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ENVIRONMENT, POLLUTION, DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF UZBEKISTAN
6.2.
Toxicity assesment of substances
The effect of any substance or factor on living organisms
depends on the nature of this effect (toxicity) as well as on the
quantities of substances that enter the body. Most substances are
harmless if the dose affecting the organism is sufficiently low,
whereas even any well-known and widely used domestic substance
in high doses may become hazardous to the human organism. Any
effect on living organisms is dependent not only on the nature of the
exposure, but also the amount of a substance that enters the body.
Any substance is harmless if their amount enters body in
mini mal amounts, but, but any in everyday life well-known and
widely used substance in large doses becomes dangerous. The first
this concept demonstrated Paracelsus (Fig. 6.6). His well-known
statement «All substances are poisons; there is none that is not a
poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy» is a bsic
for dose-response relationship.
The amount of substance that a living organism takes in over a
given period of time is called the dose.
The assessment of the hazardousness of a substance and risk of
its exposure is based on the correlation between the dose of the sub-
stan ce and the body’s response. The study of this correlation allows to
evaluate the toxicity of a substance, for the toxic reaction usually de-
pends on both the dose of the substance under study and the con centra-
tion of the substance in the part of the body affected first. Usually
exposure to a substance is toxic if there is an interaction bet ween the
compound and a certain receptor in the body. The receptor might be an
enzyme whose activity is inhibited. The binding to the receptor can be
both reversible and irreversible; hence, the du ra tion of exposure to the
toxic substance is crucial. Although the con centra tion of the substance
in tissue is directly proportional to the dose of the compound, several
factors may influence the amount of the substance that actually brings
about the toxic effect. The ab sorpt ion of the substance, its distribution
in the body, metabolic pro cesses and discharge mechanisms can affect
its concentration when molecules reach the receptor.
In order to assess the body’s reaction to the amount of the sub-
stance taken in, other factors and conditions should also be taken into
account. The key factors affecting the action of the substance are the
number of doses, the nature of intake (continuous, in specific doses),
the frequency of intake and the total time of action. Breakdown of
the amount of the substance into separate doses, as a rule, reduces
the toxicity of its action because the substance is transformed or
eliminated from the body as a result of metabolism.
Curves in Figure 6.7. show reactions in the body depending on
the quantity (dose) of the substance taken in.
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