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Well, ain't this fun?
1 posted on 06/19/2002 1:10:33 PM PDT by Aric2000
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To: Aric2000
Is making ricin against the law?
2 posted on 06/19/2002 1:16:24 PM PDT by Charge Carrier
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To: Aric2000
Agents were also searching Olsen's vehicle and workplace on Wednesday, Brown said.

I wonder what his job is?
Could he be Kenneth R. Olsen, Coast Guard Commander?

3 posted on 06/19/2002 1:22:18 PM PDT by PRND21
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To: Black Agnes
Bio alert
4 posted on 06/19/2002 1:24:55 PM PDT by firebrand
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To: Aric2000
This is nothing. They should look into the stuffing that my father-in-law makes. Bread, fruit, beans, giblets, etc.. All to be mixed and left out overnight. Then stuffed into the bird and cooked at a low temp for a day.

I start taking antibiotics a day or so before Thanksgiving every year just to get ready.
5 posted on 06/19/2002 1:27:40 PM PDT by El Sordo
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To: Aric2000
when i eat white castles, with a side of onion chips.........well, you can imagine...
9 posted on 06/19/2002 1:34:20 PM PDT by isom35
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To: Aric2000
There was no sign of a bomb in the house and agents do not know what Olsen intended to do with the chemical, Brown said.

I'm thinking he had problems with his neighbors' pets. Or, more likely, marital troubles that necessitated an untraceable cause of death.

11 posted on 06/19/2002 1:38:27 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: Aric2000
ricin causes diarrhea so severe that victims can die of shock

Gah! Good Lord- and I thought only Schlitz beer did that!
13 posted on 06/19/2002 1:57:32 PM PDT by Neckbone
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To: Aric2000
What the heck is a "castor plant?" Never heard of such a thing!
14 posted on 06/19/2002 2:01:19 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Aric2000
Castor Bean plants are pretty common here in the south, they grow wild along the road in some places. They are used for landscaping. Ricin is a poison that has been used by the gov't for covert ops & assasinations. In fact one of the Arkancides was similar to a Ricin poisoning.
15 posted on 06/19/2002 2:12:15 PM PDT by chuknospam
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To: Aric2000
The Spokane County Sheriff's Office began investigating Olsen last August, before the terrorist acts of Sept. 11, Brown said. The FBI later entered the case.

I wonder what prompted the investigation. What the heck is going on in spokane Valley, of all places? Weren't there some whacko brothers there (or nearby) arrested and convicted for various run-ins with the law, including placing a nail bomb on steps of Spokane library? They had car names...Chevy someone....Wonder if there's any connection to this case?

19 posted on 06/19/2002 2:23:26 PM PDT by PoisedWoman
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To: Aric2000
Well, ain't this fun? It gets better:

Virtual Naval Hospital

USAMRIID&#8217s Medical Management of Biological Casualties Handbook

Ricin

U.S. Army Medical Research
Institute of Infectious Diseases
Peer Review Status: Internally Peer Reviewed


SUMMARY

Signs and Symptoms: Acute onset of fever, chest tightness, cough, dyspnea, nausea, and arthralgias occurs 4 to 8 hours after inhalational exposure. Airway necrosis and pulmonary capillary leak resulting in pulmonary edema would likely occur within 18-24 hours, followed by severe respiratory distress and death from hypoxemia in 36-72 hours.

Diagnosis: Acute lung injury in large numbers of geographically clustered patients suggests exposure to aerosolized ricin. The rapid time course to severe symptoms and death would be unusual for infectious agents. Serum and respiratory secretions should be submitted for antigen detection (ELISA). Acute and convalescent sera provide retrospective diagnosis. Nonspecific laboratory and radiographic findings include leukocytosis and bilateral interstitial infiltrates.

Treatment: Management is supportive and should include treatment for pulmonary edema. Gastric lavage and cathartics are indicated for ingestion, but charcoal is of little value for large molecules such as ricin.

Prophylaxis: There is currently no vaccine or prophylactic antitoxin available for human use, although immunization appears promising in animal models. Use of the protective mask is currently the best protection against inhalation.

Isolation and Decontamination: Standard Precautions for healthcare workers. Ricin is non-volatile, and secondary aerosols are not expected to be a danger to health care providers. Decontaminate with soap and water. Hypochlorite solutions (0.1% sodium hypochlorite) can inactivate ricin.

OVERVIEW

Ricin is a potent protein cytotoxin derived from the beans of the castor plant (Ricinus communis). Castor beans are ubiquitous worldwide, and the toxin is fairly easy to extract; Therefore, ricin is potentially widely available. When inhaled as a small particle aerosol, this toxin may produce pathologic changes within 8 hours and severe respiratory symptoms followed by acute hypoxic respiratory failure in 36-72 hours. When ingested, ricin causes severe gastrointestinal symptoms followed by vascular collapse and death. This toxin may also cause disseminated intravascular coagulation, microcirculatory failure and multiple organ failure if given intravenously in laboratory animals.

HISTORY AND SIGNIFICANCE

Ricin’s significance as a potential biological warfare toxin relates in part to its wide availability. Worldwide, one million tons of castor beans are processed annually in the production of castor oil; the waste mash from this process is 5% ricin by weight. The toxin is also quite stable and extremely toxic by several routes of exposure, including the respiratory route. Ricin was apparently used in the assassination of Bulgarian exile Georgi Markov in London in 1978. Markov was attacked with a specially engineered weapon disguised as an umbrella, which implanted a ricin-containing pellet into his body. This technique was used in at least six other assassination attempts in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s. In 1994 and 1995, four men from a tax-protest group known as the “Minnesota Patriots Council,” were convicted of possessing ricin and conspiring to use it (by mixing it with the solvent DMSO) to murder law enforcement officials. In 1995, a Kansas City oncologist, Deborah Green, attempted to murder her husband by contaminating his food with ricin. In 1997, a Wisconsin resident, Thomas Leahy, was arrested and charged with possession with intent to use ricin as a weapon. Ricin has a high terrorist potential due to its ready availability, relative ease of extraction, and notoriety in the press.

TOXIN CHARACTERISTICS

Ricin is actually made up of two hemagglutinins and two toxins. The toxins, RCL III and RCL IV, are dimers with molecular weights of about 66,000 daltons. The toxins are made up of two polypeptide chains, an A chain and a B chain, which are joined by a disulfide bond. Ricin can be produced relatively easily and inexpensively in large quantities in a fairly low technology setting. Ricin can be prepared in liquid or crystalline form, or it can be lyophilized to make a dry powder. It could be disseminated as an aerosol, injected into a target, or used to contaminate food or water on a small scale. Ricin is stable under ambient conditions, but is detoxified by heat (80°C for 10 min., or 50°C for about an hour at pH 7.8) and chlorine (>99.4% inactivation by 100 mg/L FAC in 20 min.). Low chlorine concentrations, such as 10 mg/L FAC, as well as iodine at up to 16 mg/L, have no effect on ricin. Ricin’s toxicity is marginal when comparing its LD50 to other toxins, such as botulinum and SEB (incapacitating dose). An enemy would need to produce it in large quantities to cover a significant area on the battlefield, thus potentially limiting large-scale use of ricin by an adversary.

MECHANISM OF TOXICITY

Ricin is very toxic to cells. It acts by inhibiting protein synthesis. The B chain binds to cell surface receptors and the toxin-receptor complex is taken into the cell; the A chain has endonuclease activity and extremely low concentrations will inhibit DNA replication and protein synthesis. In rodents, the histopathology of aerosol exposure is characterized by necrosis of upper and lower respiratory epithelium, causing tracheitis, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, and interstitial pneumonia with perivascular and alveolar edema. There is a latent period of 8 hours post-inhalation exposure before histologic lesions are observed in animal models. In rodents, ricin is more toxic by the aerosol route than by other routes of exposure.

CLINICAL FEATURES

The clinical picture in intoxicated victims would depend on the route of exposure. After aerosol exposure, signs and symptoms would depend on the dose inhaled. Accidental sublethal aerosol exposures which occurred in humans in the 1940’s were characterized by acute onset of the following symptoms in 4 to 8 hours: fever, chest tightness, cough, dyspnea, nausea, and arthralgias. The onset of profuse sweating some hours later was commonly the sign of termination of most of the symptoms. Although lethal human aerosol exposures have not been described, the severe pathophysiologic changes seen in the animal respiratory tract, including necrosis and severe alveolar flooding, are probably sufficient to cause death from ARDS and respiratory failure. Time to death in experimental animals is dose dependent, occurring 36-72 hours post inhalation exposure. Humans would be expected to develop severe lung inflammation with progressive cough, dyspnea, cyanosis and pulmonary edema.

By other routes of exposure, ricin is not a direct lung irritant; however, intravascular injection can cause minimal pulmonary perivascular edema due to vascular endothelial injury. Ingestion causes necrosis of the gastrointestinal epithelium, local hemorrhage, and hepatic, splenic, and renal necrosis. Intramuscular injection causes severe local necrosis of muscle and regional lymph nodes with moderate visceral organ involvement.

DIAGNOSIS

An attack with aerosolized ricin would be primarily diagnosed by the clinical and epidemiological setting. Acute lung injury affecting a large number of geographically clustered cases should raise suspicion of an attack with a pulmonary irritant such as ricin, although other pulmonary pathogens could present with similar signs and symptoms. Other biological threats, such as SEB, Q fever, tularemia, plague, and some chemical warfare agents like phosgene, need to be included in the differential diagnosis. Ricin-induced pulmonary edema would be expected to occur much later (1-3 days post exposure) compared to that induced by SEB (about 12 hours post exposure) or phosgene (about 6 hours post exposure). Ricin intoxication would be expected to progress despite treatment with antibiotics, as opposed to an infectious process. There would be no mediastinitis as seen with inhalation anthrax. Ricin patients would not be expected to plateau clinically as occurs with SEB intoxication.

Specific ELISA and ECL testing on serum and respiratory secretions, or immunohistochemical stains of tissue may be used where available to confirm the diagnosis. Ricin is an extremely immunogenic toxin, and paired acute and convalescent sera should be obtained from survivors for measurement of antibody response. PCR can detect castor bean DNA in most ricin preparations. Additional supportive clinical or diagnostic features after aerosol exposure to ricin may include the following: bilateral infiltrates on chest radiographs, arterial hypoxemia, neutrophilic leukocytosis, and a bronchial aspirate rich in protein compared to plasma which is characteristic of high permeability pulmonary edema.

MEDICAL MANAGEMENT

Management of ricin-intoxicated patients depends on the route of exposure. Patients with pulmonary intoxication are managed by appropriate respiratory support (oxygen, intubation, ventilation, PEEP, and hemodynamic monitoring) and treatment for pulmonary edema, as indicated. Gastrointestinal intoxication is best managed by vigorous gastric lavage, followed by use of cathartics such as magnesium citrate. Superactivated charcoal is of little value for large molecules such as ricin. Volume replacement of GI fluid losses is important. In percutaneous exposures, treatment would be primarily supportive.

PROPHYLAXIS

The protective mask is effective in preventing aerosol exposure. Although a vaccine is not currently available, candidate vaccines are under development which are immunogenic and confer protection against lethal aerosol exposures in animals. Pre-exposure Prophylaxis with such a vaccine is the most promising defense against a biological warfare attack with ricin.

23 posted on 06/19/2002 2:52:14 PM PDT by archy
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To: Aric2000
This story puzzles me because there is no South Florida link. Remember, ALL news stories nowadays have a South Florida connection in it somewhere.
31 posted on 06/19/2002 4:25:51 PM PDT by PJ-Comix
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To: Aric2000
They started investigating him BEFORE 9-11? I wonder of the FBI has nabbed a serial killer. (or they hope they have)
37 posted on 06/19/2002 5:33:03 PM PDT by cake_crumb
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To: Aric2000
"It ain't no use,
If you ain't got the juice,
The juice you get from Loosener's,
Looooooos'nerrrrs."
Loosener's Castor Oil Flakes - the all weather breakfast!
52 posted on 06/20/2002 5:49:53 AM PDT by Wm Bach
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