Title: Chapter 11: Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
1Chapter 11 Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
2What is Risk?
- Risk - the possibility of suffering harm from a
hazard that can cause injury, disease, economic
loss, or environmental change - Expressed in terms of probability a mathematical
statement about how likely it is that some event
or effect will occur. - Risk Exposure x Harm
3How Are Risks Assessed and Managed?
- Risk Assessment
- Identifying a real or potential hazard
- Determining the probability of its occurrence
- Assessing the severity of its health,
environmental, economic, and social impact - Risk Management
- How serious it is compared to other risks?
- How much (if at all) the risk should be reduced?
- How can such risk reduction be accomplished?
- How much money should be spent?
- RM More controversial because there is a lack of
information and there can be economic, health,
and political implications
4What Are the Major Types of Hazard?
- Cultural Hazards
- Chemical Hazards
- Physical Hazards
- Biological Hazards
5Toxicity Dose and Response
- Toxicity - measures how harmful a substance is
- Dose - the amount of a potentially harmful
substance that has been ingested, inhaled, or
absorbed through the skin - Whether a chemical is harmful depends on
- The size of the dose over a certain period of
time - How often the exposure occurs
- Who is exposed
- How well the bodys detoxification system works
- Genetic make-up of an individual
6Other Factors That Determine a Substances Harm
- Solubility - water-soluble toxins can move
through the environment and get into the water
supplies fat-soluble toxins can accumulate in
the body tissues and cells - Persistence - the chemicals resistance to
breakdown and its long-lasting effects
7Bioaccumulation, Biomagnification, and Chemical
Interactions
- Bioaccumulation - where molecules are absorbed
and stored in specific organs or tissues at
higher levels than normally would be expected. - Biomagnification - where some toxins are
magnified as they pass through food chains and
webs - Chemical interactions - decrease or multiply the
harmful effects of a toxin - Antagonistic Interaction - can reduce the harmful
effects - Synergistic Interaction - can multiply the
harmful effects
8Response
- Response - the type and amount of health damage
that results from exposure to a chemical or other
agent. - Acute Effect - an immediate or rapid, harmful
reaction to an exposure - Chronic Effect - a permanent or long-lasting
consequence of exposure to a harmful substance
9Should We Be Concerned About Toxic Chemicals?
- It depends on the chemical and its concentration
- ANYTHING can be harmful if ingested in a large
quantity - Most chemicals have a safe, threshold level
- The human body can break down, dilute, and
excrete - Enzymes can repair DNA and protein molecules
- Cells reproduce quickly
- Synthetic does not mean deadly and natural does
not mean safe
10What is Poison?
- Poison - a chemical that has an LD50 of 50 mg or
less per kg of body weight - Median Lethal Dose - LD50 - the amount of a
chemical received in one dose that kills exactly
50 of the animals in a test population (usually
within a 14-day period)
11Case Reports
- Case Reports - provide information about people
suffering from some adverse health effect or
death after exposure to a chemical - Not reliable as the actual dosage and the
persons health status are not known - Could include accidental poisonings, drug
overdoses, homicides, or suicide attempts
12Epidemiological Studies
- Epidemiological Studies - the health of people
exposed to the toxic agent are compared to the
health of the people not exposed to the agent - Limited
- too few people are exposed to high levels of many
toxic substances - it is difficult to link effect to a particular
exposure - cant be used to evaluate hazards from new
technologies or chemicals to which people have
not been exposed.
13Laboratory Experiments
- Use test animals under controlled conditions --
good because it mimic biological interactions
that happen in live animals - More humane methods include
- Bacteria
- Cell and tissue cultures
- Chicken egg membranes
14Dose Response Curves
- Shows the effect of various dosages of a toxic
agent on a group of test organisms - Controlled by keeping organisms at the same age,
health status, genetic make-up, and same
environmental conditions - Non-threshold Dose-Response Model - any dosage of
a toxic chemical that causes harm that increases
with the dosage - Threshold Dose-Response Model - a threshold
dosage must be reached before any detectable
harmful effects occur
15Toxic and Hazardous Chemicals
- Toxic Chemicals - fatal to more than 50 of test
animals - Hazardous Chemicals - cause harm
- by being flammable or explosive, irritating, or
damaging to the skin - interfering with or preventing oxygen uptake and
distribution - inducing allergic reactions
16Mutagens
- Mutagens - agents that cause random mutations, or
changes, in the DNA molecules found in cells - Some are inherited, some are not
- More mutations are harmless as organisms have
biochemical repair mechanisms
17Teratogens
- Teratogens - chemicals, radiation, or viruses
that cause birth defects while the human embryo
is growing and developing during pregnancy - PCBs
- Thalidomide
- Steroid Hormones
- Heavy Metals - arsenic, cadmium, lead, and
mercury
18Carcinogens
- Chemicals, radiation, or viruses that cause or
promote the growth of a malignant tumor - Smoke
- Diet
- Occupational exposure
- Environmental pollutants
- Inherited factors and viruses (20)
- Time Delay - often 10 - 40 years between the
initial exposure and the appearance of any
symptoms
19Chemicals and the Immune System
- Examples of chemicals/situations that weaken the
immune system - HIV
- Ionizing radiation
- Malnutrition
- Weakening the immune system leaves the body
vulnerable to - Allergens
- Infectious bacteria
- Viruses
- Protozoans
20Chemicals and the Nervous System
- Certain neurotoxins can attack nerve cells
- Chlorinated hyrdocarbons - DDT, PCBs, dioxins
- Organophosphate pesticides
- Formaldehyde
- Arsenic, merculry, lead, cadmium
- Industrial solvents - tricholorethylene (TCE),
toluene, xylene
21Chemicals and the Endocrine System
- Toxins can effect
- Sexual reproduction
- Growth
- Development and behavior
- Hormonally Active Agents - mimic and disrupt the
effects of natural hormones
22Why Do We Know So Little About the Harmful
Effects of Chemicals?
- Only 10 of 75,000 have been thoroughly screened
for toxicity 2 adequately screened - Most commercial products have not been screened
and 1,000 new chemicals are introduced to the
marketplace every year. - Three major reasons for a lack of knowledge
- Most chemicals are considered innocent until
proven guilty - Not enough funds, personnel, facilities, and test
animals - Analyzing the effects of multiple exposures to
various chemicals and their possible interactions
is too difficult and expensive
23Should We Apply the Precautionary Principle?
- Would reduce the need for toxicity studies and
exposure standards. - Would reduce the risk posed by exposure to
potentially hazardous chemicals and their poorly
understood interactions
24Nontransmissible Disease
- Diseases not caused by a living organism
- Does not spread from one person to the next
- Has multiple causes
- Tend to develop slowly and progressively
- CV diseases
- Most cancers
- Diabetes
- Asthma
- Emphysema
- Malnutrition
25Transmissible Diseases
- Diseases caused by a living organism or a virus
(pathogens) - Can be spread from one person to the next
- Spread by food, water, body fluids, some insects,
and non-human carriers called vectors - Bacterium - one celled microorganisms that are
capable of replicating itself by cell division - Can use antibiotics to treat they have reduced
the incidence of disease, but they have also been
misused and bacteria have increaed their genetic
resistance - Virus - a microscopic, noncellular infectious
agent DNA or RNA contains instructions for
making more viruses
26Infectious Diseases
- Cause 1 in 4 deaths each year
- Worlds Deadliest
- Acute respiratory infections - flu, pneumonia
- AIDs
- Diarrheal Diseases
- Tuberculosis - TB
- Malaria
- Hepatitis B
- Measles
- Epidemiological Transition - when countries
industrialize and the infectious diseases of
childhood become less important and the chronic
diseases become more important
27Spreading of Viral Diseases and How Viral
Diseases Are Treated
- Can adapt quickly - new flu viruses
- Transmitted through sex
- 23 of the American Population has an STD
- AIDS situation
- 40 million people worldwide have AIDs
- 15,300 new infections a day
- In sub-Saharan Africa - 20 or more of adults are
infected with HIV within 7-10 years, those with
HIV will develop AIDS - 39 of Botswana adults have AIDS - their life
expectancy has dropped 30 years - Treating Viral Diseases
- No antibiotics
- Vaccines
28Spreading of Viral Diseases
- o Increased international air travel
- o Migration to urban areas
- o Migration to uninhabited rural areas and
deforestation in tropical developing countries -
exposes people to new diseases - o Migration to suburbs in developed countries -
more contact with forested areas - o Hunger and malnutrition increases the number
of children killed by infectious diseases
29Spreading of Viral Diseases Continued
- o Increased rice cultivation ideal breeding
grounds for mosquitos and other insects that
transmit diseases to humans - o Global warming leads to the spread of
diseases - o High winds or hurricanes can transfer
organisms and carriers of disease - o Accidental Introduction of Insect Vectors
- o Deliberate introduction of pathogens as an act
of bioterrorism - o Flooding - contaminates water supplies
creates areas of standing water and moist soil
which are breeding grounds for mosquitoes and
other insects
30Reducing Infectious Diseases
- o Increase research on tropical diseases and
vaccines - o Reduce poverty
- o Decrease malnutrition
- o Improve drinking water quality
- o Reduce unnecessary use of antibiotics
- o Educate people to take all of an antibiotic
prescription - o Reduce antibiotic use to promote livestock
growth - o Careful hand washing by all medical personnel
- o Slow global warming to reduce the spread of
tropical diseases - o Increase preventative health care
31How Can We Estimate Risks?
- Risk Analysis
- Risk Assessment - identifying hazards and
evaluating their associated risks - Comparative Risk Analysis - ranking risks
- Risk Management - determining options and making
decisions - Risk Communication - informing decision makers
and the public about risks. - Risks determined by scientists are different than
those determined by the public
32What Are The Greatest Risks People Face?
- o Poverty
- o Voluntary choices people make about their
lifestyle - o Not to smoke
- o Avoid excess sunlight
- o Not drink alcohol or drink in moderation
- o Reduce consumption of foods containing
cholesterol and saturated fats - o Eating fruits and vegetables
- o Exercising
- o Lose excess weight
- o Drive safely
- o Cannot control
- o Gender
- o Genes
- o Social and psychological environment
33How Can We Estimate Risks for Technological
Systems
- System reliability () technological
reliability x human reliability - Creates tragedies
- To err is human -- all technologies rely on
humans
34What are the Limitations of Risk Analysis?
- o Are data and models reliable?
- o Who profits and who suffers from chemicals?
- o Should we care more about short-term or
long-term risks? - o Should we determine acceptability or how to do
the least damage? - o Who should do the risk analysis?
- o Should various risks be considered?
- o How widespread is each risk?
- o Should risk levels be higher for workers than
for the general public? - o How much risk is acceptable? And to whom?
35How Should Risks Be Managed? How Do We Perceive
Risks?
- Includes the administrative, political, and
economic actions taken to decide whether and how
to reduce a particular societal risk to a certain
level at a certain cost - How Well Do We Perceive Risks?
- Motorcycling, smoking, hang gliding, driving
- Commercial airplane crash, killed by a handgun,
being struck by lightening, a train crash, a
snakebite, shark attack