Fulminant
Fulminant is any event or process which occurs suddenly, quickly and is intense and severe to the point of lethality, i.e, it has an
explosive character. The word comes from
Latin fulmināre, to strike with
lightning. It is most used in
medicine, and there are several diseases which have this adjective:
*
Fulminant liver failure*
Fulminant colitis*
Fulminant pre-eclampsia*
Fulminant meningitis* Fulminant hepatic venous thrombosis (
Budd-Chiari syndrome)
Some
viral hemorrhagic fevers, such as
Ebola,
Lassa fever and
Lábrea fever may kill in as short a time as 2 to 5 days. Diseases that cause rapidly-developing
lung edema, such as some kinds of
pneumonia, may kill in a few hours. For example, it was said of the
black death (pneumonic
bubonic plague) that some of its victims would die in a matter of hours after the initial symptoms appeared. Other pathologic conditions that may be fulminating in character are
acute respiratory distress syndrome,
asthma, acute
anaphylaxis,
septic shock and
disseminated intravascular coagulation.
The most rapid deaths are those provoked by massive body
trauma, such as in an
explosion, smashing of the whole body, etc., and, of course, by being hit by a lightning. Following this, localized acute trauma to the
heart and to the brain (such as by putting a
bullet through them), are also almost instantaneously
lethal.
Commotio cordis is a sudden cardiac arrest caused by a blunt, non-penetrating trauma to the
precordium, which causes
ventricular fibrillation of the heart, and it is often observed in young athletes in some sports. Then,
cardiac arrest and
stroke in certain parts of the
brain, such as in the
brainstem (which controls
cardiovascular and
respiratory system functions), and massive
hemorrhage of the great
arteries (such as in perforation of the walls by trauma or by sudden opening of an
aneurysm of the
aorta) may be very quick, death ensuing in less than one minute.
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is still a mysterious cause of respiratory arrest in infants.
Some
toxins, such as
cyanide may also provoke fulminant death. Abrupt
hyperkalemia provoked by intravenous injection of
potassium chloride leads to fulminant death by cardiac arrest.
*
To fulminate is to hurl denunciations or menaces to someone, or to kill by action of a lightning. Thus, the
Greek god
Zeus is commonly represented holding a bunch of lightnings in one of his hands, which he used to fulminate mortals he wanted to kill.
*
Fulminates are a class of
mercury-based
explosives used in
detonator caps, due to the startling sudenness that they explode.