Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2581798 | Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2010 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The physiological effects of human plasma-derived butyrylcholinesterase (huBuChE) administration and its modulation of the effects of percutaneous VX challenge are poorly understood. Percutaneously administered nerve agents are more slowly absorbed than inhaled agents; consequently, signs of poisoning occur later, with a longer duration. Telemetry was used to monitor heart rate, EEG, temperature and activity in guinea-pigs. Treatment with huBuChE at 30 or 120Â min following percutaneous VX challenge (â¼2.5Â ÃÂ LD50) provided 100% protection from lethality. When huBuChE administration was delayed until the onset of observable signs of poisoning only 1 out of 6 animals survived to the end of the experiment at 7 days. This study adds to the body of evidence demonstrating the efficacy of huBuChE in animals by describing the successful therapeutic use of a protein bioscavenger as a post-exposure treatment against dermal exposure to VX up to 2Â h post-exposure. This study simultaneously used telemetric methods to show that the efficacy of huBuChE is linked to the prevention of detrimental physiological changes observed in control VX-treated animals. Post-exposure therapy is a promising additional indication for the concept of use of this material, and one that has particular relevance in a civilian exposure scenario.
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Authors
Helen Mumford, Matthew E. Price, Douglas M. Cerasoli, Wolfgang Teschner, Hartmut Ehrlich, Hans Peter Schwarz, David E. Lenz,