synthesis (cleaves $28S$ rRNA). Inhalation/ingestion. No antidote, supportive care.
    • Others: Glanders (B. mallei), Melioidosis (B. pseudomallei), Staph Enterotoxin B, Epsilon toxin (C. perfringens).
  • Category C Agents: Emerging pathogens; high impact potential.
    • Examples: Nipah virus, Hantavirus, MDR-TB.
    • Easily available/produced. oka

Bioterrorism Response & Preparedness - Defense Protocols

  • Core Strategy: Detect → Protect → Treat → Decontaminate → Recover.
  • Key Components:
    • Surveillance & Early Warning: Syndromic surveillance, lab networks (e.g., IDSP in India).
    • Rapid Diagnosis: Point-of-care tests, Biosafety Level (BSL) labs.
    • Medical Management: Isolation, specific therapy (antibiotics, antitoxins), supportive care.
    • Prophylaxis: Pre-exposure (vaccines for high-risk) & Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP).

      ⭐ Anthrax PEP: Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BD or Doxycycline 100 mg BD for 60 days.

    • Decontamination: Personal (soap/water), environmental (e.g., 0.5% sodium hypochlorite).
    • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE): Appropriate levels (A, B, C, D) based on risk assessment.
    • Communication & Coordination: Inter-agency collaboration, public risk communication. Bioterrorism Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Category A agents (Anthrax, Plague, Smallpox, Botulism, Tularemia, VHFs) are highest risk: easy dissemination, high mortality.
  • Inhalational Anthrax: Widened mediastinum (X-ray), hemorrhagic meningitis. Treat: Ciprofloxacin/Doxycycline, antitoxin.
  • Pneumonic Plague: Highly contagious (aerosols), rapidly fatal. Prompt treatment: Streptomycin/Gentamicin.
  • Smallpox: Synchronous, centrifugal rash (all vesicles same stage). Vaccination is key for prevention.
  • Botulism: Classic descending flaccid paralysis. Antitoxin is critical for treatment.
  • Tularemia: Most common is ulceroglandular form. Treat with Streptomycin/Gentamicin.
  • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (VHFs): Cause severe multisystem illness, shock, hemorrhage. Primarily supportive care.

Practice Questions: Bioterrorism Agents

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Which vaccine protocol is recommended for health workers in disaster scenarios?

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What is the selective media for B. anthracis?_____

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What is the selective media for B. anthracis?_____

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