Contact our office:

(503) 765-7615
logistics@crisis-medicine.com

Login
Crisis Medicine
  • Training
    • TCCC and TECC Concepts
    • Training for Law Enforcement
    • Training for Fire & EMS
    • Training for Private Citizens
    • Training for EDC
    • Training For Faith Communities
    • Training For Teachers
  • Courses
    • ONLINE TCCC & TECC Courses
    • In-Person Training Calendar
    • Preview Course
    • Course Overview By Skills
    • Student Reviews
  • Company
    • About Crisis Medicine
    • Agency Pricing
    • Contact
    • CM in the Media
    • Disclosures – None
    • Lessons Learned in Blood
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Learn
    • New
    • Quick Tips
    • MARCH
      • (S) Security & Awareness
      • (M) Massive Hemorrhage
      • (A) Airway
      • (R) Respiration
      • (C) Circulation
      • (H) Hypothermia Prevention
    • Everything Else
    • Equipment
    • Improvised
    • K9 TECC/TCCC
    • Air Travel Emergencies
    • Tactical CBRN
      • Tactical-CBRN Journal Watch
    • Planning Your IFAK
  • Store

Tactical CBRN

An WW2 poster with a cartoon of a gas mask with the phrase "smells like garlic... Strong vesicant"

Understanding Sulfur Mustard: History, Impact, and Modern Contexts

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories Tactical CBRN

Sulfur Mustard remains a credible threat

🕖 Reading Time, 4 minutes

Sulfur mustard, a chemical warfare agent (NATO code HD) was first used during WWI and continues to be a credible chemical threat over one hundred years later. It is easily manufactured, difficult to protect against, and crude versions have been used by non-state actors in Iraq and Syria. During the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, there were 45,000 mustard agent casualties. 

The agent is known as a vesicant because of its irritating and blistering effects on exposed skin.

Sulfur mustard was the most effective chemical agent used during WWI. Although introduced late in the war, it generated about 70% of all chemical warfare agent casualties during that conflict.  

A WW2 poster showing a hula girl carrying a basket of garlic on her head, warning of mustard gas's scent
Two cartooned heads of soldiers, one wearing a gas mask, the other no, warning of the dangers of mustard gas

Sulfur Mustard has a low fatality rate, about 2.2% among US casualties. However, it causes skin blisters and severe eye irritation, which can last weeks, rendering soldiers combat ineffective for a prolonged period, and necessitating significant medical / nursing resources during their recovery.1 

Despite traditionally being taught as smelling like garlic, onions, or mustard, the smell is generally an unreliable indicator of the agent’s presence.

Even in heavily contaminated areas, although the smell is initially apparent, an exposed individual’s sense of smelling it dissipates possibly within ten minutes of exposure. Thereafter, they are no longer aware of the smell, but that ten minutes exposure is enough to ultimately cause symptoms.2

The agent, although oily in cooler environments, rapidly becomes a vapor in hot environments. This led to a common WWI technique of early morning shelling to distribute the liquid. Then it would vaporize and disseminate as the sun rose and the battlefield warmed.

The eyes are the most susceptible organ to mustard agent exposure. Eye involvement occurred in 86% of US WW1 casualties. This ranged from eye irritation, conjunctivitis, corneal ulceration in 10%, and temporary blindness. These ocular effects can take weeks to resolve.1

The vapor doesn’t just cause blisters on exposed skin. Vapor can be trapped in clothing fibers and help contaminate both other casualties and rescuers. This trapping of vapor and the agent’s predilection for moist areas results in buttock, groin, perineum, and axillae effects even without obvious exposure there. 80 to 90% of US WW1 casualties had skin involvement. 1

The skin blisters often appear like a partial thickness burn with red, swollen, and blistered skin. These wounds can take weeks to months to heal.

With historically plentiful stockpiles and ease of manufacturing, sulfur mustard continues to be a threat.

Photographs showing eye findings from sulfur mustard
Chemical Injuries Research Center, Tehran, Iran
Photographs showing skin injuries from sulfur mustard
Tactical-CBRNOnline Course

References

All of these photos are from the Chemical Injuries Research Center, Tehran, Iran.

1Medical aspects of Chem warfare, C.A Bentley ,M.B D.P.H . D.T.M 2008.

2Timperley CM, Forman JE, Abdollahi M, Al-Amri AS, Baulig A, Benachour D, Borrett V, Cariño FA, Curty C, Geist M, Gonzalez D, Kane W, Kovarik Z, Martínez-Álvarez R, Mourão NMF, Neffe S, Raza SK, Rubaylo V, Suárez AG, Takeuchi K, Tang C, Trifirò F, van Straten FM, Vanninen PS, Vučinić S, Zaitsev V, Zafar-Uz-Zaman M, Zina MS, Holen S, Alwan WS, Suri V, Hotchkiss PJ, Ghanei M. Advice on assistance and protection provided by the Scientific Advisory Board of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons: Part 3. On medical care and treatment of injuries from sulfur mustard. Toxicology. 2021 Nov;463:152967. doi: 10.1016/j.tox.2021.152967. Epub 2021 Oct 4. PMID: 34619302.

Related:

Chloropicrin (NATO code PS) was first used as a chemical warfare agent by Russia in 1916 during WWI. It's relevant again today.

A WWII poster showing a solider in a gas mask with the title, "It smelled like flypaper, Chlorpicrin"
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Dr. Mike Shertz is the Owner and Lead Instructor at Crisis Medicine. Dr. Shertz is a dual-boarded Emergency Medicine and EMS physician, having spent over 30 years gaining the experience and insight to create and provide his comprehensive, science-informed, training to better prepare everyday citizens, law enforcement, EMS, and the military to manage casualties and wounded in high-risk environments. Drawing on his prior experience as an Army Special Forces medic (18D), two decades as an armed, embedded tactical medic on a regional SWAT team, and as a Fire Service and EMS medical director.

Using a combination of current and historical events, Dr. Shertz’s lectures include relevant, illustrative photos, as well as hands-on demonstrations to demystify the how, why, when to use each emergency medical procedure you need to become a Force Multiplier for Good.

Previous post

How Misleading Data Could Change Tourniquet Protocols

Next post

Surgical Cricothyrotomy vs. Endotracheal Intubation: A Study of Long-Term Disability Outcomes

You may also like

Early treatment is key for radiation-exposed patients. A picture of a danger radiation area rusted sign and a vial of Romiplostim, the newest approved counter measure drug.
Critical Window: Why Early Treatment and Countermeasures is Key for Radiation-Exposed Patients
Gel To Treat A Hydrofluoric Acid
Can you make your own gel to treat a Hydrofluoric Acid Exposure?
A WWII poster showing a solider in a gas mask with the title, "It smelled like flypaper, Chlorpicrin"
Chloropicrin: Everything old (in CBRN) is new again

Featured Courses

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

$150.00
Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

$395.00
Complete TC2  -ONLINE

Complete TC2 -ONLINE

$595.00
Improvised TECC/TCCC

Improvised TECC/TCCC

$125.00
K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans  – ONLINE

K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans – ONLINE

$75.00
Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

$225.00
First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

$175.00
Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

$175.00
Sign up for updates
Our privacy policy can be found at https://www.crisis-medicine.com/privacy-policy/
Loading
Learn MoreTactical Casualty Care course

Search

The short version of the Crisis Medicine logo showing a C and M with an arrow in between the two

DUNS: 093140133

CAGE: 8U3A3

Company

  • About Us
  • Disclosures – None
  • Contributors
  • Contact

Courses

  • Online
  • In-Person
  • Content Warning
  • FAQs

Fine Print

  • Terms
  • Privacy Policy
  • Scope of Practice
  • FAQs

Resources

  • N. Amer. Rescue
  • TacMed Solutions
  • Chinook Medical
  • Skedco
  • Wound Cube

©2025 Crisis Medicine, all rights reserved.

  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Sitemap

Login with your site account

Lost your password?