Modern Poisons A Brief Introduction to Contemporary Toxicology
This book explains basic principles in plain language while illuminating the most important issues in contemporary toxicology. The author begins by exploring age-old precepts of the field such as the dose-response relationship and the concept, first intro
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		    Modern Poisons a brief introduction to contemporary toxicology
 
 Alan S. Kolok
 
 Washington | Covelo | London
 
 Copyright © 2016 Alan Kolok All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the publisher: Island Press, 2000 M Street NW, Suite 650, Washington, DC 20036 Island Press is a trademark of The Center for Resource Economics. Library of Congress Control Number: 2016933395 Printed on recycled, acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Keywords: Toxins, dose-response relationship, endocrine disruption, pesticides, chemical resistance, epigenetics, chemical regulation, persistent organic pollutants (POPs), Paracelsus, prions.
 
 contents
 
 Preface 
 
 ix
 
 Acknowledgments Chapter 1 The Dose Makes the Poison 
 
 xiii 1
 
 Chapter 2 The Nature of a Chemical 
 
 10
 
 Chapter 3 The Human Animal 
 
 18
 
 Chapter 4 Chemical Journeys: Absorption 
 
 26
 
 Chapter 5 Bodily Defense 
 
 35
 
 Chapter 6 Wider Journeys: Pollution 
 
 43
 
 Chapter 7 Traveling Particles 
 
 50
 
 Chapter 8 Toxins, Poisons, and Venoms 
 
 58
 
 Chapter 9 Metals: Gift and Curse 
 
 66
 
 Chapter 10 Combustion 
 
 76
 
 Chapter 11 Drugs and the Toxicology of Addiction 
 
 85
 
 Chapter 12 70,000 Years of Pesticides 
 
 95
 
 Chapter 13 The Origins of Regulation 
 
 104
 
 Chapter 14 Low-Dose Chemical Carcinogenesis 
 
 113
 
 Chapter 15 POPs and Silent Spring 
 
 123
 
 Chapter 16 Toxic Toiletries 
 
 131
 
 Chapter 17 Determining Sex: Chemicals and Reproduction 
 
 139
 
 Chapter 18 The Earliest Exposure: Transgenerational Toxicology 
 
 148
 
 Chapter 19 Natural Toxins Revisited 
 
 158
 
 Chapter 20 Chemical Resistance 
 
 164
 
 Afterword 
 
 175
 
 Toxicology and Beyond 
 
 References 
 
 179
 
 Index 
 
 197
 
 preface
 
 Toxicology is interdisciplinary. Other disciplines, such as anatomy, can be studied more or less in isolation, without much intellectual investment from the other major scientific fields. Students can be educated on the arrangement of bone, muscle, and the internal organs, for example, with very little mention of the underlying chemistry of the bone, or the biomechanics involved in muscular activity. Toxicology, on the other hand, is the study of the adverse effects of noxious chemicals on living organisms, and therefore cannot be encapsulated solely within the fields of biology or chemistry, but rather lives within the intersection of the two disciplines. Toxicology is also an applied science, being responsive to changes in the human environment and to societal needs. At its inception, toxicology was intricately associated with medicine. Physicians first developed the basic principles of toxicology over 500 years ago, for toxic insults were invariably personal and medically debilitating. The adages that “a chemical dose makes the poison” and “a chemical’s nature is revealed through its structure” arose to help understand the mechanisms by which poisons were adversely affecting humans. During the early stages of its evolution as a discipline, toxic		
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