Nitrogen tetroxide toxicity
Background
- N2O4 (NTO) is used as a propellant.
- In 1975 three astronauts on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project were exposed to NTO during reetry and treated for pulmonary edema and chemical pneumonitis[1]
Clinical Features
- Eye burning and tearing
- Cutaneous pruritis
- Shortness of breath
- Cough
- Pulmonary edema
Differential Diagnosis
Space medicine
- Ebullism syndrome
- Space adaptation syndrome
- Space motion sickness
- Spaceflight headache
- Contact dermatitis of spaceflight
- Ocular foreign body (microgravity)
- Spaceflight urinary tract infection
- Anemia of spaceflight
- Spaceflight urinary retention
- Sleep disorders of spaceflight
- Pulmonary disorders of spaceflight
- Hydrazine toxicity
- Nitrogen tetroxide toxicity
- Space dentistry
- Spaceflight urinary tract infection
Inhalation injury
- Unintentional
- Terrorism
- Pulmonary chemical agents
- Ammonia
- Methyl isocyanate
- methyl bromide
- Hydrochloric acid
- Chlorine
- Phosgene
- Bioterrorism
Evaluation
- Xray (if available)
Management
- Supportive care after removal from the contaminated environment.
Disposition
See Also
References
- ↑ Apollo-Soyuz Test Project Incident https://doctorzebra.com/drz/s_medhx.html#ASTP_incident