Module 6 Flashcards

(50 cards)

1
Q

What is an environmental toxicant?

A

A chemical released into the environment that produces adverse health effects in living organisms.

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2
Q

Types of environmental toxicants?

A

Natural (volcanoes, mercury in fish) & Anthropogenic/man-made (industry, vehicles, pesticides).

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3
Q

Acute vs Chronic toxicity difference?

A

Acute = one large exposure (chemical spill) → immediate harm.
Chronic = repeated small exposure over time → long-term damage (cancer).

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4
Q

Why is Aflatoxin B1 important?

A

Shows acute toxicity (liver necrosis) vs chronic toxicity (liver cancer) → chronic ≠ severe acute.

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5
Q

What are the 3 major environmental toxicants?

A

Air pollution, tobacco smoke, pesticides.

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6
Q

Main types of air pollutants?

A

Particulate matter & gaseous pollutants (CO, CO₂, NOx, ozone, SOx).

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7
Q

Major sources of air pollution?

A

Natural (volcanoes, forest fires) & anthropogenic (fossil fuel power, cars, industry).

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8
Q

Main health effect of air pollution?

A

Respiratory tract irritation & inflammation.

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9
Q

Who is most vulnerable to air pollution?

A

Children, elderly, asthma/heart disease patients.

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10
Q

What is secondhand smoke made of?

A

Mainstream (exhaled) + sidestream (burning cigarette).

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11
Q

WHO conclusion about secondhand smoke in 2002?

A

causes lung cancer & risk similar to direct smoking.

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12
Q

Two main classes of pesticides?

A

Insecticides & herbicides.

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13
Q

Organochlorines mechanism & example?

A

↑ neuronal sensitivity → CNS stimulation (convulsions). Example: DDT.

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14
Q

Why was DDT banned?

A

Bioaccumulation, environmental persistence, insect resistance, wildlife decline.

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15
Q

Organophosphorus insecticides mechanism example?

A

Irreversible AChE inhibition → ↑ ACh → overstimulation. Example: Malathion.

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16
Q

What is Agent Orange contaminated with?

A

TCDD

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17
Q

Organophosphate poisoning symptoms?

A

Low HR, incontinence, respiratory failure (cause of death).

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18
Q

Effects of TCDD?

A

Chloracne, liver/CNS damage, ↑ some cancers.

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19
Q

Paraquat toxicity?

A

Ingesting → burns, lung fibrosis, 2 tsp can kill.

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20
Q

Sources of lead exposure?

A

Old paint, batteries, historical gasoline.

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21
Q

Why are children more vulnerable to lead?

A

Absorb more lead than adults.

22
Q

Effects of lead?

A

CNS damage (kids), kidney damage, anemia, fatigue, irritability.

23
Q

Major exposure form of mercury?

A

Methylmercury from contaminated fish.

23
Q

Lead treatment?

A

Chelating agents.

24
Difference between mercury forms?
Mercuric (inhaled → kidney damage), Methylmercury (fat-soluble, most toxic → brain damage)
24
Minamata disease cause?
Methylmercury in wastewater.
25
What is BPA used for & concern?
Plastics/linings; estrogen-like activity.
26
Is BPA safe for the general population?
Yes at normal levels (but banned in baby bottles).
26
Where are pharmaceuticals found now?
Water, soil, animals.
27
How do pharmaceuticals enter environment?
Agriculture, improper disposal, aquaculture, human excretion, factories.
28
Major risk of anticancer drugs in water?
Toxic even at low doses.
28
Main classes of pharmaceuticals in environment?
Neuroactives, steroid hormones, antibiotics, antihypertensives, analgesics.
28
Environmental effect of neuroactive drugs?
Affect fish reproduction (low human risk).
29
Concern with steroid hormones?
Endocrine disruption in aquatic species.
30
Why are antibiotics concerning environmentally?
Antibiotic resistance.
31
Prevention strategies for pharmaceutical pollution?
Take-back programs, better sewage treatment, regulation, toxicity testing.
32
What % of Canadians get cancer?
45% men, 43% women.
33
Key properties of cancer cells?
Unlimited division, invasion, metastasis.
34
Risk-increasing diet factors?
Red meat & high salt.
34
Most common cancers?
Lung, breast, colorectal, prostate.
35
Two causes of cancer?
Genetic + environmental.
36
Top preventable cause of cancer?
Tobacco
37
Protective diet components?
Fruits & vegetables.
38
Examples of occupational carcinogens?
Asbestos, benzene, formaldehyde, radiation.
39
Infection-linked cancers?
HPV→cervical, Hep B/C→liver, H.pylori→stomach.
39
Cancer prevention strategies?
No smoking, sunscreen, reduce alcohol, good diet, exercise, vaccines.
40
Goal of chemotherapy?
Target and kill rapidly dividing cells.
41
4 classes of chemotherapeutic drugs?
Alkylating agents (DNA damage) Mitotic inhibitors (block division) Hormones (block hormone-sensitive tumours) Biologics (block cytokines/signals)
42
Side effects arise because...?
Healthy fast-dividing cells also harmed (GI, hair, bone marrow).
43
Why use combination therapy?
Prevent resistance + reduce toxicity per drug.