Basic Concept On Toxicology
Basic Concept On Toxicology
Basic Concept On Toxicology
TOXICOLOGY
the study of the adverse effects of chemical,
physical and biological agents on living organisms
TOXICITY
is the ability of a substance to cause injury to
biologic material
DEFINITION OF TERMS
POISON
Any agent that is capable of producing
deleterious effect(s) in a biological system,
seriously injuring function or producing death.
XENOBIOTIC
Substance that is not naturally produced within an
organism
TOXIN
Poisonous substance produced by plants, animals,
or bacteria
DEFINITION OF TERMS
TOXICANT
An agent capable of producing symptoms of
intoxication or poisoning
POISONING
An overdose of drugs, medicaments,
chemicals and biological substances
DEFINITION OF TERMS
RISK
the potential (likelihood) that injury (biological damage)
will occur in a given situation
EXPOSURE
is the amount of chemical that is available for absorption
SAFETY
is the probability that harm will not occur under specified
conditions (the inverse of risk)
RISK
the potential (likelihood) that injury
(biological damage)
will occur in a given situation
RISK = (TOXICITY) x (EXPOSURE)
TOXICITY
is the ability of a substance to cause
injury to biologic material
EXPOSURE
is the amount of chemical that is
available for absorption
Factors Affecting Responses to Toxic Agents
Individual factors
Exposure situation (age, sex, nutritional
(duration, frequency, status, genetic background,
route, dosage) general health status)
Individual practices
CHEMICAL & PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
1. Parenteral
2. Inhalational
3. Intraperitoneal
4. Intramuscular
5. Subcutaneous
6. Intradermal
7. Oral and dermal
EXPOSURE SITUATION: ROUTE
EXPOSURE SITUATION: DOSAGE
• AGE
• SEX
• GENETIC BACKGROUND
• NUTRITIONAL STATUS
• GENERAL HEALTH STATUS
• ABSORPTION/DISTRIBUTION/METABOLISM
AND EXCRETION
Children
Mispackaged
chemicals can lead
to children
accidentally
ingesting
them
Availability of chemicals/drugs
Improper storage of chemicals/drugs
Recycling of containers
Home as a toxic environment
HOME
Location of poisoning
(NPMCC 2005 stats)
Occupational factors
Family members bring contaminated
working clothes and equipment
at home
“Levels of chlorpyrifos
in house dust in farm
workers’ homes were
5 times higher than
levels in nonfarmworkers’
homes.” (EHP 110:549-553)
Improper disposal of c hemicals
and containers
General Classification of Toxic Effects
• Allergic reactions
• Idiosyncratic reactions
• Immediate or acute toxicity
• Delayed or chronic toxicity
• Reversible effects
• Irreversible effects
• Local toxicity
• Systemic toxicity
CHEMICAL INTERACTIONS
• INDEPENDENT EFFECT
substances qualitatively and quantitatively exert their
own toxicity independent of each other
• ADDITIVE EFFECTS
the combined effect of exposure to two chemicals
is equal to the sum of the effects of exposure to each
chemical alone (3+5=8)
• SYNERGISTIC EFFECTS
the combined effect of exposure to two chemicals, given
at the same time, is much greater than the sum of the
effects of each substance given alone (3+5=30)
DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP
2. QUANTAL RESPONSE
shows the distribution of a population of individuals
given different doses of a chemical based on a
specific end-point; “all or none”
Important Features of a D-R curve
Resistant
Slope of
the curve
Midpoint of the curve
Sensitive
Important Features of a D-R curve
Sensitive
Midpoint of the Curve
POTENCY
(the lower
or smaller
dose, the
more potent)
EFFICACY
(Higher efficacy when
the d-r relationship
continues over a
greater range of doses)
MIXED OR REVERSED
TOXICITY (when one toxicant
is not consistently more potent
over the range of doses tested
as compared to another toxicant)