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Chapter 14 Environmental Health and Toxicology

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Title: Chapter 14 Environmental Health and Toxicology


1
Chapter 14 Environmental Health and Toxicology
2
Chapter Overview
  • Case Study - Lead
  • Basics including some key terms
  • Categories of Pollutants (10 kinds - 6 pages)
  • Effects of pollutants including Dose - response
    concepts
  • Risk assessment

3
Some Basics
  • Many causes of disease, one of these are
    environmental factors.
  • Water, air, soil, etc
  • One belief - naturegood, not always true
  • Floods, volcanoes (tsunamis)
  • Lake Nyos example

4
Lake Nyos
CO2
5
Terms
  • Pollution - an unwanted change in the environment
    due to introduction of chemicals or conditions
  • Contamination - to make something unfit for use

6
More terms
  • Toxic - poisonous to people and other living
    things
  • Toxicology - study of poisons and their effects
  • Carcinogen - a toxin that causes cancer

7
More terms
  • Synergism - combined effect of two variables is
    greater than their sum.
  • Ex. SO2 and particulates are each harmful, but
    together they are much more harmful than the
    combined effect of each alone. Like two rude
    friends who get each other going.

8
More terms
  • Point sources - smokestacks, drains, spills
  • Area Sources - urban runoff, car exhaust

9
Units for measuring pollution
  • Release may be measured in gallons or tons per
    day or year
  • Concentration in the environment may be in ppm
    (parts per million) or ppb (parts per billion).
    This may be volume, mass, or weight
  • In toxicology often milligrams per kg of body
    ppm

10
Units
  • In water often mg/L or ug/L
  • mg/L is close to ppm
  • Air pollutants often in ug/m3

11
Categories of Pollutants
  • Infectious agents
  • Infectious agents which could be controlled by
    improving sanitation and treating water are
    environmental health concerns
  • Can be spread by mosquitos, contaminated food or
    water, ventilation systems

12
Examples of Infectious Diseases
  • Legionnaires Disease - spread by water such as
    from shower heads
  • Giardiasis - protozoan spread by food and water
  • Salmonella - food poisoning
  • Lyme disease - spread by ticks

13
Category 2 - Toxic Heavy Metals
  • Mercury, lead, cadmium, nickel, gold, platinum,
    silver, bismuth, arsenic, selenium, vanadium,
    chromium, thallium
  • Used in society and byproduct of mining,
    refining, etc

14
Heavy Metals 2
  • Have direct health effect
  • Can be stored in our body
  • Stored amount called body burden - measured in
    mg/kg or ppm

15
Toxic pathways
  • Many pathways available (see fig 14.4)
  • Cadmium - present in ash from coal in low
    concentration
  • Can be incorporated into plants at higher
    concentration biomagnification

16
Organic Compounds
  • Carbon-based compounds, produced both naturally
    or by humans
  • Many kinds with many effects
  • Used in industrial processes, pesticides,
    pharmaceuticals, food additives, etc

17
Radiation
  • Result of nuclear processes - discussed more in
    chapter 18

18
Thermal Pollution
  • Heat pollution
  • Natural sources include forest fires and
    volcanoes
  • Major source is heat released from electrical
    generating plants
  • Changes average temp of water

19
Thermal Pollution cont.
  • Many aquatic species have a very narrow range
    tolerating only 1-3 degree change
  • Temperature change can effect food chains
  • Solutions include cooling towers or cooling
    lagoons

20
Particulates
  • Dust released into atmosphere by industrial
    processes
  • Much added by farming, dust storms, fires,
    volcanoes.
  • Inhalation hazard as well as climatic effects,
    heavy metal contents and synergistic effects

21
Asbestos
  • Small elongated mineral fragments
  • Used for fire prevention and insulation
  • Certain types of asbestos under certain
    conditions cause lung diseases
  • All types of asbestos are not equally hazardous

22
Asbestos cont.
  • 95 of asbestos in US is chrysolite
  • Studies show this type is not especially harmful
  • Public health risks have been overstated and many
    actions were probably taken unnecessarily

23
Electromagnetic fields
  • Created by electric motors, power lines, cell
    phones, appliances.
  • Possible health effects controversial BUT
  • Possible associations with leukemia, lymphomas
    (blood cancer), and cancers of the nervous system
    in children.

24
Noise Pollution
  • Defined as unwanted sound
  • Sound measure in decibels (dB)
  • Interior of a home is 45 dB
  • Scale is logarithmic 55 dB is ten times louder
    than 45
  • 140 dB causes pain
  • Effects depend on volume and duration of exposure

25
Voluntary Exposures
26
General Effects of pollutants
  • Almost every part of bodies can be effected
  • Affected area and symptom area may differ
  • See figure 14.8

27
Concept of Dose and Response
  • Everything is poisonous, yet nothing is
    poisonous.
  • Selenium is required by living things, but in
    high amounts can cause cancer in wildlife

28
Dose- Response Curve
29
LD-50
30
Other Measures
  • ED-50 - Effective Dose
  • TD-50 - Toxic Dose
  • There is sometimes an overlap, see fig 14.11. The
    dose which is effective on 95 of individuals
    might be toxic to 5.

31
Threshold effects
  • Read about Minimata
  • What happened?
  • Why?
  • What is Threshold and how does it apply?

32
Threshold Effects
Response
Dose
33
Ecological Gradient
  • The types of plants which grow closest to a site
    of contamination may differ from those growing
    further away.

34
Tolerance
  • 3 kinds behavior, physiological, genetic
  • Behavioral - Mice learn to avoid traps
  • Physiological - body has mechanisms to deal with
    effect on repeated exposure ie ozone

35
  • Genetic Tolerance - Natural Selection like
    insects and pesticides
  • Acute Effects - Occurs soon after exposure,
    usually to a large dose
  • Chronic effects - Occurs over a long time, some
    times to small dose

36
Risk Assessment - 1
  • Identify Hazard
  • Test materials to see if they may have toxic
    effects.
  • One way investigate populations who have been
    exposed.
  • Or test materials on cells, then extrapolate to
    predict effects on an organism

37
Risk Assessment - 2
  • Dose-response assessment
  • ID relationship between dose and adverse effect
  • Sometimes involves high doses in animals
    extrapolated to low dose in humans
  • Can be controversial because of statistics and
    other issues such as threshold.

38
Risk Assessment -3
  • Exposure assessment
  • Estimate the intensity, duration, and frequency
    of human exposure
  • Difficult to determine accuracy of small
    concentrations

39
Risk Assessment - 4
  • Risk Characterization
  • Delineate the health risk
  • Combines steps 2 and 3 and includes all of their
    uncertainties.

40
Risk Assessment - 1
  • Identify Hazard
  • Test materials to see if they may have toxic
    effects.
  • One way investigate populations who have been
    exposed.
  • Or test materials on cells, then extrapolate to
    predict effects on an organism
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