Acta Med. 2006, 49: 3-11

https://doi.org/10.14712/18059694.2017.102

Protein Biotoxins of Military Significance

Jiří Patočkaa,b, Ladislav Středac

aUniversity of Defence, Faculty of Military Health Sciences, Department of Toxicology, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
bUniversity of South Bohemia, Faculty of Health and Social Studies, Department of Radiology and Toxicology, Czech Republic
cState Office for Nuclear Safety, Department for Control of the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, Czech Republic

Received June 1, 2005
Accepted March 1, 2006

There is a spectrum of several threat agents, ranging from nerve agents and mustard agents to natural substances, such as biotoxins and new, synthetic, bioactive molecules produced by the chemical industry, to the classical biological warfare agents. The new, emerging threat agents are biotoxins produced by animals, plants, fungi, and bacteria. Many types of organisms produce substances that are toxic to humans. Examples of such biotoxins are botulinum toxin, tetanus toxin, and ricin. Several bioactive molecules produced by the pharmaceutical industry can be even more toxic than are the classical chemical warfare agents. Such new agents, like the biotoxins and bioregulators, often are called mid-spectrum agents. The threat to humans from agents developed by modern chemical synthesis and by genetic engineering also must be considered, since such agents may be more toxic or more effective in causing death or incapacitation than classical warfare agents. By developing effective medical protection and treatment against the most likely chemical and mid-spectrum threat agents, the effects of such agents in a war scenario or following a terrorist attack can be reduced. Toxin-mediated diseases have made humans ill for millennia. Unfortunately, the use of biological agents as weapons of terror has now been realized, and separating naturally occurring disease from bioterroristic events has become an important public health goal. The key to timely identification of such attacks relies on education of primary care physicians, first responders, and public health officials.

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