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The history of arsenical pesticides and health risks related to the use of Agent Blue
V. Bencko, F. Yan Li Foong,
Language English Country Poland
Document type Historical Article, Journal Article
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
from 1998
ProQuest Central
from 1997-01-01 to 2022-01-31
Open Access Digital Library
from 1997-01-01
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
from 1997-01-01 to 2022-01-31
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
from 1994
PubMed
28664715
DOI
10.26444/aaem/74715
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- History, 20th Century MeSH
- History, 21st Century MeSH
- Food Contamination analysis MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Agricultural Workers' Diseases epidemiology etiology history MeSH
- Arsenic Poisoning epidemiology etiology history MeSH
- Pesticides history toxicity MeSH
- Risk MeSH
- Environmental Exposure analysis history statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Check Tag
- History, 20th Century MeSH
- History, 21st Century MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Historical Article MeSH
Arsenicals in agriculture. Beginning in the 1970s, the use of arsenic compounds for such purposes as wood preservatives, began to grow. By 1980, in the USA, 70% of arsenic had been consumed for the production of wood preservatives. This practice was later stopped, due to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ban of the arsenic-and chromium-based wood preservative chromated copper arsenate. In the past, arsenical herbicides containing cacodylic acid as an active ingredient have been used extensively in the USA, from golf courses to cotton fields, and drying-out the plants before harvesting. The original commercial form of Agent Blue was among 10 toxic insecticides, fungicides and herbicides partially deregulated by the US EPA in February 2004, and specific limits on toxic residues in meat, milk, poultry and eggs, were removed. Today, however, they are no longer used as weed-killers, with one exception - monosodium methanearsonate (MSMA), a broadleaf weed herbicide for use on cotton. Severe poisonings from cacodylic acid caused headache, dizziness, vomiting, profuse and watery diarrhea, followed by dehydration, gradual fall in blood pressure, stupor, convulsions, general paralysis and possible risk of death within 3-14 days.The relatively frequent use of arsenic and its compounds in both industry and agriculture points to a wide spectrum of opportunities for human exposure. This exposure can be via inhalation of airborne arsenic, contaminated drinking water, beverages, or from food and drugs. Today, acute organic arsenical poisonings are mostly accidental. Considerable concern has developed surrounding its delayed effects, for its genotoxic and carcinogenic potential, which has been demonstrated in epidemiological studies and subsequent animal experiments. Conclusions. There is substantial epidemiological evidence for an excessive risk, mostly for skin and lung cancer, among humans exposed to organic arsenicals in occupational and environmental settings. Furthermore, the genotoxic and carcinogenic effects have only been observed at relatively high exposure rates. Current epidemiological and experimental studies are attempting to elucidate the mechanism of this action, pointing to the question whether arsenic is actually a true genotoxic, or rather an epigenetic carcinogen. Due to the complexity of its effects, both options remain plausible. Its interactions with other toxic substances still represent another important field of interest.
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