Fulminant
Fulminant is a medical descriptor for any event or process that occurs suddenly and escalates 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. There are several diseases described by this adjective:
- Fulminant liver failure
- Marburg [acute multiple sclerosis|Fulminant (Marburg variant) multiple sclerosis]
- Fulminant colitis
- Fulminant pre-eclampsia
- Fulminant meningitis
- Purpura fulminans
- Fulminant hepatic venous thrombosis
- Fulminant jejunoileitis
- Fulminant myocarditis
The term is generally not used to refer to immediate death by trauma, such as gunshot wound, but can refer to trauma-induced secondary conditions, such as commotio cordis, a sudden cardiac arrest caused by a blunt, non-penetrating trauma to the precordium, which causes ventricular fibrillation of the heart. Cardiac arrest and stroke in certain parts of the brain, such as in the brainstem, and massive hemorrhage of the great arteries may be very quick, causing "fulminant death". Sudden infant death syndrome is still a mysterious cause of respiratory arrest in infants. Certain infections of the brain, such as rabies, meningococcal meningitis, Acute measles encephalitis, or primary amebic meningoencephalitis can kill within hours to days after symptoms appear.
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.