Objective: The genotoxic vesicant sulphur mustard [bis-2-(chloroethyl)sulphide] is a chemical warfare agent which is easily available due to its relatively simple synthesis. Thus, sulphur mustard is a potential agent for mass contamination.
In this study, we focused on sulphur mustard toxicity and decontamination in a rat model using commercially available detergent mixtures for dermal decontamination. Methods: Male Wistar rats were percutaneously treated with sulphur mustard and subjected to wet decontamination 2 min postexposure.
Commercially produced detergents Neodekont™, Argos™, Dermogel™ and FloraFree™ were tested for their decontamination efficacy against an exposed group and their protective ratios determined. Results and conclusion: The results showed that all tested detergent solutions produced an increase in the median lethal dose [LD50 = 9.83 (5.87–13.63) mg·kg−1] in comparison to controls, which led to increased survival of experimental animals.
In general, all tested detergents provided modest decontamination efficacy (PR = 2.0–5.7). The highest protective ratio (5.7) was consistently achieved with Argos™.
Accordingly, Argos™ should be considered in further investigation of mass casualty decontamination.