Title: Laymans Toxicology
1Laymans Toxicology
- An Overview of Toxicology
- for
- Pesticide Applicators
- Developed by Don Mullins and Pat Hipkins
- Department of Entomology / Virginia Tech
Pesticide Programs - 1997
Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education
Curriculum Office July, 2002
2TOXIC
- Poisonous.
- Harmful to living things.
3TOXICITY
- The quality of being
- poisonous
- having harmful effects.
4Definitions
- Toxicant
- a toxic substance
- Hazard
- the inherent toxicity of a substance, based on
appropriate animal models or information from
human studies
5Definitions (continued)
- Toxication (intoxication)
- a product more toxic than the original compound
- Activation
- a specific reaction (enzymatic) that produces a
more toxic compound - Detoxification
- deactivation of a toxic compound
6Routes of Entry
- Oral Ingestion by mouth
- Dermal Skin exposure
- Inhalation Absorbed by lungs
- Ocular Eye exposure
7Dermal Exposure Variables
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, which is 1.0
mjweaver,1997
8Toxic effects may occur
- during or soon after exposure (acute),
- and
- after repeated exposures over a long time
(chronic). - In addition, some people may be especially
sensitive (allergic) to a substance.
9Acute Toxicity
10Chronic Toxicity
11Definitions Chronic Effects
- Carcinogens
- Cause cancer
- Mutagens
- Cause mutations in an organisms genetic material
- Teratogens
- cause birth defects in offspring following
exposure of a pregnant female
12Toxicity Measure LD50
- The LD50 is the dose of toxin
- that produces 50 mortality
- in a test population.
- LD50 is usually expressed
- in milligrams of toxin
- per kilogram of test animal body weight (mg/kg).
13LD50 Value and Toxic Effect
- The more toxic a material is, the less it takes
to kill or produce a harmful effect...
14LD50 Value and Toxic Effect
- ...therefore,
- - the lower the LD50 value, the more toxic the
substance, and - - the higher the LD50 value, the less toxic the
substance.
15Toxicity Comparisons
Acute toxicity measurements
Acute oral and/or
LD
Lethal dose
Acute dermal
50
(in mg / kg)
in parts per million
( ppm )
Methoxychlor 6000 Malathion
1500 --- DDT 250 Lindane
125 Dieldrin 100 ------------- Parathion
3 --------------
15 x
33 x
16Toxicity Comparisons (cont.)
- Acute toxicity measurements
- acute inhalation ( lethal concentration )
- LC 50 mg / liter
-
17Toxicity Measures and Lethal Dose
- Oral LD50 Lethal Dose
- (mg toxin/kg body weight) (for an average
adult) - 0 - 5 a drop or a pinch
- 5 - 50 a few drops to 1 teaspoon
- 50 - 500 1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon
- 500 - 5,000 1 ounce to 1 pint
- 5,000 - 15,000 1 pint to 1 quart
- gt 15,000 gt 1 quart
18Toxicity Information and Clues
- Concentration of Active Ingredient in Product
- Restricted Use (reason?) vs. General Use
- PPE Requirements, Re-Entry Interval (REI), and
other label Precautions and Instructions - Label Signal Word
- MSDS for Product
19Toxicity Measures and Signal Word
- Acute Oral LD50 Signal Word
- 0 - 50 DANGER/POISON N (skull and
crossbones) - DANGER
- 50 - 500 WARNING
- 500 - 5,000 CAUTION
- gt 5,000 CAUTION
20Label Signal Word and Hazard
- Signal Word Toxicity Hazard
- Danger/Poison N high toxicity
- Danger high toxicity
- (by some entry route and/or
- to some organisms)
- Warning moderate toxicity
- Caution low toxicity
21Sample Oral Toxicity Valuesfor Commonly-Used
Insecticides
- Pesticide (Product) Acute Oral LD50
- (mg/kg - male rat)
- acephate (Orthene) 945
- carbaryl (Sevin) 850
- chlorpyrifos (Dursban, Lorsban) 135 - 163
- diazinon (DZN Diazinon) 300 - 400
- malathion (various) 1,378 - 2,800
- methyl parathion (Penncap-M) 14 - 24
- parathion (Parathion) 3.6 - 13
- terbufos (Counter) 1.6
- The Agrochemical Handbook, Royal Society of
Chemistry (1991)
22Sample Oral Toxicity Valuesfor
Botanical-Derivative Insecticides
- Active Ingredient Acute Oral LD50
- (mg/kg - rat)
- azadirachtin (neem) 5,000
- nicotine 50 - 60
- pyrethrum 584 - 900
- synthetic pyrethroids 22 - 5,000
- rotenone 39 - 1,500
- ryania 1,200
- The Agrochemical Handbook, Royal Society of
Chemistry (1991) and - Agricultural Chemicals Book I Insecticides
(1994-95)
23Sample Oral Toxicity Valuesfor Commonly-Used
Herbicides, etc.
- Pesticide (Product) Acute Oral LD50
- (mg/kg - male rat)
- acetylsalicylic acid (asprin) 50-500
- caffeine (coffee, tea, some sodas) 50 - 500
- 2,4-D (various) 666 - 805 (salt) 700 (ester)
- dicamba (Banvel, Vanquish) 2,629 - 6,764 (salts)
- glyphosate (Accord, RoundUp) 4,045 (salt)
- imazapyr (Arsenal) gt5,000
- nicotine (tobacco products) 0.5 - 1.0
- sodium chloride (table salt) 430 - 3,750
- triclopyr (Garlon) 713
- The Agrochemical Handbook, Royal Society of
Chemistry (1991) - Clinical Toxicology of Commercial Products (1984)
24RISK FACTORS
- 1. Toxicity of the Formulated Product.
- 2. Other Physical and Chemical Characteristics
- (ex. liquid vs. dry formulation).
- 3. Amount of Handling Required.
- 4. Method of Exposure(s) / Route of Entry.
- 5. Frequency and Duration of Exposure(s).
25Special Risk Factors for Children
- lower body weight
- greater surface area
- high metabolism
- habits
- diet
26Surface Area Volume Ratio
- edge (in) surface area (in2) volume (in3) RATIO
- 2 24 8 3 1
- 4 96 64 1.5 1
- 6 216 216 1 1
- 8 384 512 1 1.3
- 10 600 1,000 1 1.7
- 12 864 1,728 1 2
27Surface Area Volume
children
28RISK MANAGEMENT
29REDUCE TOXICITY
- Reduced Use
- Product Selection
30REDUCE EXPOSURE
- Engineering Controls
- Safe Work Habits
- PPE Use
31Units of Measurement
- parts per million milligrams per kilogram ( mg
/ kg ) - 1 oz of sand in 31 tons of cement
- 1 square foot in 23 acres
- 1 minute in 695 days
- parts per billion micrograms per kilogram (m g
/ kg ) - 1 square foot in 36 square miles
- 1 pinch of salt in 10 tons of potato
chips - 1 inch in a 160,000 mile trip
- parts per trillion nanograms per kilogram ( ng
/ kg ) - 1 square inch in 250 square miles
- 1 second in 320 centuries or 11,574,074 days
- 1 postage stamp in an area the size of
Texas
32Synergist / Synergism
Synergism is increased activity (toxicity)
resulting from the effect of one chemical on
another.
LD50 DDT 250 mg/kg LD50 synergist 1,000
mg/kg LD50 DDT synergist 50 mg/kg