1_02 Toxicity and Toxicology
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Transcript 1_02 Toxicity and Toxicology
Chapter 1.2: Introduction to Toxicity and
Toxicology
•It is not intended in this module to produce a
detailed and comprehensive course in
toxicology
•However, in order to discuss food chemical
risk assessment we need as a starting point to
introduce the concept of chemical toxicity,
and the discipline of toxicology which is used
to examine chemical toxicity in a structured
way.
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Historical aspects of Toxciology
Estimated 40,000 deaths
due to ergotism
Ebers scrolls
”Traité des Poisons”
Bonaventura Orfila
Socrates’ conviction
?
~1550 B.C.
399 B.C.
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”Everything is a poison…it is
only the dose
that makes it not a poison”
(Paracelsus, 1493-1541)
~1000
~1500
~1800
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Example: Socrates was ultimately sentenced to death by drinking a hemlockbased extract
Hemlock contains the pyridine alkaloids coniine, Nmethylconiine, conhydrine, pseudoconhydrine and
γ-coniceine. The most toxic of these is coniine,
which has a chemical structure similar to nicotine.
.
Coniine
Coniine containing plants have actions similar to nicotine. Clinical effects will depend on the dose of
coniine or coniine-like alkaloid ingested. The nicotinic effects are biphasic, with stimulation followed by
CNS depression and paralysis of respiratory muscles.
Initial symptoms may be vomiting, confusion, respiratory depression, and muscle paralysis. Death, when it
occurs, is usually rapid and due to respiratory paralysis.
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgibin/sis/search/a?dbs+hsdb:@term+
@DOCNO+3474
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Mathieu Joseph Bonaventure Orfila (24 April 1787 – 12 March 1853) was a Spanish
born French toxicologist and chemist, often seen as the founder of the science of
toxicology.
Role in Forensic Toxicology
If there is reason to believe that a murder or attempted murder may have been
committed using poison, a forensic toxicologist is asked to examine pieces of
evidence such as corpses and food items for poison content.
At Orfila's time the primary poison in use was arsenic, but there were no reliable
ways of testing for its presence.
Orfila developped new techniques and refined existing techniques in his first
treatise, Traité des poisons, greatly enhancing their accuracy.
In 1840, Marie LaFarge was accused for the murder of her husband using
arsenic. Mysteriously, although arsenic was available to the killer and was found
in the food, none could be found in the body.
Orfila was asked by the court to make further investigations. He discovered that
the test used, the Marsh Test, had been performed incorrectly, and that there
was in fact arsenic in the body, allowing LaF arge to be found guilty.
And arsenic is still poisonous (Bangladesh) from arsenic naturally occurring in water
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Paracelsus (1493-1541)
• “Alle Ding' sind Gift
und nichts ohn' Gift;
allein die Dosis macht,
dass ein Ding kein Gift
ist.
– "All things are poison
and nothing is without
poison, only the dose
permits something not to
be poisonous."
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One of the most
important concepts in
toxicology
“The dose makes the poison”
LOW EXPOSURE = LOW RISK
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What does it mean that
something is Toxic?
Let us get some suggestions!
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Other words (expressions) for toxic?
•Poisonous
•Health impairing
•or to some extent
•Hazardious
•Lets get an explanation on the last !
•http://map.ais.ucla.edu/go/1002739
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What can be toxic?
•An element (lets get examples)!
•A chemical compound (examples)!
•A ”product” (examples)!
•Naturally occurring/”man made”
• Any difference?
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Introduction to Toxicity
What can be Toxic?
A solid, liquid or gas ”element” (examples)!
• Lead (Pb) (metal found in some crops and
seafoods).
• Arsenic (As) (metalloid in grains such as rice)
• Mercury (Hg) (converted to methylmercury in
seafood, marine plants etc)
• Calcium, copper, iron, sodium, magnesium,
manganese, porassium (essential dietary minerals
but can be toxic at high cncentratons)
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Introduction to Toxicity
What can be Toxic (cont’d)....
A chemical compound (examples)!
•Sodium Chloride (NaCl also known as salt!)
•Carbon dioxide (CO2)
•Ethanol (CH3CH2OH)
•Cyanide (HCN)
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Introduction to Toxicity
What can be Toxic (cont’d).....
A ”product” (examples)!
• Agricultural and veterinary chemicals –
pesticides, insecticides, fungicides
• Pollutants – lubricants, cleaning agents,
dioxins and PCBs
• Food additives – preservatives, artificial
colours, acidifiers etc
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Introduction to Toxicity
What can be toxic (Cont’d)....
Naturally Inherent Plant Toxicants Examples
• Macromolecular polyphenolic substances (hydrolysable and
condensed tannins)
• Toxic fatty acids/lipids
• Non-protein amino acids
• Alkaloids
• Furanocoumarins
• Polyacetylenes
• Mono-, sesqui- and diterpenes; and
• Toxic glycosides of various types (glucosinolates, cyanogenic
glycosides, saponins)
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Introduction to Toxicity
What can be toxic (Cont’d)....
Naturally Inherent Plant Toxicants Examples
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cyanogenic glycosides in casava and apricot kernels
produce HCN.
Tannins in processed products such as tea, coffee and
wine.
Proteinase inhibitors in legumes (e.g. Soybeans)
Alkaloids in foods and beverages (e.g. Caffeine)
Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids in grains, teas and herbal
supplements
Gossypol in cotton seed oil
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A chemical compound (or a mixture) that is
toxic may e.g. be called:
•A Poison
•A Toxin
•A Biotoxin
•A toxicant
•What are the differences?
•http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxin
•http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxicant
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What is toxicology?
• The study of toxins/toxicants (=toxic substances)
• ”Toxic substances disturb the physiological balance to the extent that
the organism becomes ill”
• Multidisciplinary field of science building on basic disciplines
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What is Toxicology
Some References to consider for further
reading:
1.
Analytical toxicology (A.Wallace Hayes, Principles and Methods of Toxicolog, 3rd Edition;
Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th Editiin) ;
http://www.who.int/ipcs/publications/training_poisons/analytical_toxicology/en/ind
ex.html
• 2. Clinical toxicology (Ellenhorn’s Medical Toxicology, 5th Edition).
• 3. Occupational toxicology (A.Wallace Hayes, Principles and Methods of Toxicolog, 3rd Edition;
Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th Edition)
• 4. Environmental toxicology (A.Wallace Hayes, Principles and Methods of Toxicolog, 3rd Edition;
Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th Edition)
• 5. Regulatory toxicology (A.Wallace Hayes, Principles and Methods of Toxicolog, 3rd Edition;
Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th Editiin); http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih/gov/pubmed/11814699
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Quantitative aspects:
Dose-response relationship
• Dose
• Acute/chronic toxicity
• Quantal (all or nothing)
• Graded response
(degree of symptoms
in a single animal)
• Species specific
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