Title of article :
Delayed Complications and Long-term Management of Sulfur Mustard Poisoning: Recent Advances by Iranian Researchers (Part І of ІІ)
Author/Authors :
Darchini-Maragheh, Emadodin Medical Toxicology Research Centre - Faculty of Medicine, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Balali-Mood, Mahdi Medical Toxicology Research Centre - Faculty of Medicine, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Chemical warfare agents are the most brutal weapons among
the weapons of mass destruction. Sulfur mustard (SM) is a
potent toxic alkylating agent known as “the King of the Battle
Gases”. SM has been the most widely used chemical weapon
during the wars. It was widely used in World War I. Thereafter,
it was extensively employed by the Iraqi troops against the
Iranian military personnel and even civilians in the border
cities of Iran and Iraq in the period between 1983 and 1988.
Long-term incapacitating properties, significant environmental
persistence, lack of an effective antidote, and relative ease
of manufacturing have kept SM a potential agent for both
terrorist and military uses. Even 3 decades after SM exposure,
numerous delayed complications among Iranian victims are
still being reported by researchers. The most common delayed
complications have been observed in the respiratory tracts of
chemically injured Iranian war veterans. Also, skin lesions and
eye disorders have been observed in most Iranian SM-exposed
war veterans in the delayed phase of SM intoxication. Thus,
extensive research has been conducted on Iranian war veterans
during the past decades. Nevertheless, major gaps still continue
to exist in the SM literature. Part І of this paper will discuss the
delayed complications and manifestations of exposure to SM
among Iranian victims of the Iran–Iraq conflict. Part ІІ, which
will appear in the next issue of Iran J Med Sci, will discuss the
long-term management and therapy of SM-exposed patients.
Keywords :
Chemical warfare agents , Sulfur mustard , Poisoning , Delayed complications
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics