Guest guest Posted January 14, 2006 Report Share Posted January 14, 2006 I received this from a friend of mine....excellent information and I wanted to share it with the group. Angel Huggzz or Angel =============== Hi , I thought you might be interested in this. I hope you are continuing to improve from your recent pneumonia from Mold exposure. Click this link to download the three zipped files. http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/toxtutor.html It's well designed in easy to learn increments with short (optional) quizzes with no worry about grades. Toxicology does not cover effects on chemically sensitive individuals. You'll learn that inhalation of chemicals bypasses our bodies defense and can directly enter the bloodstream without detoxification by our liver. B. Olinsky, M.S. Environmental Specialist Toxicology Tutorials Toxicology Tutor I - Basic Principles http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox1/index.html Toxicology Tutor II - Toxicokinetics http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox2/index.html Toxicology Tutor III - Cellular Toxicology http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox3/index.html You can run the tutorials locally from your computer without the need for an Internet connection. Each tutorial is made up of about 800 files. Save the zipped file to your computer, open the zipped file (double click on filename, e.g. Tox1.zip), then double click on the index.htm file to open and run the tutorial. You will need a utility such as WINZIP® to open the zipped file. Tox1.zip 5.4 mb http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox1.zip Tox2.zip 4.2 mb http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox2.zip Tox3.zip 6.0 mb http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/enviro/enviro/toxtutor/Tox3.zip Last updated: 01 June 2005 First published: 21 April 2005 Copyright, Privacy, Accessibility U.S. National Library of Medicine, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20894 National Institutes of Health, Health & Human Services Excerpts below. The 1st (of three) section didn't take me too long. Respiratory Toxicity Respiratory Toxicity relates to effects on the upper respiratory system (nose, pharynx, larynx, and trachea) and the lower respiratory system (bronchi, bronchioles, and lung alveoli). The primary types of respiratory toxicity are: pulmonary irritation asthma/bronchitis reactive airway disease emphysema allergic alveolitis fibrotic lung disease pneumoconiosis lung cancer Toxic effects are primarily of two general types: hepatic and nephrotoxic effects carcinogenic or teratogenic effects systemic or specific target organ effects THAT'S CORRECT! Toxic effects are primarily systemic or specific target organ effects. Systemic effects are those in which there may be numerous target organs. For example, some agents will produce cancer in multiple organs rather than one specific organ. The primary difference between acute and chronic toxicity is: Acute toxicity appears soon after an exposure whereas chronic toxicity occurs many months or years later. Different organs are involved. Acute toxicity occurs only after a single dose whereas chronic toxicity occurs with multiple doses. VERY GOOD! The primary difference between acute and chronic toxicity is that acute toxicity appears soon after an exposure whereas chronic toxicity occurs many months or years later. The period of time between an exposure and onset of chronic toxicity is known as the " latency period. " Police respond to a 911 call in which two people are found dead in an enclosed bedroom heated by an unvented kerosene stove. There was no sign of trauma or violence, a likely cause of death is: Excess oxygen generated by the combustion of kerosene. Acute toxicity due to uncombusted kerosene fumes. Acute toxicity due to carbon monoxide poisoning. EXCELLENT! Police respond to a 911 call in which two people are found dead in an enclosed bedroom, which is heated by an unvented kerosene stove. Since there was no sign of trauma or violence, a likely cause of death is acute toxicity due to carbon monoxide poisoning. The binding of carbon monoxide to hemoglobin is 245 times as strong as oxygen. Thus 0.1% carbon monoxide in air will bind 50% of the hemoglobin (since air contains 21% oxygen). Interactions Humans are normally exposed to several chemicals at one time rather than to an individual chemical. Medical treatment and environment exposure generally consists of multiple exposures. Examples are: hospital patients on the average receive 6 drugs daily home influenza treatment consists of aspirin, antihistamines, and cough syrup taken simultaneously drinking water may contain small amounts of pesticides, heavy metals, solvents, and other organic chemicals air often contains mixtures of hundreds of chemicals such as automobile exhaust and cigarette smoke gasoline vapor at service stations is a mixture of 40-50 chemicals Normally, the toxicity of a specific chemical is determined by the study of animals exposed to only one chemical. Toxicity testing of mixtures is rarely conducted since it is usually impossible to predict the possible combinations of chemicals that will be present in multiple-chemical exposures. Xenobiotics administered or received simultaneously may act independently of each other. However, in many cases, the presence of one chemical may drastically affect the response to another chemical. The toxicity of a combination of chemicals may be less or it may be more than would be predicted from the known effects of each individual chemical. The effect that one chemical has on the toxic effect of another chemical is known as an interaction. Piperonyl butoxide added to pyrethrum insecticide results in a pyrethrum formulation having about 100 times the toxicity of pyrethrum alone. The interaction of this combination is: Additivity Antagonism Synergism EXCELLENT! Piperonyl butoxide added to pyrethrum insecticide results in a pyrethrum formulation having about 100 times the toxicity of pyrethrum alone. The interaction of this combination is synergism. Synergists are used to enhance the toxicity of several commonly used insecticides. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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