Descriptive Toxicology

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Contents

Defintion

A branch of Toxicology, typically involves toxicity testing.

Broad spectrum of responses reflects toxicity

  • Functional effects, such as immunological responses
  • Growth inhibition
  • Reproductive impairment
  • Increase in cancer incidence
  • Mortality

Toxicity Testing

Assesses the concentration-dependent hazard a chemical may present

  • Human health
  • Natural populations

Results typically applied to

  • Approval of product use
  • Regulating allowable concentrations

Types of toxicity testing

In vitro (test tube)

  • useful in detecting potential biochemical and genetic effects
  • Use model systems (bacteria, cultured animal cells, DNA interactions)

In vivo (animal)

  • are essential for detecting health effects
  • Acute, chronic, multi-generation
  • Experimental animals may be treated with high doses over a lifetime to evaluate potential to cause cancer

In silico (computer-based)

  • biological experiments conducted by computer models; these depend on data previously collected in other experiments

Completion of all toxicity tests may take five or six years and is very costly.

Applications

  • They often unravel complex processes that underlie an adverse response.
  • Use of toxicants can help determine the function of proteins in complex networks.

Private and Public sectors investment in toxicity testing that aims to protect human health

  • Chemical Manufacturers
  • Pharmaceutical Industry
  • US Federal Agencies and Programs
  • National Toxicology Program (NTP)‏
  • Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)‏
  • National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)‏
  • Food and Drug Administration (FDA)‏
  • State and Local Governmental Bodies