Extract from ABC News
Analysis
By David Caldicott
Medical tests on Alexei Navalny, the outspoken political critic of Vladimir Putin who was allegedly poisoned last week, have shed more light on his illness.
Berlin's Charite–Universitätsmedizin hospital said yesterday that Mr Navalny was being treated in intensive care and remained in a medically induced coma.
"While his condition is serious, it is not currently life-threatening," the hospital said in a statement.
Notably, the hospital said he was poisoned by "a substance from the group of cholinesterase inhibitors".
But what are these, and how can this sort of poisoning be treated?
From pesticides to weapons-grade chemicals
Cholinesterase inhibitors, also called anticholinesterases, are a broad group of chemical agents.
They include many everyday pesticides such as organophosphate and carbamate compounds, which the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority regulates in Australia.
They also include more exotic weapons-grade chemicals such as sarin, which was deployed in Syria, and novichok, reportedly used to poison two Russian expatriates in the UK town of Salisbury in 2018.
In this form, these chemicals are often collectively referred to as "nerve agents".
First developed in Germany in the lead-up to World War II, nerve agents are several times more potent, and therefore dangerous, than organophosphate or carbamate pesticides.
They're banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention.
These chemicals can cause harm through simple contact or inhalation, in minuscule quantities. Some reports suggest Mr Navalny was poisoned via a cup of tea, which would also be effective.
It is no exaggeration to say this group represents the most lethal chemicals humans have ever created.
How do they make people sick?
Cholinesterase inhibitors work by blocking an enzyme called acetylcholinesterase.
Under normal circumstances, acetylcholinesterase regulates the amount of a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine (ACh) that crosses our nerve junctions (or synapses), converting electrical signals through the body.
ACh acts mainly on the body's autonomic (involuntary) nervous system, which controls fundamental functions such as heart rate, breathing rate, salivation and digestion. It is a crucial neurotransmitter.
Left unregulated, the effect of cholinesterase inhibitors is a little bit like blocking one of the major "off-switches" of the body. You're left with all the lights turned "on" and the body quickly runs into trouble.
A rapid build-up of ACh at the nerve junctions leads to the effects we tend to see in nerve agent toxicity, including mucus secretions from the respiratory and digestive tracts, breathing problems, and muscle dysfunction.
Ultimately, death is usually a result of respiratory failure.
How can this poisoning be treated?
It is possible to treat nerve agent poisoning with a combination of physical and pharmacological interventions. But it is dangerous, and difficult.
Initially, decontamination is critical. Poisoning continues as long as contact with the agent continues, and there's a risk of contamination for those providing medical care.
Significant exposure will invariably require intubation and mechanical ventilation.
The German hospital reports Mr Navalny is currently being treated with atropine.
Atropine is used to bind to and blanket ACh receptors, rendering the circulating excess of these neurotransmitters less hazardous.
Identifying the poison
Health workers can detect whether or not someone has been exposed to harmful cholinesterase inhibitors by taking urine and blood samples.
But as time passes, and the toxin is secreted in the urine, it becomes more difficult to identify exactly what type of cholinesterase inhibitor is the culprit.
The "ghosts" of the poisoning — incapacitated acetylcholinesterase enzymes — are detectable for a longer time, but it can be very hard to link these in isolation to a specific agent.
Depending on the toxicity of the agent, how much was used, how long patients were exposed, and how they were exposed, enzyme levels can start to return to normal from several days to several weeks after exposure.
The person's health will improve, but often not back to normal.
An intermediate syndrome can last for weeks, and people affected describe this as very debilitating.
A history of exotic poisonings
Critics of the Russian regime and their affiliates seem to have a higher than average chance of succumbing to exotic poisons, compared with the general population.
In 2004, the then-president of Ukraine, Viktor Yushchenko, was poisoned with a chemical called TCDD-dioxin, and left with facial disfigurement.
In 2006 Alexander Litvinenko, a former FSB agent who defected to the West, was poisoned with radioactive isotope polonium-210.
The attempt on the lives of the Skripal family in Salisbury, with an agent generally assumed to be novichok, was probably the highest-profile poisoning in recent years.
In the case of Mr Navalny, it's very unlikely the specific agent used will ever be proven. But his case does share common ground with these others.
To assume all of these attempts were necessarily at the personal behest of the Russian leader is probably too long a bow to draw. But it would be reasonable to assume someone in an inner coterie was involved each time — if only to access such sophisticated weapons of assassination.
David Caldicott is an emergency medicine consultant at the Australian National University. This article originally appeared on The Conversation.
No comments:
Post a Comment