toxicology

    Cards (65)

    • Toxicology
      The science that deals with the adverse effects of chemicals on living organisms and assesses the probability of their occurrence
    • Disciplines of modern toxicology
      • Mechanistic toxicology
      • Clinical toxicology
      • Descriptive toxicology
      • Regulatory toxicology
      • Forensic toxicology
      • Environmental toxicology
    • Mechanistic toxicology
      Investigates how a chemical causes toxic effects by examining its absorption, distribution and excretion
    • Clinical toxicology

      Investigates the toxic effects of various drugs in the body and the treatment and prevention of drug toxicity in the population
    • Descriptive toxicology

      Investigates the toxic properties of chemical agents for various endpoints using a variety of different organisms
    • Regulatory toxicology

      Uses scientific data to determine how to protect humans and animals from excessive risk
    • Forensic toxicology
      Uses medical evidence of poisoning, and tries to establish the extent to which poisons were involved in human deaths
    • Environmental toxicology
      Investigates the effects of pollutants on organisms, populations, ecosystems and the biosphere
    • China (plant and fish poisons)
      2700 B.C.
    • Egypt (800 poisonous recipes)

      1900-1200 B.C.
    • India (poisons and antidotes)
      800 B.C.
    • Greece (600 plant and mineral poisons)
      50-100 A.D.
    • Romans (poisons for executions)
      50-400 A.D.
    • Islamic authority on poisons
      980-1036 A.D.
    • Paracelsus (the father of toxicology)

      1493-1541
    • Paracelsus: '"All substances are poisons: there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison from a remedy."'
    • Ramazzini (Book; Diseases of Workers)

      1713
    • Orfila (Toxicology as a distinct discipline)

      1815
    • Paul Ehrlich – developed staining procedures to observe cell and tissues of how toxicants influence living organisms

      1936
    • Exposure
      Must occur first for the chemical to present a risk
    • Risk
      The magnitude of risk is proportional to both the potency of the chemical and the extent of exposure
    • Dose makes the poison
      The amount of the chemical at the target site determines the toxicity
    • Poisonous chemicals
      Plants, animals and bacteria
    • Toxicant
      Specific poisonous chemicals
    • Phytotoxins
      Toxins from plants
    • Zootoxins

      Toxins from animals
    • Bacteriotoxins
      Toxins from bacteria
    • Xenobiotic
      Man-made substance
    • Toxicity
      The adverse effects that a chemical may cause
    • Dose
      The amount of chemical that accesses the body
    • Exposure
      The extent to which a poisonous dose is acquired
    • Hazard
      The likelihood that a toxicity will be expressed
    • Antidotes
      Counteracting a poison
    • Types of antidotes
      • Chemical - reacts chemically with the poison to form a harmless compound
      • Mechanical - prevents absorption (activated charcoal)
      • Physiological - counteracts the effects of the poison by producing opposite physiological effects
    • LD50
      The amount (dose) of a chemical which causes death in 50% of a population of test animals, to which it is administered by any of a variety of methods
    • LC50
      The concentration of a chemical in an environment (generally air or water) which causes death in 50% of an exposed population of test animals in a specified time frame
    • Dose (mg/kg/day)
      % Adverse Outcome
    • Sugar has an LD50 of 30,000 mg/kg
    • Ethanol has an LD50 of 13,700 mg/kg
    • Water has a recognized LD50 of 80,000 mg/kg
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