12.07.2015 Views

PRINCIPLES OF TOXICOLOGY - Biology East Borneo

PRINCIPLES OF TOXICOLOGY - Biology East Borneo

PRINCIPLES OF TOXICOLOGY - Biology East Borneo

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

18 GENERAL <strong>PRINCIPLES</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>TOXICOLOGY</strong>Figure 1.4 By plotting the cumulative dose–response curves (log dose), one can identify those doses of a toxicantor toxicants that affect a given percentage of the exposed population. Comparing the values of LD50A to LD50B orLD50C ranks the toxicants according to relative potency for the response monitored.as coma or liver injury, and much lower doses than fatal exposures. This situation is shown in Figure1.5, and it can be easily seen that understanding the relationship of the three dose–response curvesmight allow the use of sentinel effects (represented in Figure 1.5 by the SD curve) to preventoverexposure and the occurrence of more serious toxicities.The difference in dose between the toxicity curve and a sentinel effect represents the margin ofsafety. Typically, the margin of safety is calculated from data like that shown in Figure 1.5, by dividingTD 50by the SD 50. The higher the margin of safety, the safer the chemical is to use (i.e., greater roomfor error). However, one may also want to use a more protective definition of the margin of safety (forexample, TD 10/SD 50or TD 01/SD 100) depending on the circumstances of the substance’s use and theease of identifying and monitoring either the sentinel response or the seriousness of the toxicityproduced. Changing the definition to include a higher percentile of the sentinel dose–response curve(e.g., the SD 100) and correspondingly lower percentile of the toxic dose–response curve (e.g., the TD 10or the TD 01) forces the margin of safety to be protective for the vast majority of a population.TABLE 1.5 A Relative Ranking System for Categorization of the Acute Toxicity of a ChemicalProbable Oral Lethal Dose for HumansToxicity Rating or Class Dose (mg/kg) For Average Adult1. Practically nontoxic > 15,000 > 1 quart2. Slightly toxic 5000–15,000 1 pint to 1 quart3. Moderately toxic 50–5000 1 ounce to 1 pint4. Very toxic 50–500 1 teaspoonf ul to 1 ounce5. Extremely toxic 5–50 7 drops to 1 teaspoonf ul6. Supertoxic < 5 < 7 dropsSource: Reproduced with permission of the American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!