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Pharm Exam 1
Set 11: Toxicology thru non-metallic poisons
163
Pharmacology
Graduate
10/10/2011

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Term
def

toxicology
Definition
the study of the harmful effects of chemicals on biological systems
Term
def

poison
Definition
any substance that can cause death, disease, or injury
Term
What are the 4 routes of poison entry to the body?
Definition
1) oral
2) inhalation
3) parenteral
4) dermal
Term
How are poisons classified?
Definition
Under borad headings s.a.
irriants
systemics
corrosives
gases


or by chemical structure s.a.
acids
bases
organic solvents
heavy metals
etc.
Term
def

pollutant
Definition
any substance in the environment as a consequence of human activity
Term
Where can poisons act?
Definition
locally, systemically, or both
Term
What determines time before posion effect is noticed/duration & intensity?
Definition
1) dose
2) age
3) personal habits
4) genetics
5) route of administrationWhe
Term
What is the leading cause of all poisons in the U.S.?
Definition
plants
Term
def

Toxicokinetics
Definition
ADME of toxins, toxic doeses of therapeutic agents, and their metabolites
Term
def

toxicodynamics
Definition
the injurious effects of these substances on vital functions
Term
When will a chemical produce a toxic effect on a biological system?
Definition
when it reaches a critical concentration in traget tissue
Term
def LD50
Definition
dose of a chemical required to produce death in 50% of organisms exposed to it
Term
def ED50
Definition
dose producing desired parmacological effect in 50% of individuals
Term
Equation

Therapeutic index
Definition
TI = LD50/ED50
Term
In general, what route of exposure leads to the most rapid & greatest effect?
Definition
IV
Term
def

acute exposure
Definition
single exposure or multiple exposures over a 24 hr period
Term
def

subacute exposure
Definition
multiple exposures over 24 hr to 3 month period
Term
def

chronic exposure
Definition
muliple exposures over period of 3 months or more
Term
def

non-cumulative poisons
Definition
readily cleared by the body & doesn't cause permanent irreversible damage at low doses
(total dose not important, so long as individual doses are small)
Term
def

cumulative posion
Definition
accumulate in the body or cause irreversible damage where total exposure is critical
Term
def

zero order kinetics
Definition
rate of drug elimination is independent of of drug concentration
Term
How are drugs usually eliminated, first or zero order kinetics?
Definition
first order kinetics
Term
When do drugs become zero order?
Definition
overdose/poisoning
Term
What causes the change from first order to zero order kinetics in overdose situations?
Definition
saturation
Term
What happens at saturation?
Definition
processes are functioning at maximum & therefore limits rate of drug removal
Term
Equation ke (zero order rate constant)
Definition
ke = (A0-A)/t A0 = amount of drug at time 0 A = amount of drug at any other given time
Term
When will zero order kinetics yield a straight line?
Definition
normal x-y plot
Term
When will we see zero order kinetics with toxic agents?
Definition
higher doses

(first order at low doses & mixture in between)
Term
What everyday substances (as examples) observe first order kinetics below saturation & zero order kinetics above?
Definition
Alcohol & aspirin
Term
What are some examples of heavy metals?
Definition
lead
murcury
arsenic
cadmium
chelators
Term
def

heavy metals
Definition
metals that are not metabolized & so pose a significant threat since they stay in the body for long periods of time
Term
What do heavy metals combine with in the body to exert their toxic effect?
Definition
essential aa residues of enzymes => inhibition of catalytic activity
Term
What are the sources of lead exposure?
Definition
Environmental (water, air, soil, food)
Household (crayons, toys, paint, etc)
Occupational (miners, spray painters, etc)
Term
Sx

Acute Inorganic Pb poisoning
Definition
Severe GI
Progresses to: CNS (stupor/convulsions to coma/death)
Term
Why is Dx of acute inorganic Pb poisoning difficult?
Definition
Sx ~ appendicitis, peptic ulcer, pancreatitis
Term
Sx

Chronic inorganic Pb poisoning
Definition
Weakness, anorexia, nervousness, tremor, wt. loss, headache, GI

(recurrent abdominal pain & extensor muscle weakness w/o sensory disturbances => Pb poisoning possibility)
Term
What is the most characteristic finding in chronic inorganic Pb poisoning?
Definition
wrist drop
Term
How do you confirm Dx of inorganic Pb poisoning?
Definition
1) measure blood level
2) ID abnormalities of porphyrin metabolism
Term
What usually causes organic Pb poisoning?
Definition
tetraethyl or tetramethyl Pb in gasoline
Term
Why is organic Pb readily absorbed thru skin & RT?
Definition
highly volatile & lipid soluble
Term
What has diminished organic Pb in environment?
Definition
phase-out of leaded gasoline
Term
Sx

organic Pb poisoning
Definition
acute CNS disorders
few hetatological abnormalities

rapidly progressing => hallucinations, insomnia, headache, & irritability
Term
Where in the body does inorganic Pb distribute to after absorption?
Definition
soft tissues (primarily kidney & liver) => redistribution to bone, teeth, & hair => eventually 95% found in bone
Term
What is most circulating inorganic Pb associated with?
Definition
RBCs
Term
What is the half life of Pb in blood?

in bone?
Definition
blood: 1-2 mo.
bone: 20 yr.
Term
What are tetraethyl & tetramethyl lead metabolized to by the liver?
Definition
trialkyl Pb & inorganic Pb
Term
What is trialkyl Pb responsible for?
Definition
acute poisoning syndrome
Term
Where are trialkyl & inorganic Pb excreted?
Definition
urine & feces
Term
What is the primary screening procedure for Pb poisoning?
Definition
FEP test (RBC protoporphyrin will be increased due to inhibitionof ferrochelatase by Pb)
Term
What happens due to Pb inhibition of several enzymes in heme biosynthesis?
Definition
elevated urinary prophyrin
Term
How does Pb cause anemia?
Definition
inhibiting hemoglobin synthesis in bone marrow & increasing fragility of RBC
Term
Heme metabolism

Succinyl CoA + Glycine -> ?

What enzyme is used?
Definition
δ-Aminolevulinate synthase is used to produce δ-Aminolevulinate
Term
Heme metabolism

δ-Aminolevulinate -> ?

What enzyme is used?
Definition
δ-Aminolevulinate dehydratase is used to produce Prophobiliongen
Term
Heme metabolism

Prophobilinogen -> ?

Which enzymes are used?
Definition
Porphobilinogen deaminase & uroporphyrinogen III cosynthase are used to produce Uroporphyrinogen III
Term
Heme metabolism

Uroporphyrinogen III -> ?

What enzyme is used?
Definition
Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase is used to produce Coproporphyrinogen III
Term
Heme metabolism

Coproporphyrinogen III -> ?

What enzyme is used?
Definition
Coproporphyrinogen oxidase is used to produce Protoporphyrun IX
Term
Heme metabolism

Protoporphyrin IX -> ?

What enzyme is used?
Definition
Ferrochelatase + Fe2+ are used to produce heme
Term
What 2 enzymes in heme metabolism does Pb have an effect on for sure?
Definition
δ-Aminolevulinate dehydratase & Ferrochelatase
Term
What 2 enzymes in heme synthesis does Pb probably have an effect on?
Definition
δ-Aminolevulinate synthase & Coproporphyrinogen oxidase
Term
What happens to δ-Aminolevulinate as a consequence of Pb?
Definition
it's excreted in the urine
Term
What happens to coproporphyrinogen as a result of Pb?
Definition
excreted in urine
Term
What happens to protoporphyrin IX as a consequence of Pb?
Definition
accumulates in RBCs
Term
Tx

acute Pb poisoning
Definition
1) orevent further exposure & provide supportive measures
2) Tx of seizures with diazepam
3) Tx of cerebral edema w/ mannitol & dexamethasone
4) Maintain fluid & electrolyte balance
5) initiate chelation therapy asap
Term
What are the 3 forms of Hg?
Definition
elemental
inorgangic
organic
Term
Which form of Hg is more completely absorbed through GI?
Definition
Organic
Term
Which Hg form is poorly absorbed thru GI, but is quite volatile & can be absorbed thru the lungs?
Definition
elemental
Term
Which organic Hg is most dangerous?

Why?
Definition
methylmercury - more completely absorbed thru GI
Term
Where, after distribution, is Hg concentration the highest?
Definition
renal proximal tubles
Term
What does Hg bind to in the body?
Definition
sulfahydryl groups
Term
How is Hg excreted?
Definition
kidney
Term
Which Hg is more predominant in CNS?
Definition
short-chain organics
Term
How are patients with acture Hg intoxication being exposed?
Definition
inhalation of Hg vapor (occupational exposure)
Term
Sx

acute Hg intoxication
Definition
chest pain
SOB
metallic taste
N/V
=> acute kidney damage
if survives, severe gingivitis & gastroenteritis occur
Severe cases: muscle tremor & psychopathology develop
Term
Sx

Chronic Hg intoxication
Definition
mouth/GI disorders w/ Sx of renal insufficency
gingivitis, discolored gums, loose teeth
enlarged salivary glands
Tremor of digits, arms, & legs
altered handwriting
ocular changes (Hg deposition in lens)
personality change
Term
Where are organ toxicity most present in Hg poisoning?
Definition
CNS & kidney
Term
Why is Hg very corrosive?
Definition
ability to precipitate protein on contact
Term
Tx

acute Hg poisoning
Definition
removal from exposure & chelation with dimercaprol
Term
Tx

chronic Hg poisoning
Definition
Oral penicillamine or N-acetylpenicillamine (chelation)
Term
How is Hg chelation success monitored?
Definition
Hg level in urine
Term
What are 4 the chemical forms of arsenic?
Definition
elemental
inorganic
organic
asine gas
Term
When is arsenic used medically?
Definition
only in certain tropical diseases
Term
What are the 2 inorganic arsenic forms that cause major toxiological effects?
Definition
primary: trivalent
pentavalent
Term
Why does pentavalent also have toxicologic effects?
Definition
uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation
Term
How do trivalent arsenics produce toxological effects?
Definition
act as sufhydryl reagents => inhibition of SH-sensitive enzymes
Term
MOA

arsenic (trivalent)
Definition
closes sulfhydryl ring by connecting to both S in the enzyme complex
Term
Tx

arsenic poisoning
Definition
stabilization of patient & prevention of further absorption.
chelation with dimercaprol followed bby penicillamine
Term
What contributes to cadmium (Cd) exposure?
Definition
cigarette smoking
<5% of Cd is recycled in environment => pollution
Term
What is the half life of Cd?
Definition
10-30 yrs
Term
Why are smokers at an increased risk to Cd posioning?
Definition
build up sm. amounts of Cd/year due to cigarettes + Cd has an extremely long half life (prone to accumulation)
Term
Tx

Cd poisoning
Definition
no effective Tx established
stabilization & prevention of further absorption
Chelation with calcium disoodium (never with dimercaprol => mobilizaes Cd causes it to concentrate in kidney & dissociates from chelator)
Term
def

heavy metal antagonists
Definition
chelators
Term
MOA

chelators
Definition
desined to bind to heavy metals & prevent or reverse binding of metals to cellular molecules
Term
How are chelators flexible?
Definition
2+ electronegative groups that for stable covalent bonds with cationic metal
Term
How is binding b/w chelator & metal ion accomplished?
Definition
sharing of electrons
Term
What are the common donor atoms for electron supply on the chelator?
Definition
N, S, & O
Term
What 4 things does chelating effectiveness depend on?
Definition
1) affinity for heavy metal
2) affinity for essential metals in body
3) distribution of metal & chelator in body
4) ability of chelator to mobilize metal
Term
What are the desirable propertirs of a good chelating agent?
Definition
1) water solubility 2) resistance to metabolism 3) ability to distribute to same sites as metal 4) ready excretion of chelation complexes 5) can function at physiological pH 6) complexes are less toxic than free metal 7) low affinity for Ca2+ & Zn2+ 8) high affinity for metal 9) minimal inherant toxicity 10) absorbed orally
Term
What are the 4 chelators used?
Definition
1) Dimercaprol
2) EDTA
3) penicillamine
4) desferoxamine mesylate
Term
What are the propterties of dimercaprol?
Definition
colorless oily liquid with offensive odor
readily absorved IM
Term
When is dimercaprol contraindicated?
Definition
liver disease or severe renal disease
Term
SE

dimercaprol
Definition
Cardiovascular (HTN, tachycardia)
headache
fever in children
etc.
N/V
Term
Why do congeners of dimercaprol have less SE?
Definition
more water soluble & therefore confined to extracellular space
Term
When is EDTA an efficient chelator?
Definition
di- & tri- valent metals
Term
What limits the clinical usefulness of EDTA?
Definition
chelation of essential calcium
Term
When in EDTA contraindicated?
Definition
Hg poisoning
renal disease
Term
How is invivo calcium binding circumvented with EDTA?
Definition
addition of calcium-disodium
Term
How is penicillamine formed?
Definition
degradation of penicillin
Term
Why is the D isomer of penicillamine preferred over the L isomer?
Definition
less toxic
Term
What is penicillamine most used to Tx?
Definition
Pb, Hg, & Cu poisoning (Wilson's disease since Cu chelation)
Term
When are SE seen in penicillamine
Definition
only in chronic use
(allergic rxn, leukopenia, eosinophilia, nephrotoxicity)
Term
What is deferoxamine mesylate isolated from?
Definition
streptomyces pilosus
Term
When is deferoxamine mesylate used?
Definition
iron toxicity (possibly aluminium toxicity as well)

only use when severity of poisoning justifies it, since it's toxic as well
Term
When is deferoxamine mesylate contraindicated?
Definition
renal insufficency
Term
SE

deferoxamine mesylate
Definition
diarrhea
HTN
cataract formation
Term
10 yo boy living near pigment manufacturing plant presents with burning snesation in glove and stocking distribution with sever bilateral arm & leg weakness. He presents with hyperpigmentation & thickening of skin over pamls & soles. He is in the habit of eating paint.

Neurological exam reveals decreased senation, decreased motor stregeth, absent tendon reflexes, & wasting in arms & legs.

Arsenic levels elevated in blood, urine, & hair.

What should be used for Tx?
Definition
penicillamine or oral DMSA
Term
When do neurological Sx predominate over GI Sx in arsenic poisoning?
Definition
chronic exposures
Term
5 yo boy brought to medical clinic b/c of sudden, vigorous vomiting with no previous nausea. Mother states he's been behaving stragely & been irritable. Child complains of weakness in hands & feet. Boy lives in an old house recently renovated. He's had episodes of abdominal pain in the past.

PW shows pallor, lethary, foot drop, retinal strippling, lines in gum, wasting of muscles of hands with motor weakness.

Labs show hyperchromatic, microcytic anemia with casophilic strippling, hyperuricemia, increased urinary coproporphyrin & aminolevulinic acid, elevated blood Pb.

X-rays show increased density at metaphysis

Edema of the brain & peripheral nerve segmental demyelination present

Acid fast intranuclear bodies in renal tubluar cells, hepatocytes, & osteoclasts.

What Tx is indicated?
Definition
sepatation from source of exposure
IM chelation with CaEDTA or DMSA orally, dimercaprol
Term
28 yo male, professor of chemistry, come to ER complaining of acute retosternal & epigastric pain & frequent vomiting of blood-tinged material. He admits to a suicide attempt thru ingestion of several teaspoons of mercurium bichloride. On arrival he had a bloody, diarrhetic bowel movement.

PE shows hypotenstion, tachycardia, pallor, cold & clammy skin, whitish tongue, & confused demeanor. Patient was oliguric & dyspneic, exhibited moderate abdominal tenderness & grayish discoloration of buccal mucosa.

Lab showed elevate serum creatinine & BUN. tubular casts in urine analysis. Markedly increased fractional excretion of sodium & elevated serum hemoglobin levels

He has acute tubular necrosis, acute irritative colitis with mucosal necrosis with sloughing & hemorrhage.

What Tx is indicated?
Definition
Specific chelation therapy with dimercaprol & siccomer.

Supportive management of acute tubular necrosis
Term
What are the properties of carbon monoxide (CO)?
Definition
colorless, tasteless, odorless, non-irritating
Term
What are the major sources of CO?
Definition
automobile exhause, charcoal fires, gas furnaces, methylene chloride
Term
Why is CO toxic?
Definition
It combines with Hb at O2 binding sites to form carboxyhemoglobin (unable to transport O2 from lungs to tissue) Hb affinity for CO is >200x that of Hb for O2 therefore CO is dangerous at LOW levels
Term
What tissues are most affected by CO poisoning?
Definition
brain & heart
Term
How do Sx of CO poisoning vary?
Definition
by % saturation
Term
Sx

CO poisoning
Definition
headache, weakness, N/V => loss of muscular control, collapse, unconsciousness & death
Term
Why are the cardiac & resp. systems affected by CO?
Definition
hypoxia
Term
Tx

CO poisoning
Definition
1) remove from source of exposure 2) maintain respiration 3) may need to administer O2
Term
Why is it important to remove indivudual from exposure & maintain respiration (besides the obvious) in CO poisoning?
Definition
Once removed from exposure, CO readily dissociated from COHb via expiration
Term
What are the cources of cyanide (CN)?
Definition
occupational chemicals (fumigants, cleaners, rubber, etc)
produced in fired involving N-containing plastics
Home environment (silver polish, insecticides, fruit seeds)
Term
How soon after inhalation of toxic doses of CN as Sx seen?
Definition
within seconds
Term
Sx

CN poisoning
Definition
Sm dose: giddiness, headache, palpitations, N/V => increased dose: ataxia, convulsions, soma, death

very lg dose: collapse & death almost immediately
Term
Dx

CN poisoning
Definition
Abruptness of Sx onset
Odor of bitter almonds on breath
Term
Why is CN toxic?
Definition
CN bings to ferric iron in cytochrome oxidase of mitochondra => inhibits cellular respiration => cytotoxic hypoxia
Term
Tx

CN poisoning
Definition
Administer amyl nitrite or sodium nitrite to produce methemeoglobin from hemoglobin [Fe(II) to Fe(III)]. This provides a large pool of Fe(III) for CN to bind to Tx of induced hypoxia via O2 inhalation
Term
What are the sources of methanol?
Definition
industrial chemical (anitfreeze, paint remover)
Term
How does MeOH removal compare to EtOH?
Definition
MeOH is more slowly oxidized
Term
What are the 2 MeOH products responsible for MeOH toxicity?
Definition
MeOH -> fomaldehyde -> formic acid
Term
Sx

MeOH toxicity
Definition
~ to those with EtOH
Severe GI cramps, vomiting, acidosis, cardiac depression
early: vision disturbances (blurred, dilated pupils)
resp. & circulatory failure => coma, delirium, death
(protracted blondness can be premanent, even if recovery occurs)
Term
What causes blindness in MeOH toxicity?
Definition
formaldehyde by damaging retinal cells
Term
What causes cadiac Sx & is a systemic acidifier in MeOH toxicity?
Definition
formic acid
Term
What is the key to survaval of MeOH poisoning?
Definition
correction of acidosis
Term
Tx

MeOH intoxication
Definition
keep patient warm
protect patient eyes from light
correct acidosis by administration of sodium bicarbonate
continuously monitor blood pH & gases
may administer EtOH since both are metabolized by EtOH dehydrogenase, but with a higher affinity for EtOH
Term
Where is the major source of ethylene glycol?
Definition
antifreeze (major component)
Term
What metabolizes ethylene glycol?
Definition
EtOH dehydrogenase
Term
What does EtOH dehydrogenase metabolize Ethylene glycol to?
Definition
oxalate
Term
Why does oxalate cause severe renal injury & failure?
Definition
oxalate crystalluria
Term
What causes acidosis in ethylene glycol intoxication?
Definition
formic acid production (just like MeOH)
Term
Tx

Ethylene glycol intoxication
Definition
gastric lavage
correct acidosis with sodium bicarbonate
administration of EtOH to compete for EtOH dehydrogenase & slow metabolism of ethylene glycol
hemodialysis
Term
How much of acetaminophen (APAP) is absorbed from GI?
Definition
100% absorbed (& rapidly)
Term
How soon after APAP administration is plasma concentration peak seen?
Definition
30-60 min
Term
What is the half life of APAP?
Definition
1-3 hr
Term
What is APAP metabolized to?
Definition
primarily: glucuronide
sulfate conjugates
Term
Sx

APAP toxicity
Definition
24-48 hr: pallor, N/V
2-4 d: heptaic damage observed
Term
Why is early diagnosis of APAP toxicity critical?
Definition
it's metabolized during 1st pass metabolism (must monitor LFT)
Term
How is APAP metabolized?
Definition
majority: gluronidated
sm amount: hydroxylated by CYP450 => conjugation to GSH & excreted
Term
What happens to GSH levels in massave APAP doses?
Definition
depletion => hydroxylated metabolite binding to tissue => necrosis
Term
Tx

APAP poisoning
Definition
N-Acetylcysteine (asministration of sulfhydryl compound to maintain hepatic GSH or act as an alternative target for hydroxylated APAP metabolite)
Term
What is one of the major causes of accidental poisoning in children under 5?
Definition
vitamins
Term
What is the source of most vitamin toxicities?
Definition
chronic use of vitamins over many years
Term
def

vitamin megadose
Definition
a dose that is 10x RDA
Term
Which vitamins are most likely to cause overdose?
Definition
fat soluble (A & D more prominent, E & K rarely seen)
Term
What is the main source of "multivitamin" toxicity?
Definition
iron
Term
A 29 yo mechanic brought to ER after complaining of persistent headache, nausea & dizziness. He has been working indoors all day bc of the cold weather & felt tired, dizzy, & nauseated. He has otherwise been in good health.

PE reveals tachycardia & patient is lethargic & disoriented.

Labs reveal carboxyhemaglobin concentraion of 38%

What Tx should be administered?
Definition
100% oxygen until carboxyhemoglobin concentration <5%.
Term
6 yo boy is brought to ER b/c of severe vomiting. Patient was with his father in the garage when he drank some antifreeze. On arrival, the boy started having tonic-clonic seizures.

PE reveals tachycardia, no fever, hypotension, & the patient was hyperventilating & experiencing convulsions.

Labs reveal leukocytosis, ethylene glycol in blood, metabolic acidosis w/ elevated osmolar & anion gap, hyponatremia & hyperkalemia. BUN & creatinine were normal. ECG showed premature ventricular beats.

Chest x ray showed no evidence of bronchoaspiration of ethylene glycol.

What Tx should be administered?
Definition
administration of EtOH to saturate EtOH dehydrogenase.
administer pyridoxine, folate, & thiamine to counteract effecs of toxic metabolites
Treat convulsions with diazepam & monitor vital signs.
hemodialysis if necessary
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