Principles of toxicology 1 Flashcards

0
Q

what is a xenobiotic ?

A

a chemical that is foreign to life

  • any chemical that is not part of the metabolic processes that maintain life
  • includes both toxicants and toxins
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1
Q

what is a toxicant ?

A

man made/ synthetic chemical that has the potential to cause harm

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2
Q

what is the most common relationship between exposure and response to chemicals ?

A

most produce a hyperbola

the range of exposure is generally very large

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3
Q

what does response mean in the response exposure relationship ?

A

it is a measure of organisms in a sample that show a toxic effect

  • show signs of toxicity and it is expressed as a percentage
  • it is a quantal response in which it is an all or nothing response - either toxic effects are shown or not
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4
Q

what do toxicologists do to the response exposure graph ?

A

they produce a log to the base 10 of exposure to prevent data clumping together
- transforms graph into distinct regions= threshold region, linear region and plateau region to the maximum response

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5
Q

what is the threshold region ?

A

it is the first points at which a response is detected

- it is these organisms which are the most vulnerable

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6
Q

what is the TD 50 ?

A

its used to determine the median toxic dose

- it is the level of exposure that produces the toxic effects in 50% of the population

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7
Q

what is the LD50 ?

A

it is the median lethal dose

-the dose at which is lethal to 50% of the population

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8
Q

how is potency calculated using the log10 exposure response graphs ?

A

the toxin furthest to the left is the most potent- it has the smallest TD50 so it is the most potent
if the TD50s of different chemicals are divided by each other, their relative potencies can be determined

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9
Q

what does NOAEL stand for ?

A

No Observed Adverse Effect Level

- it is the highest level of exposure that does not produce any adverse effects

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10
Q

what does LOAEL stand for ?

A

Lowest Observed Adverse Effect Level

  • lowest level of exposure thats produces a significant level of toxicity
  • greater than this there is increasing toxicity
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11
Q

what does POD stand for ?

A

Point Of Departure

- initial curve linear threshold region stops and turns into a linear region

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12
Q

why is it important to look at the slope of the exposure response curve ?

A

important to look at when carrying out a risk assessment

  • the slope of the graph can be very steep (organophosphate nerve agents) this almost represents an all or nothing response, therefore for a very narrow range of exposures there is a large increase in toxicity which is more dangerous
  • a very steep slope can often indicate that the chemical has only 1 molecular target
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