Cyanide poisoning occurs when a living organism is exposed to a compound that produces cyanide ions (CNâ') when dissolved in water. Common poisonous cyanide compounds include hydrogen cyanide gas and the crystalline solids potassium cyanide and sodium cyanide. The cyanide ion halts cellular respiration by inhibiting an enzyme in the mitochondria called cytochrome c oxidase.
Acute poisoning
Cyanide poisoning is a form of histotoxic hypoxia because the cells of an organism are unable to use oxygen, primarily through the inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase. Acute hydrogen cyanide poisoning can result from inhalation of fumes from burning polymer products that use Nitrile in their production, such as polyurethane, or vinyl. If cyanide is inhaled it causes a coma with seizures, apnea, and cardiac arrest, with death following in a matter of seconds. At lower doses, loss of consciousness may be preceded by general weakness, giddiness, headaches, vertigo, confusion, and perceived difficulty in breathing. At the first stages of unconsciousness, breathing is often sufficient or even rapid, although the state of the victim progresses towards a deep coma, sometimes accompanied by pulmonary edema, and finally cardiac arrest. A cherry red skin color that changes to dark may be present as the result of increased venous hemoglobin oxygen saturation. Cyanide does not directly cause cyanosis. A fatal dose for humans can be as low as 1.5Â mg/kg body weight.
Chronic exposure
In addition to its uses as a pesticide and insecticide, cyanide is contained in tobacco smoke and smoke from building fires, and is present in some foods such as almonds, apricot kernel, apple seeds, orange seeds, cassava (also known as yuca or manioc), and bamboo shoots. Vitamin B12, in the form of hydroxocobalamin (also spelled hydroxycobalamin), may reduce the negative effects of chronic exposure, and a deficiency can lead to negative health effects following exposure.
Exposure to lower levels of cyanide over a long period (e.g., after use of cassava roots as a primary food source in tropical Africa) results in increased blood cyanide levels, which can result in weakness and a variety of symptoms, including permanent paralysis, nervous lesions, hypothyroidism, and miscarriages. Other effects include mild liver and kidney damage.
Treatment of poisoning and antidotes
The United States standard cyanide antidote kit first uses a small inhaled dose of amyl nitrite, followed by intravenous sodium nitrite, followed by intravenous sodium thiosulfate. Hydroxocobalamin is newly approved in the US and is available in Cyanokit antidote kits. Sulfanegen TEA, which could be delivered to the body through an intra-muscular (IM) injection, detoxifies cyanide and converts the cyanide into thiocyanate, a less toxic substance. Alternative methods of treating cyanide intoxication are used in other countries.
Historical cases
Burnings
- On December 5, 2009, a fire in night club Lame Horse (Khromaya Loshad) in Russian city Perm took the lives of 156 people. 111 people died on the spot and 45 later in hospitals. One of the main reasons of lethality was cyanide poisoning and other toxic gases released by the burning of plastic and polystyrene foam used in the construction of club interiors. Taking into account the number of deaths, this was the largest fire in post-Soviet Russia.
- On January 27, 2013, a fire at the Kiss nightclub in the city of Santa Maria, in the south of Brazil, caused the poisoning of hundreds of young people by cyanide released by the combustion of soundproofing foam made with polyurethane. By March 2013, 241 fatalities were confirmed.
Gas chambers
- Hydrogen cyanide in the form of Zyklon B was used in German extermination camps during World War II, and especially from 1942 onwards. It is estimated that over a million people were murdered in Nazi concentration camp gas chambers using the gas. Naked victims were packed into a large chamber which could be sealed hermetically. The Zyklon B pellets were then dropped into the chamber via small openings in the roof. When the pellets were exposed to moisture and human heat (as in a closed chamber), they gave off gaseous HCN, which then killed the victims. The gas was used mainly at Auschwitz and Majdanek, but the extermination camps such as Treblinka built earlier used engine exhaust gas, in which carbon monoxide was the toxic component. The gas chambers were either mobile lorries as at Chelmno or specially built chambers as at Sobibor and Belzec.
- Hydrogen cyanide gas has also been used for judicial execution in some states of the United States, where cyanide was generated by reaction between potassium cyanide dropped into a compartment containing sulfuric acid, directly below the chair in the gas chamber. The State of California executed Caryl Chessman in this manner.
War
Cyanide was stockpiled in chemical weapons arsenals in both the Soviet Union and the United States in the 1950s and 1960s. However, as a military agent, hydrogen cyanide was not considered very effective, since it is lighter than air and needs a significant dose to incapacitate or kill.
Although there have been no verified instances of its use as a weapon, hydrogen cyanide may have been employed by Iraq in the Halabja poison gas attack against the Kurds in the 1980s under Saddam Hussein.
Suicide
Cyanide salts are sometimes used as fast-acting suicide devices. Cyanide works better with higher stomach acidity.
- In February 1937, the Uruguayan short story writer Horacio Quiroga committed suicide by drinking cyanide in a hospital at Buenos Aires.
- In 1937, the famous polymer chemist, Wallace Carothers, committed suicide by cyanide.
- In the 1943 Operation Gunnerside, to destroy the Vemork Heavy Water Plant in World War II (an attempt to stop/slow German atomic bomb progress), the commandos were given cyanide tablets (cyanide enclosed in rubber) kept in the mouth and were instructed to bite into them in case of German capture. The tablets ensured death within three minutes.
- Cyanide, in the form of pure liquid prussic acid (a historical name for hydrogen cyanide), was the favored suicide agent of the Third Reich. It was used to commit suicide by Erwin Rommel (1944), after being accused of conspiring against Hitler; Adolf Hitler's wife, Eva Braun (1945); and by Nazi leaders Heinrich Himmler (1945), possibly Martin Bormann (1945), and Hermann Göring (1946).
- It is speculated that, in 1954, Alan Turing used an apple that had been injected with a solution of cyanide to commit suicide after being convicted of having a homosexual relationshipâ"illegal at the time in the UKâ"and forced to undergo hormonal castration.
- Jonestown, Guyana, was the site of a large mass suicide/murder, in which over 900 members of the Peoples Temple drank potassium cyanideâ"laced Flavor Aid in 1978.
- Members of the Sri Lankan LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, whose insurgency lasted from 1983 to 2009), used to wear cyanide vials around their necks with the intention of committing suicide if captured by the government forces.
- On June 28, 2012, millionaire Wall Street trader Michael Marin ingested a cyanide pill seconds after a guilty verdict was read in his arson trial in Phoenix, AZ; he died minutes after.
- On June 27, 2013, after being found guilty of statutory sodomy of a 14-year-old female, 48-year-old Steve Parsons ingested a cyanide pill and died shortly after in Maryville, MO.
Mining and industrial
- In 2000, a spill at Baia Mare, Romania resulted in the worst environmental disaster in Europe since Chernobyl.
- In 2000, Allen Elias, CEO of Evergreen Resources was convicted of knowing endangerment for his role in the cyanide poisoning of employee Scott Dominguez. This was one of the first successful criminal prosecutions of a corporate executive by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Murder
See:
- John Tawell murderer, who in 1845 became the first person to be arrested as the result of telecommunications technology
- Grigori Rasputin (1916; attempted, killed by gunshot)
- Goebbels children (1945)
- Nick Baird and Casey Killen (2013)
- Chicago Tylenol murders (1982)
- Ronald Clark O'Bryan (1944-1984)
- Richard Kuklinski (1948â"1986)
- Neil Heywood (1970-2011)
- Dr. Autumn Marie Klein (1972-2013)
- On July 19, 2012, Urooj Khan, 46, cashed in an Illinois lottery ticket for more than $600,000. After taxes, the winnings amounted to about $425,000. Khan fell ill the next day and was pronounced dead at a hospital. No autopsy was done because, at the time, the Chicago Medical Examiner's Office didn't generally perform them on people 45 and older unless the death was suspicious. The cutoff age has since been raised to 50. After the basic toxicology screening for opiates, cocaine and carbon monoxide came back negative, the death was ruled a result of the narrowing and hardening of coronary arteries. Days after the initial cause of death was released, a relative of Khan's asked authorities to look into the case further. The morgue reopened the case and did more extensive toxicology studies. On March 1, 2013, the Cook County coroner's office confirmed Khan was the victim of cyanide poisoning.
Terrorism
- In 1995, a device was discovered in a restroom in the Kayabacho Tokyo subway station, consisting of bags of sodium cyanide and sulfuric acid with a remote controlled motor to rupture them in what was believed to be an attempt by the Aum Shinrikyo cult to produce toxic amounts of hydrogen cyanide gas.
- In 2003, Al Qaeda reportedly planned to release cyanide gas into the New York City Subway system. The attack was supposedly aborted because there would not be enough casualties.
In fiction
Homicide
- The Detective Conan manga/anime series has a large number of cases in which the victims are killed by cyanide, with all or most mentioning an 'almond scent' to describe it.
- Raymond Chandler uses "a little potassium hydrocyanide" against private detective Philip Marlowe in The Little Sister â" "merely relaxing".
- In Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, the first death occurs from cyanide poisoning.
- In Agatha Christie's Sparkling Cyanide (also entitled Remembered Death), based upon her Hercule Poirot short story entitled "Yellow Iris", Rosemary and George Barton are poisoned by cyanide crystals.
- In Ngaio Marsh's Death At The Bar, Luke Watchman, a top London barrister and King's Counsel dies of potassium cyanide poisoning after a freak dart throwing accident whilst holidaying in Devon.
- In Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors by "Rex Feral", the use of cyanide to poison a mark is explained in detail.
- In the Joseph Kesselring play Arsenic and Old Lace, two old ladies mix wine with arsenic, cyanide and strychnine to use to kill old men.
- In Roald Dahl's short story "The Landlady", a landlady poisons a young boy named Billy Weaver staying in her Bed and Breakfast with tea that was said to taste suspiciously like cyanide (described as tasting like "bitter almonds"), presumably to stuff him.
- Bishop Lilliman was killed by 'V', forcing the bishop to swallow a communion wafer poisoned with cyanide in Alan Moore and David Lloyd's comic book series, V for Vendetta.
- In the manga Battle Royale, Yuko Sakaki's assigned weapon is hydrocyanic acid. She uses it to poison food intended for Shuuya Nanahara, but it ends up being ingested by Yuka Nakagawa.
- In Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations game, the third case solved by the player involves a programmer who is murdered when potassium cyanide is slipped into his coffee at a restaurant.
- In the game Hitman: Contracts, the player can assassinate people using cyanide.
- In the 1999 Midsomer Murders episode "Judgement Day", the second murder victim is poisoned by cyanide mixed in a glass of wine.
- In the 2008 Doctor Who episode "The Unicorn and the Wasp", the Doctor is nearly poisoned by cyanide, but manages to metabolize it and detoxify himself using a combination of proteins, salt, and a shock, plus the advantage of his non-human physiology.
- In the Assassin's Creed video game series, Alan Turing was revealed to have been killed by Templars who laced an apple (which he would later eat) with cyanide in an attempt to make it look as if he had committed suicide.
- In the film "The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane", Rynn Jacobs (Jodie Foster) poisons Frank Hallet (Martin Sheen) with cyanide-tainted tea, serving him almond cookies to mask the taste.
- In Nevil Shute's 1957 novel, On the Beach, set in post-nuclear Australia, citizens are given cyanide capsules to kill themselves with rather than suffer the effects of radiation fallout from the nuclear bombs.
Suicide
- In Agatha Christie's novel The Hollow, woman called Gerda Christow kills herself when she gets caught by murder of her husband.
- In Agatha Christie's novel The Secret Adversary, the villain "Mr Brown" commits suicide using cyanide concealed in a signet ring.
- In Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Dr. Jekyll kills himself with cyanide, the smell of kernels (almonds) is evident.
- In Ian Fleming's James Bond stories and the movies based on them, 00 agents are issued cyanide capsules for use in the event of capture by the enemy. James Bond is described as having thrown his away.
- Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez's novel Love in the Time of Cholera begins with Jeremiah de Saint-Amour's suicide by cyanide poisoning.
- Australian author Nevil Shute's 1957 novel about life after nuclear war, On the Beach, gives the scenario of the Australian government giving survivors free cyanide tablets to commit suicide rather than face death from radiation poisoning.
- In William Styron's 1979 novel Sophie's Choice and the movie based on the book, Sophie and Nathan commit suicide by ingesting a cyanide pill.
- In Ford Maddox Ford's novel The Good Soldier one of the main characters, Florence, commits suicide by drinking her phial of "prussic acid" after learning that her lover is having an affair with another woman.
- In Japanese author Koushun Takami's 1999 novel Battle Royale and the film Battle Royale based on the book, Yuko Sakaki is given a small bottle of potassium cyanide (KCN) as a "special bonus" in addition to the weapon provided in her day pack.
- In the film Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), Heinz Kruger commits suicide by cyanide tablet upon being caught.
- In the film Unknown (2011), Jürgen commits suicide by emptying a bag of sodium cyanide into his coffee, disguised as a packet of sugar.
- In the Kannada film Cyanide (2006), which is about the incidents that occurred in the peripheries of Bangalore after the assassination of the former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, the killers of the Prime Minister use cyanide vials to commit suicide to avoid being captured by the police.
- In the James Bond film Dr. No (1962), James Bond believes that his cab driver is an enemy agent, and after a fight scene, begins to interrogate the driver, who proceeds to poison and kill himself with cyanide embedded in a cigarette.
- In the James Bond film Skyfall (2012), Raoul Silva discusses his failed attempt to commit suicide using a hydrogen cyanide capsule whilst under interrogation. Rather than kill him, the cyanide burned his body internally, forcing him to wear a prosthetic face plate to hide his disfigurement. This scene is particularly unrealistic given that hydrogen cyanide only exists as a gas and that cyanide poisoning does not cause facial or dental disfigurement.
Other
- Isaac Asimov's short story "Hostess" features an alien race which requires small amounts of hydrogen cyanide in order for their hemoglobin analogues to remain stable. As such, while they do not suffer cyanide poisoning, cyanide withdrawal is, for them, an extremely painful condition similar to slow strangulation.
- In Erwin Schrödinger's famous thought experiment Schrödinger's cat, a flask of hydrocyanic acid is rigged to release inside a box upon the decay of a radioactive substance, randomly poisoning a cat. In such a scenario, the macroscopic effects of quantum indeterminacy would cause the cat to be neither alive nor dead until observation.
See also
- Victims of poisoning
- Konzo
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