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retrieved 2025-03-10 Medterms.com
Archived 2012-08-09 at the
Wayback Machine Medical Aspects of
Biological and
Chemical Warfare,
Chapter 7:
Vesicants...
-
substances also
attack the eyes, or any
other tissue they contact. The
vesicants are
substances that
produce large fluid-filled
blisters on the skin....
- and
administration of
medications with
vesicant and
irritant potential should be
allowed to
administer vesicants.
Choose a large,
intact vein with good...
-
anthrax toxin) and by some
types of
cytotoxic chemical weapons, e.g.,
vesicants such as
mustard gas and Lewisite, or
urticants such as
phosgene oxime...
-
grouped with the
vesicant (blister agent)
chemical agents. However,
because nettle agents do not
cause blisters, they are not true
vesicants. Smith, Kathleen...
- bite or sting. Some
chemical warfare agents,
known as
blister agents or
vesicants,
cause large,
painful blisters wherever they
contact skin; an example...
- 14 (1): 11, doi:10.1186/s12917-017-1318-7, PMC 5765607, PMID 29325550
Vesicant Archived 2017-12-12 at the
Wayback Machine EFFECTS Weterle R, Rybakowski...
- ISBN 978-0849314346.
Fitzgerald GM,
Vollmer T (19 June 2006). "CBRNE -
Vesicants,
Organic ****nicals: L, ED, MD, PD, HL". emedicine. WebMD.
Retrieved December...
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generic thiol odor at
larger concentrations.
Sulfur mustard, a
potent vesicant, was used in
World War I as a
disabling agent. Sulfur–sulfur
bonds are...
- Urbanetti, John S.; Smith,
William J.; Hurst,
Charles G. "Chapter 7:
Vesicants".
Medical Aspects of
Chemical and
Biological Warfare.
Office of The Surgeon...