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Human Health & Toxicology
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Three Major Categories Physical – Natural disasters Biological – disease Chemical – Natural or synthetic * Most deaths
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Infectious Disease Caused by pathogens – Bacteria, virus, fungi, protist, & helminths Top three infectious diseases – Respiratory – AIDS – Diarrhea (parasitic worms)
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Infectious Disease Categories Chronic – Disease that slowly impairs function – Ex. Heart disease, most cancers Acute – Rapidly impairs bodily functions – Ex. Ebola
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Risk Factors (Chronic) Low income countries – Poverty – Unsafe drinking water – Poor sanitation – Malnutrition High income countries – Availability of tobacco – Less active lifestyle – Poor nutrition/overeating
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Historically Important Infectious Diseases Plague Cause: Yersinia pestis (bacteria) Vector: fleas 1300 – ¼ of European population died Today - antibiotics
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Historically Important Infectious Diseases Malaria Cause: Plasmodium (protist) Vector: mosquito Hardest hit: Africa, Asia, Middle East, & Central & South America 1951 – eradicated from the US
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Historically Important Infectious Diseases Tuberculosis Cause: Mycobacterium tuberculosis (bacteria) Affects the lungs Today – antibiotics Drug resistant strains – Hardest hit: Africa & Russia (20% MRTb)Russia
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Emergent Infectious Diseases HIV/AIDS Cause: Human immunodeficiency virus Discovered in the 1980s (coined in 1982) Jump from chimpanzees to humans Today – 33 million worldwide (1 million US) With meds – 24 yrs Without meds – 10 yrs Poverty can affect access to meds
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HIV/AIDS Timeline of Events 1959 – first case confirmed from male in Congo from preserved blood samples 1980 – first death in US 1996 – first meds published to block progression of AIDS 1999 – study published to suggestion the retrovirus began in chimpanzees 2007 – first patient cured via bone marrow transplant (Germany) – Still HIV free in 2011 2013 – first toddler cured by bone marrow transplant but relapsed
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Emergent Infectious Diseases Mad Cow Disease Cause: Prions (proteins that act as pathogens) Vector: transmission requires an uninfected cow to consume the nervous system of an affect cow 1980 in Europe – many cow diets included ground up remains of cattle for extra protein
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Emergent Infectious Diseases Ebola Cause: Ebola virus 1 st seen: Republic of Congo (Ebola River) Also infected other primates 50-89% death rate Source: Remains unknown
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Harmful Chemical Categories Neurotoxins Carcinogens Teratogens Allergens Endocrine disruptors
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Neurotoxins Disrupts the nervous system of animals Insecticides Lead – Improved – eliminate lead in gas and paint Mercury
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Carcinogens Chemicals that cause cancer – Interfering with metabolic processes – Damaging DNA Examples: – Asbestos – Formaldehyde – Tobacco
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Teratogen Chemicals that interfere with the normal development of embryos or fetuses Famous teratogen: ThalidomideThalidomide – Morning sickness – Birth defects Famous teratogen: Alcohol – Fetal alcohol syndrome – Reduce birth weight Damage to brain & nervous system
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Allergens Chemicals that cause an abnormally high immune response from the immune system
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Endocrine Disruptors Chemicals that interfere with normal hormone function in animals Hormone binding = response Sources: agriculture, birth control (unfiltered in sewage, pesticides
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Biomagnification The process by which toxic substances accumulate at increasingly high concentrations in progressively higher trophic levels
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Two Characteristics Non Biodegradable Non Biodegradable Fat soluble Fat soluble – Accumulate in fat of body Bioaccumulation Bioaccumulation – Stored energy is passed to higher trophic levels
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DDT - Pesticide Dichloro – Diphenyl – Trichloroethane Dichloro – Diphenyl – Trichloroethane Use in WWII to control malaria Use in WWII to control malaria After war – agricultural insecticide After war – agricultural insecticide 1972 – Banned in US 1972 – Banned in US
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Bald Eagle DDT affected offspring DDT affected offspring Affects not seen initially Affects not seen initially
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Egg Shell Thinning Caused by DDE (broken down DDT)Caused by DDE (broken down DDT) Blocks calcium carbonate productionBlocks calcium carbonate production
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Shell Thinning
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Toxicology The study of harmful effects of chemicals on humans & other organisms Toxicity – measure of the harmfulness of a substance (the ability to cause injury, illness, or death) Basic principle: Any synthetic of natural chemical can be harmful if ingested in a large enough quantity
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Exposure Key factors: – Dose - the amount of a harmful chemical that a person has ingested, inhaled, or absorbed – Response – resulting damage to health Variables: – Age – Genetics – Functionality of detox systems (liver, kidney, etc.) – Solubility – Persistence
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Response Health damage Acute – immediate or rapid – Dizziness, nausea, or death Chronic – Liver damage
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Dose Response Curve Median Lethal Dose – LD50 – The dose that can kill 50% of the population within a 18 day period
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