Comments by "Spring Bloom" (@springbloom5940) on "" video.
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Minutes, to hours, dependant upon the weapon and exposure rate. A tactical deployment of a typical modern nerve agent, would produce effects, almost immediately, with full incapacitation in under an hour. Thats a critical exposure from a military munition. For a surreptitious attack, like a poisoning, it depends greatly on exposure vector. For instance, contaminated clothing or environment, could take several hours to a day or more, to produce a critical exposure. This is fairly common with pesticide poisoning, where cumulative exposure occurs. But, being poison, it could've been applied to clothing, or jewelry, or medication, etc. Weeks before he just happened to take the right pill from the bottle, or choose that specific tie. Without identifying the vector, its pretty well impossible to determine when the primary attack(deployment of the weapon) actually occurred. That said, rapidity and intensity of symptom onset, would indicate exposure within the previous 24 hrs. That is, it doesn't appear to be a gradual cumulative poisoning.
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