1986
DOI: 10.1016/0041-008x(86)90399-6
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Pathophysiology of Soman intoxication in primates

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Cited by 43 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Excess acetylcholine initiates rapid progression of miosis, hypersecretions, muscular fasciculation, tremors, seizures, convulsions, and death in laboratory rodents, NHPs, and man (Sidell 1997;Tryphonas and Clement 1996;Baze 1993). The rate of soman intoxication and observed clinical signs in African green monkeys were consistent with descriptions in the literature for the rhesus monkey, cynomolgus monkey, and baboon (Adams et al 1976;Adams 1990;Anzueto et al 1986). As Lipp (1968) had indicated, electrographic tonic-clonic seizures and motor convulsions were prominent aspects of the toxic symptomatology of soman intoxication in all animals at the doses studied, although it must be emphasized that only one animal was exposed at the lowest dose.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Excess acetylcholine initiates rapid progression of miosis, hypersecretions, muscular fasciculation, tremors, seizures, convulsions, and death in laboratory rodents, NHPs, and man (Sidell 1997;Tryphonas and Clement 1996;Baze 1993). The rate of soman intoxication and observed clinical signs in African green monkeys were consistent with descriptions in the literature for the rhesus monkey, cynomolgus monkey, and baboon (Adams et al 1976;Adams 1990;Anzueto et al 1986). As Lipp (1968) had indicated, electrographic tonic-clonic seizures and motor convulsions were prominent aspects of the toxic symptomatology of soman intoxication in all animals at the doses studied, although it must be emphasized that only one animal was exposed at the lowest dose.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…The clinical literature emphasizes the peripheral effects contributing to acute pulmonary insufficiency [11,13]. However this does not exclude early mortality in the field due to central apnea [14,15].In this study we used a rodent model to analyze the dynamics of respiratory and cardiovascular collapse during acute OP poisoning. We found that poisoning caused a rapidly lethal central apnea.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Convulsions are usually associated with blood lactic acidosis during seizures in man (Osnes and Hermansen, 1972) and in animals exposed to OP (e.g. rats, (Husain et al, 1987) or baboons (Anzueto et al, 1986)). The strong increase in blood lactate we observed in our paradigm is congruent with these reports.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%