Dermatotoxin
A dermatotoxin or dermatoxin (from derma, the Greek word for skin) is a toxic chemical that damages skin, mucous membranes, or both, often leading to tissue necrosis. Dermatoxins can be drugs, natural chemicals, or synthetic chemicals.
The severity of the effects of a dermatoxic agent is strongly dependent on the dose, route of exposure, rate at which it spreads, and the health of the afflicted individual.
It can produce allergic contact dermatitis, changes that lead to skin cancer, chemical burns, irritant dermatitis, photodermatitis, phototoxicity, changes to pigmentation, and urticaria.[1]
Examples of dermatoxic substances
- T-2 toxin
- Sterigmatocystin
- Sulfur mustard
- Psoralen
- Cantharidin
See also
- Vesicant
References
- ↑ Barile, Frank A. (2019-04-24). Barile's Clinical Toxicology: Principles and Mechanisms. CRC Press. Table 4.9. ISBN 978-0-429-53201-6.
External links
- Dermatotoxins at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
This article is issued from Offline. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.