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 3 of 5)
The Army's doses were for adults, and little Tess weighed only seven pounds. As Tracy was doing all right, doctors decided to administer almost one-half the adult dose intravenously to Tessler. Within four hours there was some movement in her hands and toes. Twelve hours after the first dose, she received a second one and gradually began to improve. Within a week, Tessler Baird was breathing on her own again, and was fully mobile. She spent three weeks recovering in the hospital.
Three years later, the only signs of her disease are scars on her chest from feeding tubes. "She's absolutely perfect," Tracy says and smiles. "A normal, ornery child."
"It's unbelievable to me that the Department of Defense — with its bombs, airplanes and guns — also manages these medical research and treatment programs," Tracy says. "Thankfully, we were able to use its treatment. The military saved my daughter's life."
The horse that helped save Tessler began his medical career in 1978 when he was 10 years old. Already retired from racing, First Flight had served as a ceremonial caisson horse for funeral and military processions at Arlington National Cemetery. But, skittish in crowds, he is said to have bolted with a general's coffin during a somber funeral. Needless to say, he was retired again. Soon thereafter, he was selected for a then-new botulinum antitoxin program.
"If a horse ever knew his value to the medical world, it was First Flight. He was a fractious, hot-blooded, pumped-up, macho horse," says George Lewis, who worked with First Flight for many years. Now retired, Lewis was a colonel in the U.S. Army Veterinary Corps when he worked with First Flight at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Its mission is to develop medical countermeasures — vaccines, drugs and diagnostics — to protect American military personnel from biological warfare agents and endemic infectious diseases.
First Flight was not vicious or dangerous but had a mind of his own, says Lt. Col. Terry Besch, another veterinarian who worked with the horse for years.
"Woe to the technician who didn't have a way with horses," she says. First Flight would "lightly nip. A loud 'Hey!' and quick snap on the lead line by an experienced person" and First Flight cooperated again. He then stood nicely to be groomed or have his blood withdrawn and "gratefully accepted a pat and a carrot, then he was off to the fields to boss around the other horses," Besch says. He was almost always the dominant horse in the pasture, "proud and full of himself as if he knew he had some importance."
Using delicate and dangerous techniques, a research team under Lewis' direction produced small quantities of each of the seven toxin types and slightly changed them so that they would not be toxic to First Flight. Instead they would cause him to respond by producing antibodies that would neutralize botulinum toxin. Lewis injected these new products, called toxoids, into First Flight. Then, once the horse had developed antibodies, the actual toxin — in carefully titrated amounts — would be injected to further boost antibody production. It was this procedure that frightened and worried Lewis: if he miscalculated, the injections could kill the horse.
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