Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (Sep 2017)

Sulfur Mustard Exposure from Dredged Artillery Shell in a Commercial Clammer

  • Jenna Otter,
  • Alveena Dawood,
  • Joseph D’Orazio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/cpcem.2017.5.34034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4

Abstract

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A 40-year-old commercial fisherman presented with a blistering second degree burn to the right arm after handling a dredged and undetonated World War I-era sulfur mustard artillery shell. He sustained isolated second degree cutaneous injury requiring wound care and skin grafting. Sulfur mustard, or dichlorethylsulphide, is a vesicant chemical warfare agent that causes significant cutaneous chemical burn and is managed with burn wound care. Long-term effects include cosmetic disfigurement and increased risk of developing cancer. Sulfur mustard exposure is a rare but devastating injury when discarded artillery shells are encountered in coastal waters.