Title: Toxicity
1A Review of Exposure and Toxicity
2The Need for Gloves and Respirators
A Brief Review of Exposure
3 Pesticide Health Hazard
- Pesticide health hazard is determined by the
toxicity of the pesticide and the amount of
exposure to the pesticide - Hazard Exposure x Toxicity
4Exposure
- How Pesticides Enter the Body
54 Routes of Exposure
- Dermal - any covered or uncovered skin
- Eyes direct splash or contact with hands
- Inhalation carried in with air
- Oral taken into mouth or on lips
Skin
Eyes
Nose
Mouth
6Dermal Exposure
- 97 of all pesticide exposures are dermal
- The most common route is through the hands and
forearms -
- Dermatitis is most
- common reported
- symptom associated
- with exposure
7Dermal Exposure Parts of the body absorb
pesticides at different rates
Area Rate forehead 4.2 forearm
1.0 abdomen 2.1 palm 1.3 scrotum
11.8 ball of foot 1.8
Absorption rate compared to forearm (1.0)
8Dermal Exposure
- Formulations vary in their ability to be absorbed
through the skin. Emulsifiable concentrates are
more readily absorbed than other formulations - All formulations can be absorbed in clothing,
thereby becoming a path to skin exposure
9Inhalation Exposure
- Typically occurs when using fine dusts and mists
- Mixing and loading concentrates
- Lung exposure is the fastest way to the
bloodstream
10Oral Exposure
- Poisoning occurs most often when pesticides have
been taken from original container and put in
unlabeled bottle or food container - Children are most common victims
11Oral Route of Exposure
- Splashing during mixing or cleaning
- Siphoning with the mouth
- Eating
- Drinking
- Smoking
- Licking lips
12Eye Exposure
- Absorption through the eyes can be significant
- Serious eye exposure can result from splash,
spill, drift, or rubbing eyes with contaminated
hands or clothing
13Pesticide Exposure
- Avoiding exposure is the key to safe pesticide
use - Proper protective equipment worn correctly helps
avoid exposure
14The Need for Gloves and Respirators
A Brief Review of Toxicity
15 Hazard Toxicity x Exposure
16Types of Toxicity
17Acute Toxicity
- single, short term exposure
- the effects of acute pesticide poisoning usually
occur within minutes or hours after exposure
18Acute Toxicity - Symptoms
- Dermal - skin irritation, itching, reddening
- Oral - nausea, muscle twitching, sweating,
weakness
- Inhalation - burning of throat and lungs,
coughing - Eye - temporary or permanent irritation or
blindness
19Acute Toxicity
- Acute toxicity is expressed as
- Lethal Concentration 50 (LC50)
- Lethal Dose 50 (LD50)
20 Lethal Concentration (LC50)
- The concentration of a chemical in an environment
(generally air or water) which produces death in
50 of an exposed population of test animals in a
specified time frame - mg/L
- Normally expressed as milligrams of substance per
liter of air or water (ppm)
21Lethal Dose (LD50)
- Subject test members to different dosages of the
active ingredient and each of its formulated
products - Amount of a chemical that it takes to kill 50 of
the test population - mg/kg
- Expressed in milligrams of chemical per kilogram
of body weight of the test animal
22Lethal Dose 50
- The less you need to cause a toxic effect the
more toxic the substance is - Thus an LD50 of 25 mg/kg is more toxic than is an
LD50 of 6,000 mg/kg
23Lethal Dose (LD50)
HIGHER LD50
higher toxicity
LOWER LD50
lower toxicity
24Chronic Toxicity
- Potential of a pesticide to cause injury from
repeated or prolonged exposure to small doses of
pesticides. - Delayed - time lapses between exposure and
effects
25Chronic Toxicity
26 Chronic Toxicity Can Cause
- Cancer
- Tumors
- Birth defects
- Impotence
- Infertility or sterility
- Blood Disorders
- Brain damage
- Paralysis
- Emphysema, asthma
- Kidney problems
27REMEMBER
-
- Repeated low-level exposure to chemicals can
increase the possibility of future adverse health
effects
28Toxicity - 4 Categories
29Signal Words
- Warning signs on the label that indicate the
toxicity of the pesticide to both humans and
animals - Signal words measure acute toxicity for skin,
mouth, lung and eye exposure
30Danger / Poison
- The oral LD50 is from a trace amount up to 50
mg/kg of body weight - Label must have the signal word DANGER/PELIGRO
plus the word POISON - Label also must display the skull and crossbones
icon - Human Exposure trace to teaspoon is fatal to
150lb. person
31Danger
-
- Tells nothing about the toxicity of the pesticide
- Indicates that the product has a high potential
to irritate or damage the eyes and skin
32Warning
- The oral LD50 is between 50 and 500 mg/kg of body
weight - Pesticides in this category are classed as
moderately toxic - Human Exposure - two teaspoons is fatal to 150lb.
Person - WARNING/AVISO
33Caution
- All pesticides with an LD50 of greater than 500
mg/kg must display this word on their label - Actually includes two groups of pesticides
those classed by the EPA as Relatively nontoxic
(gt5,000 mg/kg) and those classified as slightly
toxic (500 5,000 mg/kg)
34Where do I find LD50 values?
- On the label? NO
- On the products
- MSDS
35Relative Toxicity
- Are all substances toxic?
- YES!
- All are toxic to some quantifiable degree
- Sugar has an LD50 of 30,000 mg/kg
- 4.5 pounds
- Even water has a recognized LD50 of slightly
greater than 80,000 mg/kg - 1.5 gallons
36 Summary
- You cannot control the toxicity of a pesticide
BUT - You can control your exposure to a pesticide
37Summary
- Toxicity is a given amount.not in control of
applicator - Exposure is determined by applicator therefore,
if exposure is low or zero (0) then health hazard
is also low or zero - Using the equation
- Toxicity x Exposure Hazard
- 90 x 100 (1.0) 90
- 90 x 0.0 (0.0) 0
38Summary
The best way to avoid a pesticide poisoning is to
protect yourself by Reading the label and
Wearing personal protective equipment
39This presentation produced through a grant in
cooperation withThe Pennsylvania State
University Pesticide Education Programby the
Southwestern Pennsylvania Pesticide Educators
Committee