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Natural Gas Poisoning Symptoms Curative treatment of poisoning Most poisons taken in sufficient quantity are lethal. A toxic substance can come from a mineral, plant or animal and it may take the form of a solid, liquid or gaseous. A poison, depending on the type, may attack the body surface or, more seriously the internal organs. Poisons in humans are usually classified according to their corrosive effects, irritant, or systemic poisons. Corrosives include strong acids or bases which cause destruction of the local, external or internal, that is, they burn the skin or mucosa of the stomach. Vomiting occurs immediately, and vomiting is mixed with blood. Common household poisons or corrosive called hydrochloric acid, carbolic acid, mercuric chloride and ammonia. Irritants such as arsenic, mercury, iodine, and laxatives act directly on the mucosa, causing gastrointestinal irritation or inflammation accompanied by pain and vomiting diluted corrosive poisons also these effects. Irritants include cumulative poisons, substances that can be absorbed gradually without apparent harm until they suddenly take effect. Systemic poisons act on the central nervous system or on major organs until they touch the respiratory and circulatory systems. These poisons can cause seizures or delirium. Blood poisoning, also bacterial in nature, is a condition that occurs when virulent micro-organisms invade the blood from an injury or infection. Symptoms include chills, fever, prostration, and often secondary infections or abscesses in various organs. Most poison gas also affect blood circulation. Because these gases to restrict the body's ability to absorb oxygen, they are often regarded as a separate category called poison, including carbon monoxide during the group belongs. poison gas, however, can also be corrosive or irritant. About 50 percent of cases of intoxication of man in the West with commonly used drugs or household products such as Aspirin, pesticides and cosmetics. Because barbiturates are easily available, toxic effects resulting from their misuse are not uncommon. Acute poisoning can lead to overdose or interaction with other drugs, especially alcohol. The victim of acute barbiturate poisoning may become agitated and nauseated, or may pass into a deep sleep characterized by breathing more and more weak. Coma and heart failure may follow. Chronic barbiturate poisoning, caused by prolonged use of drugs, is usually marked by gastrointestinal irritation, loss of appetite and anemia. In advanced stages of chronic barbiturate poisoning the victim may show mental confusion. In most cases, the use of the dilution is advised that the ingestion of large quantities of water or milk. In other cases, it is advisable to use an emetic, a substance that induces vomiting and rids the stomach of certain poisons. An emetic may act locally, as on the gastric nerves, or regularly on the part of the brain that causes vomiting. Household emetics, which act locally, including a tablespoon of salt dissolved in warm water or two tablespoons of mustard dissolved in a liter of water. Emetics should not be given to a person who has swallowed a corrosive poison. An antidote , unlike an emetic, is a remedy that counteracts the effects of a chemical poison, even if it may lead indirectly to vomiting. An antidote is a drug used in addition to special measures not to counteract the effects of another drug or chemical Posted on August 20, 2010.
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