Dictionary Definition
intoxicated adj
1 stupefied or excited by a chemical substance
(especially alcohol); "a noisy crowd of intoxicated sailors";
"helplessly inebriated" [syn: drunk, inebriated] [ant: sober]
2 as if under the influence of alcohol; "felt
intoxicated by her success"; "drunk with excitement" [syn: drunk]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
- Stupefied by alcohol, drunk.
- Stupefied by any chemical substance.
Translations
Stupefied by alcohol
- Dutch: dronken, bedronken, gealcoholiseerd, zat italbrac Flemish
- German: alkoholisiert
- Romanian: beat
Stupefied by any chemical substance
- Finnish: päihtynyt
Verb
intoxicated- past of intoxicate
Extensive Definition
Toxicity is the degree to which something is able
to produce illness or damage to an exposed organism. Toxicity can
refer to the effect on a whole organism, such as a human or a
bacterium or a plant,
or to a substructure, such as a cell
(cytotoxicity) or an organ (organotoxicity such as the liver (hepatotoxicity). By
extension, the word may be metaphorically used to describe
toxic effects on larger and more complex groups, such as the family
unit or "society at large".
In the science of toxicology, toxicity is the
degree of impact of an external substance or condition and its
deleterious effects on living things: organisms, organ systems,
individual organs, tissues, cells, subcellular units is the subject
of study. A central concept of toxicology is that effects are
dose-dependent; even water
– generally not considered to be toxic – can lead to water
intoxication when taken in large enough doses, whereas for even
a very toxic substance such as snake venom
there is a dose below which there is no detectable toxic effect.
Toxicity is the ability of a chemical or physical agent to induce
detrimental temporary or permanent tissue change or to
detrimentally interfere with normal biochemical processing.
Types of toxicity
There are generally three types of toxic entities; chemical, biological, and physical.- Chemicals include inorganic substances such as lead, hydrofluoric acid, and chlorine gas, organic compounds such as methyl alcohol, most medications, and poisons from living things.
- Biological toxic entities include those bacteria and viruses that are able to induce disease in living organisms. Biological toxicity can be complicated to measure because the "threshold dose" may be a single organism. Theoretically one virus, bacterium or worm can reproduce to cause a serious infection. However, in a host with an intact immune system the inherent toxicity of the organism is balanced by the host's ability to fight back; the effective toxicity is then a combination of both parts of the relationship. A similar situation is also present with other types of toxic agents.
- Physically toxic entities include things not usually thought of under the heading of "toxic" by many people: direct blows, concussion, sound and vibration, heat and cold, non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation such as infrared and visible light, and ionizing radiation such as X-rays and alpha, beta, and gamma radiation.
Toxicity can be measured by the effects on the
target (organism, organ, tissue or cell). Because individuals
typically have different levels of response to the same dose of a
toxin, a population-level measure of toxicity is often used which
relates the probability of an outcome for a given individual in a
population. One such measure is the LD50. When such data
does not exist, estimates are made by comparison to known similar
toxic things, or to similar exposures in similar organisms. Then
"safety
factors" are added to account for uncertainties in data and
evaluation processes. For example, if a dose of toxin is safe for a
laboratory rat, one might assume that one tenth that dose would be
safe for a human, allowing a safety factor of 10 to allow for
interspecies differences between two mammals; if the data are from
fish, one might use a factor of 100 to account for the greater
difference between two chordate classes (fish and mammals).
Similarly, an extra protection factor may be used for individuals
believed to be more susceptible to toxic effects such as in
pregnancy or with certain diseases. Or, a newly synthesized and
previously unstudied chemical that is believed to be very similar
in effect to another compound could be assigned an additional
protection factor of 10 to account for possible differences in
effects that are probably much smaller. Obviously, this approach is
very approximate; but such protection factors are deliberately very
conservative and the method has been found to be useful in a wide
variety of applications.
Assessing all aspects of the toxicity of
cancer-causing agents involves additional issues, since it is not
certain if there is a minimal effective dose for carcinogens, or
whether the risk is just too small to see. In addition, it is
possible that a single cell transformed into a cancer cell is all
it takes to develop the full effect (the "one hit" theory).
It is more difficult to assess the toxicity of
chemical mixtures than of single, pure chemicals because each
component display its own toxicity and components may interact to
produce enhanced or diminished effects. Common mixtures include
gasoline, cigarette
smoke, and industrial
waste. Even more complex are situations with more than one type
of toxic entity, such as the discharge from a malfunctioning sewage
treatment plant, with both chemical and biological agents.
Factors influencing toxicity
Toxicity of a substance can be affected by many different factors, such as the pathway of administration (whether the toxin is applied to the skin, ingested, inhaled, injected), the time of exposure (a brief encounter or long term), the number of exposures (a single dose or multiple doses over time), the physical form of the toxin (solid, liquid, gas), the genetic makeup of an individual, an individual's overall health, and many others. Several of the terms used to describe these factors have been included here. ;chronic exposure: continuous exposure to a toxin over an extended period of time, often measured in months or years can cause irreversible side effects.Etymology
"Toxic" and similar words came from Greek τοξον = "bow (weapon)" via "poisoned arrow," which came to be used for "poison" in scientific language, as the usual Classical Greek word ('ιον) for "poison" would transcribe as "io-", which is not distinctive enough. In some biological names, "toxo-" still means "bow", as in Toxodon = "bow-toothed" from the shape.See also
- Biological activity
- Biological warfare
- California Proposition 65 (1986)
- Carcinogen
- Drunkenness
- Mutagen
- Toxication
- Nephrotoxicity
- Neurotoxicity
- Ototoxicity
- Paracelsus
- Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling.
- Poison
- RTECS - toxicity database
- Soil contamination
- Teratogen
- Toxin
- Toxic tort
- Toxicophore
- Indicative limit value
External links
intoxicated in Catalan: Toxicitat
intoxicated in Czech: Jed
intoxicated in Danish: Gift
intoxicated in German: Toxizität
intoxicated in Estonian: Mürk
intoxicated in Spanish: Toxicidad
intoxicated in Esperanto: Veneno
intoxicated in French: Toxicité
intoxicated in Korean: 독
intoxicated in Italian: Veleno
intoxicated in Hebrew: רעל
intoxicated in Latin: Venenum
intoxicated in Luxembourgish: Gëft
intoxicated in Lithuanian: Nuodas
intoxicated in Dutch: Giftigheid
intoxicated in Japanese: 毒
intoxicated in Norwegian: Gift
intoxicated in Norwegian Nynorsk: Gift
intoxicated in Polish: Trucizna
intoxicated in Portuguese: Veneno
intoxicated in Romanian: Toxicitate
intoxicated in Russian: Токсичность
intoxicated in Simple English: Poison
intoxicated in Slovak: Jed
intoxicated in Slovenian: Strup
intoxicated in Serbian: Отров
intoxicated in Finnish: Myrkyllisyys
intoxicated in Swedish: Gift
intoxicated in Turkish: Zehir
intoxicated in Chinese: 毒物
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandoned, ablaze, addled, affected, afire, amok, ardent, beery, befuddled, bellowing, bemused, berserk, besotted, blind, blind drunk, blotto, boiled, boiling over, bombed, boozy, breathless, burning, canned, carried away, cockeyed, concerned, cordial, crapulent, crapulous, crocked, cut, dazed, delirious, demoniac, disguised, distracted, dizzy, dopey, drenched, drunk, drunken, ecstatic, elated, enraptured, enthusiastic, excited, exhilarated, exuberant, far-gone, febrile, feral, ferocious, fervent, fervid, fevered, feverish, fierce, fiery, flaming, flushed, flustered, fou, frantic, frenzied, fried, fuddled, full, fulminating, furious, galvanized, gay, giddy, glorious, glowing, haggard, half-seas over,
happy, hearty, heated, hog-wild, hot, howling, hysterical, impassioned, in a transport,
in hysterics, in liquor, in the bag, inebriate, inebriated, inebrious, intense, interested, jagged, jolly, juiced, keen, lit, lit up, lively, loaded, looped, loopy, mad, madding, maniac, maudlin, mellow, merry, moved, muddled, nappy, oiled, on fire, organized, orgasmic, orgiastic, passionate, pickled, pie-eyed, piqued, pissed, pixilated, plastered, polluted, possessed, potted, rabid, raging, ramping, ranting, raving, ravished, red-hot, reeling, roaring, running mad, screwy, shikker, shot, sloppy, smashed, sodden, soppy, sotted, sozzled, steaming, steamy, stewed, stiff, stimulated, stinking, stinko, stoned, storming, swacked, tanked, tiddly, tight, tipsy, transported, turned-on,
uncontrollable,
under the influence, under the weather, unrestrained, vigorous, violent, warm, wet, wild, wild-eyed, wild-looking,
zealous, zonked