Race for a Remedy
Retired from the track, thoroughbred First Flight served as a "factory" to produce botulism antitoxin
- By Carolyn H. Crowley
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2000, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
The doctors began to suspect infant botulism, and sent the Bairds to get a stool sample from Tessler's last diaper. The anxious parents and the doctors waited as the Ohio Department of Health examined the sample for toxins. Finally, after a few days had passed, word came back that Tessler, indeed, had infant botulism.
Infant botulism — unlike its adult counterparts — occurs when a baby ingests botulinum spores, as ubiquitous as the dust on which they may travel. Because of competing bacteria that mature humans usually have in their intestines, these bacterial spores are killed or pass through the system before they're able to produce toxin in adults. When adults get botulism, it is from a toxin created by bacteria outside the body, found in food, for instance, that is not cooked well enough to kill the bacteria, and then sealed, allowing these anaerobic microbes to create neurotoxin.
But infants can become ill by ingesting the spores themselves, which create toxin in the oxygen-free environment of the child's intestines. Botulinum bacterial spores travel widely, and can be found in a variety of sources, including foods such as honey.
Infant botulism is rare, but the mortality rate is high if severe cases are not diagnosed and treated quickly. It strikes as many as 100 babies a year in the United States, most younger than 6 months.
There have been more than 1,700 confirmed cases in nearly 50 states since its recognition as a distinct disease in 1976. Parents may notice infrequent bowel movements, listlessness, lethargy, poor feeding, and drooling from the mouth because of an inability to swallow, as babies, essentially, become "floppy." The progression of weakness eventually necessitates hospital admission. The toxin can cause paralysis and loss of muscle tone in the respiratory tract, resulting in asphyxiation and possibly death.
Before Tessler was definitively diagnosed, her doctors had contacted infant botulism experts at the California Department of Health Services who were developing a new human-derived botulinum antitoxin for infants. There are seven known types of botulinum toxin, types A through G, each of which must be treated with antitoxin derived from different antibodies. The California researchers' antitoxin was for types A and B, which accounted for all but three of more than 1,500 infant botulism cases reported to that point. But the toxin found in Tessler's sample, it turned out, was type F, a rare form. There was no suitable antitoxin available. None, that is, except for the antitoxin derived from First Flight's blood.
The Army had stored First Flight's antitoxin, the only one for all seven botulinum toxin types. But, up to then, only 59 adults — no children — had received the equine-derived botulinum antitoxin. So the Bairds now faced a dilemma: try the antitoxin on their daughter or wait the many months it would take, while she was on the ventilator, for the poison to work its way out of her body.
"A doctor suggested injecting me," Tracy Baird recalls. "He said if Mom has a reaction — she may stop breathing — the baby likely will too. Other doctors said the shot wouldn't help Tess because, at that point, she'd been sick for more than a week." The Bairds chose the antitoxin injections, with a fearful Tracy getting the first one, just enough to test for adverse reactions. Everyone waited an hour for reactions, but none came.
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