Title: An Introduction to the Principles of Toxicology
1An Introduction to the Principles of Toxicology
A Small Dose of Toxicology
Introduction to the Health Effects of
Chemicals BIS 411 Jan 9, 2006
Steven G. Gilbert, PhD, DABT www.asmalldoseof.org
2Child Health
3Toxicology Definitions
The study of poisons or the adverse effects of
chemical and physical agents on living organisms.
4Ancient Awareness
399 BC Death of Socrates by Hemlock Socrates was
charged with religious heresy and corrupting the
morals of local youth. The active chemical used
was the alkaloid coniine which, when ingested
causes paralysis, convulsions and potentially
death.
5Historical Awareness
From Romeo and Juliet - act 5 Come bitter pilot,
now at once run on The dashing rocks thy seasick
weary bark! Heres to my love! O true
apothecary! Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a
kiss I die. Shakespeare
6Environmental Human Health
Conditions that ensure that all living things
have the best opportunity to reach and maintain
their full genetic potential. Steven G.
Gilbert, 1999
7What do these have in common?
- Hong Kong
- Princess Diana
- Ambassador to Mexico
- Coeur dAlene, Silver Valley, ID
- Tacoma
- Seattle Schools
- 100 Billion, 65 Billion
- Food, noise, dust
- 11,000 to 689,000 Children
8Who are these white guys?
9Power To Discover The Truth
It is not the truth that makes you free. It is
your possession of the power to discover the
truth. Our dilemma is that we do not know how to
provide that power. Richard Lewontin (New York
Review of Books, Jan 7, 1997)
10What Is This?
O
CH3
CH3
N
N
7
1
3
N
O
N
CH3
11Key Words
Dose / Response
Individual Sensitivity
12Paracelsus
All substances are poisons there is none which
is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a
poison from a remedy. Paracelsus (1493-1541)
13An Individual View
The sensitivity of the individual differentiates
a poison from a remedy. The fundamental principle
of toxicology is the individuals response to a
dose. S. G. Gilbert (1997)
14Superman
15Neuron
16Thalidomide
- Introduced in 1956 as sedative (sleeping pill)
and to reduce nausea and vomiting during
pregnancy - Withdrawn in 1961
- Discovered to be a human teratogen causing
absence of limbs or limb malformations in
newborns - 5000 to 7000 infants effected
- Resulted in new drug testing rules
17What Is This?
(CH3-CH2-OH)
18Effects of Prenatal Alcohol
19FAS Child
20Mouse Scanning EM
21Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)
Most common preventable cause of adverse CNS
development 4,000-12,000 infants per year in
US Characteristics Growth retardation Facial
malformations Small head Greatly reduce
intelligence
22Fetal Alcohol Effect (FAE)
Milder form of FAS 7,000-36,000 infants per year
in US 1 to 3 infants per 1,000 world
wide?? Characteristics Growth deficiency Learning
dysfunction Nervous systems disabilities
23A Small Dose of Lead
24Lead In Homes
25Lead History
Lead Makes the Mind Give Way
26Lead in Families
27Recycling Lead
28Agency Blood Lead Levels
29A Small Dose of Mercury
30Polluting with HG
Discharge in Minamata Bay
31Fetal Effects of MeHg
32Life-Long Effects of MeHg
33Structure of PBDEs
PolyBrominated Diphenyl Ether
X Y are number of Bromine atoms Common Penta,
Octa, and Deca
34PBDEs in House Dust (ppb)
From EWG - Toxic Fire Retardants Contaminate
American Homes - http//www.ewg.org/reports/inthed
ust/summary.php
35PBDEs in Breast Milk (ppb)
From EWG - Toxic Fire Retardants in Breast Milk
from American Mothers - http//www.ewg.org/reports
/mothersmilk/es.php
36Key Words
Dose / Response
Individual Sensitivity
37Effects of Amount on Response
38Effects of Size on Response
39Glasses of Wine - Dose Response
All Effected
100
75
Difficulty Walking
50
Amount half are effected
25
NO Effect
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Glasses of Wine
40Dose Response Function
All Effected
100
75
Response
50
Half Effected
25
NO Effect
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Dose (mg/kg body weight)
Increasing dose
41Agent LD-50 (mg/kg)
Ethyl alcohol 10,000 Salt (sodium
chloride) 4,000 Iron (Ferrous sulfate) 1,500 Mor
phine 900 Mothballs 500
(paradichlorobenzene) Aspirin 250 DDT 250
Cyanide 10 Nicotine 1 Tetrodotoxin (from
fish) 0.01 Dioxin (TCDD) 0.001 Botulinum
Toxin 0.00001 Bee Venom ??
42Exposure Absorption
Route of exposure
1) Skin (dermal) 2) Lung (inhalation)
3) Oral (gut)
43Frequency Of Exposure
Number of Times
Time Between
4 Beers in an hour or 4 Beers in 4 Days
44Duration Of Exposure
Acute Exposure
Sub-chronic Exposure
Chronic Exposure
45Distribution
Where It Goes
(body water, fat, bone)
Where It Accumulates
46Metabolism
How The Body Breaks It Down
What It Turns Into
How Fast It Does It
47Caffeine - 1,3,7 Trimethylxanthine
O
CH3
CH3
N
N
7
1
3
N
O
N
CH3
48Half-life
How Long It Takes To Go
14
12
10
8
Concentration (µg/ml)
6
4
2
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Time (hrs)
49Susceptibility Variability
- Young or Old
- Male or Female
- Individual Variability
- Genetics Differences
- Species Differences
50Risk Assessment
Process of estimating association between an
exposure and the incidence of some adverse outcome
51Risk Management
Policy developed to deal with hazards identified
through risk assessment Process of evaluating
alternative regulatory options and selecting
among them
52Asthma Diabetes
53Overweight Obese
54The Potential of Children
55Principles of Toxicology
56Additional Information
- A Small Dose of Toxicology
- www.asmalldoseof.org
57Authorship Information
This presentation is supplement to A Small
Dose of Toxicology
For Additional Information Contact Steven G.
Gilbert, PhD, DABT E-mail smdose_at_asmalldoseof.org
Web www.asmalldoseof.org