TOXICOLOGY1
TOXICOLOGY1
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  CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION TO
  TOXICOLOGY
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                               Objectives
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                         Outline
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                              Definitions
Toxicology
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                       Definitions cont’d
• Derived from Greek word, toxikon and logos
• Toxicology is the study of the adverse effects of xenobiotics
 It also deals with foods and cosmetics for public consumption both
  in alive or dead victims
 It has many dimension: the social, the moral & legal aspects of
  exposure of populations to chemicals of unknown or uncertain
  hazard
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               Historical Aspects of Toxicology
  In the past it was mainly a practical art utilized by murderers &
   assassins
 In Ancient time (1500 BC) earliest collection of medical records
  contains many references and guidelines about poisons
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            Historical aspects of toxicology cont’d
 Paracelsus (1493 AD), summarized his concept in the following
  famous phrase ;
 “All substances are poisons; there is none that is not a poison. The
  right dose differentiates a poison from a remedy”
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            Historical aspects of toxicology cont’d
 The 20th century- toxicology has now become much more than the
  use of poisons
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              Toxicological terms and definitions
 Toxin- a poison of natural (biological) origin
Acute poisoning
   – is caused by an excessive single dose, or several dose of
      a poison taken over a short interval of time.
   e.g. Strychnine, potassium cyanide
Chronic Poisoning
   – is caused by smaller doses over a period of time, resulting in
      gradual worsening
 e.g. arsenic, phosphorus, antimony and opium
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          Toxicological terms and definitions cont’d
Sub acute poisoning
   – shows features of both acute and chronic poisoning
Fulminant poisoning
   – is produced by a massive dose
   – in this death occur rapidly, sometimes without preceding
     symptoms
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                            Classification
Toxicology is broadly divided into different classes
Depending on:
 Research methodology
 Socio-medical
 Organ/specific effects
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                       Classification cont’d
I.   Based on research methodology
Descriptive toxicology
  –     Descriptive toxicology deals with toxicity tests on chemicals
        exposed to human beings and environment as a whole
Mechanistic toxicology
  – Mechanistic toxicology this deals with the mechanism of toxic
    effects of chemicals on living organisms
  – This is important for rational treatment
  – Facilitation of search for safer drugs (e.g. Instead of
    organophosphates, drugs which reversibly bind to cholinesterase
    would be preferable in therapeutics
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                         Classification cont’d
Regulatory toxicology :
 studies whether the chemical substances has low risk to be used in
  living systems, Examples:
 encompasses     the    collection,   processing   and    evaluation        of
epidemiological   and     experimental    toxicology     data   to   permit
toxicologically based decisions
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                        Classification cont’d
 Occupational safety and health administration regulates the safe
  conditions for employees in USA authority
Predictive toxicology
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                       Classification cont’d
II. Based on specific socio-medical issues
Occupational toxicology
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                   Classification cont’d
Environmental toxicology
Ecotoxicology
Forensic toxicology
   – Forensic toxicology closely related to clinical toxicology
   – It deals with the medical and legal aspects of the harmful effects
     of chemicals on man, often in post mortem material, for instance,
     where there is a suspicion of murder, attempted murder or suicide
     by poisoning
Animal and plant toxicology
  –     deals with the diagnosis and treatment of harmful effects of
        animals and plants
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                        Classification cont’d
– Cardiovascular toxicology
– Renal toxicology
– Gastrointestinal toxicology
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                     Principles of toxicology
Paracelsus (1493-1541) once said
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  “All things are poison and nothing is without poison, only the
           dose permits something not to be poisonous
                 The dose makes the poison”
therapeutic                                             toxic
   effect              increasing dose                  effect
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            Principles of toxicology cont’d
• There are a number of assumptions that should be
  considered before D- R r/n ships are used
  appropriately
   o The response is due the chemical administered
   o The magnitude of the response is related to dose
     -There is a molecular target site(s) with which the
       chemical interacts to initiate the response
     -The production of a response and the degree of response
       are related to the concentration of the chemical at the
       target site
     -The concentration at the target site is related to the dose
       administered
  o There exists both a quantifiable method of
    measuring and a precise means of expressing the
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Principles of toxicology cont’d
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                Principles of toxicology cont’d
Thresholds
 An important concept pertinent to the dose–response relationship is
  that of threshold dose, below which there is no response
 Threshold doses apply especially to acute effects and are very hard
  to determine, despite their crucial importance in determining safe
  levels of exposures to chemicals
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                    Nature of toxic responses
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                 Nature of toxic responses cont’d
RELATIVE TOXICITIES
(supertoxic)
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 Parameters
 Median lethal dose (LD50) – is the dose which is expected
  to kill 50% of the population in the particular group.
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 Median toxic dose (TD50) – is the dose which is expected to
  bring toxic effect in 50% of the population in the particular group
       • TI = LD50 (or TD50)/ED50
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                Nature of toxic responses cont’d
REVERSIBILITY AND SENSITIVITY
a) Reversibility Vs. Irreversible
 Sub lethal doses of most toxic substances are eventually eliminated
   from an organ system. If there is no lasting effect from the exposure,
   it is said to be reversible
 However, if the effect is permanent, it is termed irreversible
 For various chemicals and different subjects, toxic effects may range
  from the totally reversible to the totally irreversible
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               Nature of toxic responses cont’d
extreme reaction to it
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                       Routes of poisoning
 Oral route – the GIT is the most important route of absorption, as
  most acute poisonings involve ingestions
 Intravenous route – is the most reliable and provides the most rapid
  clinical response
 Oral (commonest)
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                    Potential causes of toxicity
The potential causes of toxicities include:
 Therapeutic agents
 Environmental contaminants
 Drugs of abuse
 Food preservatives
 Traditional drugs
 Fumes …..
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                        Sources of Poison
 Domestic or household sources
 Industrial sources
 Commercial sources
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                     Sources of Poison cont’d
 Domestic or household sources - detergents, disinfectants, cleaning
  selling shops                                                     40
                    Sources of Poison cont’d
and drink
 Irritant poisons
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    Factors influencing toxicity
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                  Factors influencing toxicity
1. Quantity:
 A high dose of poison acts quickly and often resulting in  fatal
  consequences.
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               Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
3. Chemical form:
 But white arsenic (arsenic oxide) and mercuric chloride are deadly
poisonous
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              Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
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              Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
5. Condition of the stomach:
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               Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
6. Route of administration:
 Opium and its alkaloids are tolerated better by elderly subjects but
  badly by children and infants.
 A well built person with good health can tolerate the action of poison
  better than a weak person.
9. Presence of disease:
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               Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
 In certain poisoning cases some drugs are well tolerated, like, in case
  of strychnine poisoning, barbiturates and sedatives are better
  tolerated.
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               Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
11. Sleep
 But depressant drugs may cause, more harm during the state of sleep.
12. Exercise
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             Factors influencing toxicity cont’d
 But when such poisons enter over a long period of time, may cause
  harm when their concentration in different tissue reaches high level
  due to their cumulative property
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  GENERAL MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Initial Approach to the Poisoned Patient
 Focus on six major areas:
     o Resuscitation and stabilization
     o History and physical examination, including evaluation
       for a specific toxidrome
     o Appropriate decontamination of the gastrointestinal
       tract, skin, and eyes
     o Judicious use of laboratory tests, electrocardiograms,
       and radiographic studies
     o Administration of specific antidotes, if indicated
     o Utilization of enhanced elimination techniques for
       selected toxins
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   Resuscitation and Stabilization
 The first priorities in the management of seriously
  poisoned patients are the same as with all patients
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• Neurologic manifestation of toxins:
  – Agitation & delirium, sedation & coma, seizures,
    pupils size (miosis, mydriais), Nystagmus,
    Movement Disorders(Toxin-induced
    parkinsonism)
•   Sympathomimetic Syndrome
    – hypertension, diaphoresis, tachycardia, tachypnea,
      hyperthermia, and mydriasis
    – Restlessness, agitation, excessive speech, tremors,
      and insomnia also occur
• Opioid Syndrome
  – mental status depression, respiratory depression, and
    pinpoint pupils, Bradycardia, hypotension (rare),
    hypothermia, hyporeflexia, and needle marks
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• Anticholinesterase Syndrome
   – Organophosphates are commonly available as
     insecticides
   – DUMBELS is a mnemonic used: defecation,
     urination, miosis, bronchorrhea, bronchospasm,
     bradycardia, emesis, lacrimation, and salivation.
   – Clinical findings suggestive of acute
     anticholinesterase intoxication.
•   Sedative-Hypnotic Syndrome
    – Hypotension, bradypnea, hypothermia, mental status
      depression, slurred speech, ataxia, and hyporeflexia
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    Gastrointestinal Decontamination
 Preventing drug absorption
 To decontaminate the entire GI tract not just the
  stomach while reducing the risk of iatrogenic harm
 Common Methods of Gastrointestinal (GI)
  Decontamination
    Activated charcoal
    Gastric lavage
    Syrup of ipecac
    Cathartics, e.g. Sorbitol, Magnesium sulfate/citrate
    Whole bowel irrigation
       for patients who have ingested iron, other metals
        and radiopaque material, and substances not
        adsorbed to charcoal or for body packers or body
        stuffers                                          65
Extracorporeal Removal of Drugs and Toxins
• Are principles and techniques applied to enhance
  elimination of toxins from the blood
    Common                Uncommon
    Barbiturates           Aminoglycosides
•   Ethylene glycol       Atenolol
•   Lithium                Boric acid
•   Methanol              Bromide
•   Salicylates            Carbamazepine
•   Theophylline          Chloral hydrate (trichloroethanol)
                      Diethylene glycol
                      Ethanol Isopropanol
                      Magnesium
                      Metformin
                      Methotrexate (high flux)
                      Paraquat (very early)
                      Procainamide/N-acetylprocainamide
                      Sotalol Thallium Valproic acid
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               DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
• Serum concentrations of specific drugs are useful in guiding
  management
   – Acetaminophen, theophylline, lithium, salicylates, digoxin
• Other tests:
  – such as serum electrolytes, calculated anion gap,
    glucose, arterial blood gases, serum creatinine, and liver
    function tests, can assist in the indirect evaluation of the
    end organ effects of a toxin
• Know that
  – The majority of toxicological diagnoses and
    therapeutic decisions are made on a clinical
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    Situations in which qualitative toxicology
           tests or screens have utility
• When the differential diagnosis is sufficiently narrowed to
  a drug cause vs. a disease cause (e.g., psychosis—
  functional vs. amphetamines)
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                Role: Toxicology Lab
• The most important role for the toxicology laboratory to
  be the quantitation of drug concentrations to determine
  the need for dangerous or expensive treatment
• Therapeutic Drug monitoring
   – For instance,
      • Drugs that require:
          – hemoperfusion (e.g., theophylline,
            phenobarbital)
          – hemodialysis (e.g., salicylate, methanol,
            lithium) to avoid life-threatening concentrations
      • To shorten coma, and to evaluate the efficacy of
        extracorporeal elimination
      • When deciding to treat a digoxin overdose with
        Fab fragments (Digibind) and for the appropriate
        use of chelators in metal poisoning                  71
Serum quantitation of overdosed drugs: TDM
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Assay methods…
• The techniques for detecting the presence
  of drugs include
  – a variety of chromatographic methods,
   immunoassays, and chemical and
   spectrometric techniques
    • can be adapted to detect a wide number of drugs
      and chemicals, or focused to detect and quantitate
      certain drugs
  – Immunoassays are most widely used for
   discrete analysis, and gas chromatographic
   techniques are used for broad screens
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         Serum conc…..cont’d
• Availability and Reliability
   – Measurements should be available on an immediate,
     24-hour basis and should be precise (not
     semiquantitative)
   – Increasing use of quantitative IAs on rapid chemistry
     analyzers
   – Serum quantitations require adequate precision to
     recognize change from time point to time point and
     should also be accurate so that management
     decisions can be made correctly
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    Consideration in serum measurement
• Serum drug quantitation's must be evaluated
  with respect to each patient’s clinical condition
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             References and Suggested Reading
 Phillip L. Williams, Robert C.James, and,Stephen M.
  Roberts,eds.,Principles of toxicology: environmental and industrial
  applications, 2nd ed ., A Wiley-Interscience,New York, 2000.
 Ballantyne, B., T. C. Marrs, and P. Turner. “Fundamentals of toxicology,”
  in General and Applied Toxicology, B.Ballantyne, T. Marrs, and P. Turner,
  eds., M. Stockton Press, New York, 1993, pp. 3–38.
 Eaton, D. L., and C. D. Klassen, "Principles of toxicology," in Casarett and
  Doull’s Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons, 5th ed., C. D. Klassen,
  ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 1996, pp 13–34.
 Gallo, M. A., “History and scope of toxicology,” in Casarett and Doull’s
  Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons,5th ed., C. D. Klassen, ed.,
  McGraw-Hill, New York, 1996, pp. 3–12.
 Musch, A., “Exposure: Qualitative and quantitative aspects,” in
  Toxicology: Principles and Applications, R. J. M.Niesink, J. deVries, and
   M. A. Hollinger, eds., CRC Press, New York, 1996, pp. 16–39.
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                       Quiz
1. List four factors that influence toxicity (2pt)
2. Write the initial approaches for a poisoned
   individual (2pt)
3. Which chromatographic technique(method) has the
   highest resolution power (1pt)
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