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Toxicological considerations physiological determinants

As defined in Section 6.8, a xenobiotic species is one that is foreign to living systems. Common examples include heavy metals, such as lead, which serve no physiologic function, and synthetic organic compounds, which are not made in nature. Exposure of organisms to xenobiotic materials is a very important consideration in environmental and toxicological chemistry. Therefore, the determination of exposure by various analytical techniques is one of the more crucial aspects of environmental chemistry. [Pg.414]

In recent years life science researchers have become more earnest in their considerations that trace elements have important roles in physiology and pathology. So far, some of these experimenters have used activation analysis (1) to measure the elemental contents of biological tissues and fluids (2) to determine if a correlation exists between abnormal trace element concentration and certain types of diseases (3) as an investigational method for epidemiological functions (4) to measure metabolic functions (5) as a clinical and investigational method for toxicology (6) in total body in vivo studies (7) in in vivo studies with stable tracers and (8) in individual identifications for forensic requirements. [Pg.366]


See other pages where Toxicological considerations physiological determinants is mentioned: [Pg.248]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.868]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.367]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.71]   


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Physiologic considerations

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