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The Dose Makes the Poison: A Plain-Language Guide to Toxicology, 2nd Edition
 
 
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The Dose Makes the Poison: A Plain-Language Guide to Toxicology, 2nd Edition [Paperback]

M. Alice Ottoboni (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0471288373 978-0471288374 May 1, 1997 2
The Dose Makes the Poison A Plain-Language Guide to Toxicology Second Edition M. Alice Ottoboni Increasing media coverage of reports on the effects of chemicals, new recognition within government and industry of the need to protect against exposure, and other current issues are elevating the public's concern about the health effects of synthetic chemicals in our environment. Unfortunately, much of this concern is based more on sensational news reports and half-truths than on scientific facts. This second edition of a widely read and highly acclaimed work reviews and explains the facts of chemical dangers in a clear and understandable manner. It objectively discusses the factors determining whether chemicals in our air, food, and water are harmful or harmless, and puts the dose - response relationship of chemicals in proper perspective. Effects of chemicals encountered at home and at work are presented in layman's language to assure understanding without having to turn to other references. Thoughtful discussions of controversial issues help you to understand news media reports on toxicology, avoid the half-truths that lead to "poison paranoia," and make informed judgments about our use and control of chemicals. Extensively revised, the second edition is also reorganized to expedite access to specific information. All experimental and analytical methods are in one section, and references to the origins of toxicology and regulation of chemicals are in another separate section to improve ease of reading. In addition, coverage of subjects such as public distrust of science, epidemiology, reproductive toxicology, and risk have been expanded to provide a better understanding of the relationship of toxicology to current environmental problems. All aspects of exposure and its effects are reviewed, including
* How chemicals cause harm--toxicity, sensitization, corrosiveness, irritation, radioactivity, and other properties
* Routes of exposure--skin, inhalation, oral, and combinations
* Factors that influence degree of toxicity--species, age, sex, nutrition, state of health, presence of other chemicals, adaptation, and possibly, light
* Chemicals that cause cancer and birth defects
Chapters on toxicity of chemicals address no-effect levels and thresholds, margins of safety, and bioaccumulation. You'll see how the effects of chemicals are studied and how health problems are traced to environmental causes. Also clarified are differences between actual risk and perceived risk of various chemicals. With the media presenting us daily with new findings on chemical risks, this book provides a welcome "antidote" to the confusion. The Dose Makes the Poison is an easy-to-read review of toxicology that has become "required reading" for scientists and managers throughout industry; public health officials; environmental scientists; industrial hygienists; hazardous waste workers ; and anyone who wishes to improve his or her understanding of toxic chemicals without taking the time to go back to school.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Alice Ottoboni's second edition of "The Dose Makes The Poison", a "plain language guide to toxicology" is must reading for every industrial hygienist, client, employer, and daily contact of the industrial hygienist. Ottoboni takes us on a well organized tour of toxicology in layman's terms. The distinctions between poison, toxicity and hazard are sharply drawn. Thorough explanations of factors that influence toxicity are included. Cogent examples using using everday items like foods which contain toxic materials (caffeine in coffee, solanine in potatoes, or ethanol in vodka) make clear the ability of the body to handle divided doses. Dr. Ottoboni helps us understand the difference between the trauma we cause from a needless fear of a chemical than the trauma we cause when we permit exposure to toxicologically significant amounts of that chemical. -- Dr. H. L. Kusnetz, past president of the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA) and the American Academy of Industrial Hygiene (AAIH)

From the Back Cover

The Dose Makes the Poison A Plain-Language Guide to Toxicology Second Edition M. Alice Ottoboni Increasing media coverage of reports on the effects of chemicals, new recognition within government and industry of the need to protect against exposure, and other current issues are elevating the public’s concern about the health effects of synthetic chemicals in our environment. Unfortunately, much of this concern is based more on sensational news reports and half-truths than on scientific facts. This second edition of a widely read and highly acclaimed work reviews and explains the facts of chemical dangers in a clear and understandable manner. It objectively discusses the factors determining whether chemicals in our air, food, and water are harmful or harmless, and puts the dose - response relationship of chemicals in proper perspective. Effects of chemicals encountered at home and at work are presented in layman’s language to assure understanding without having to turn to other references. Thoughtful discussions of controversial issues help you to understand news media reports on toxicology, avoid the half-truths that lead to "poison paranoia," and make informed judgments about our use and control of chemicals. Extensively revised, the second edition is also reorganized to expedite access to specific information. All experimental and analytical methods are in one section, and references to the origins of toxicology and regulation of chemicals are in another separate section to improve ease of reading. In addition, coverage of subjects such as public distrust of science, epidemiology, reproductive toxicology, and risk have been expanded to provide a better understanding of the relationship of toxicology to current environmental problems. All aspects of exposure and its effects are reviewed, including
  • How chemicals cause harm—toxicity, sensitization, corrosiveness, irritation, radioactivity, and other properties
  • Routes of exposure—skin, inhalation, oral, and combinations
  • Factors that influence degree of toxicity—species, age, sex, nutrition, state of health, presence of other chemicals, adaptation, and possibly, light
  • Chemicals that cause cancer and birth defects
Chapters on toxicity of chemicals address no-effect levels and thresholds, margins of safety, and bioaccumulation. You’ll see how the effects of chemicals are studied and how health problems are traced to environmental causes. Also clarified are differences between actual risk and perceived risk of various chemicals. With the media presenting us daily with new findings on chemical risks, this book provides a welcome "antidote" to the confusion. The Dose Makes the Poison is an easy-to-read review of toxicology that has become "required reading" for scientists and managers throughout industry; public health officials; environmental scientists; industrial hygienists; hazardous waste workers ; and anyone who wishes to improve his or her understanding of toxic chemicals without taking the time to go back to school.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 2 edition (May 1, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471288373
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471288374
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #887,246 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Useful book, plodding effort, April 16, 2002
By 
Nicolas S. Martin (Indianapolis, IN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Dose Makes the Poison: A Plain-Language Guide to Toxicology, 2nd Edition (Paperback)
Dr. Ottoboni has two simple objectives in writing this book: to descibe the basics of toxicology and to refute unscientific views about chemicals and their toxicity that lead to unwarranted scares. She accomplishes her goals, but with some discomfort for the reader. Her style is that of a didactic bureaucrat and there are many words that could have been trimmed by an assertive editor. Considering the technical nature of the book and its many scientific assertions, it is inexcusable that the book has no footnotes. Apparently the reader is supposed to accept her declarations at face value. Ottoboni occasionially falls into a trap that she herself warns against by commenting about issues on which he has no expertise. She says, for instance, that the "medical profession now generally accepts the premise that stress can exert a profound influence on the course of many illnesses. Stress can actually be an etiologic (causitive) agent for some cases of such diseases as high blood pressure, ulcers, allergies, colitis, and even cancer." Unfortunately for her, the fact that it was generally accepted did not make it true that ulcers are caused by stress. They are now known to be caused by a bacteria and the former claim that they were caused by stress is a major embarassment to medicine, which made this bogus claim in lieu of proof. It is also highly contestable that the other diseases she names are actually caused by stress, and she offers no evidence for her claim. (Medicine has a tragic history of attributing many diseases to emotional disorder, not the least of which was epilepsy, but Ottoboni shows no awareness of this.) Ottoboni should have restricted herself to what is proven, not what is "accepted." When she writes that "an authority in one field is not, of necessity, an authority in all of the others" she should have understood that that also applies to herself. Instead of this expensive book I would suggest a couple of very well written and documented books that go at the same issues from different perspectives. The first is Edith Efron's "The Apocalyptics : How Environmental Politics Controls What We Know About Cancer," and the second is the recent book, "The Skeptical Environmentalist," by Bjorn Lomborg. Both are superb, readable and worth buying. Borrow the Ottoboni book from the library.

Update: This review is for the second edition. I see now that a third edition has been published which no longer mentions stress as a cause of ulcers. It also shows that Dr. Ottoboni has taken on a co-author, so perhaps it addresses my criticisms. I'll give it a read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough and accessible, December 2, 2011
By 
Phelps Gates (Chapel Hill, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
An excellent explanation of what Toxicology is all about. The book makes no assumptions about any prior knowledge on the part of the reader, either of chemistry or of biology, and manages to cover the subject thoroughly and clearly. In some ways it was not quite what I expected: as a longtime fan of CSI and police procedurals, I had expected more about forensic toxicology, which hardly gets covered at all. But I certainly learned a lot. In spite of containing a lot of information, the book manages to be readable and easy to follow for the general reader. It does seem rather expensive for a paperback of this size: probably the intended market is public libraries. (There are some editing problems, perhaps corrected in a later printing. Bhopal is misspelled twice. One milligram is one 28thousandth of an ounce, not a 128thousandth. And the failure to superscript 23 in Avogadro's number - not 6 times 1023 - makes the Appendix incomprehensible).
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Big words made clear, November 25, 2011
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
This book is an introduction to the field of toxicology written for informed audiences who may not have a background in science. Frank is a toxicology consultant who works in the field of pharmaceutical registration. Ottoboni is a toxicologist for the California State Department of Public Health and the author of previous editions of this book. The book's topics include the following: what are chemicals, what harm do chemicals cause, what is toxicology and how is it studied, mutagenesis, carcinogenesis, and reproductive toxicity, epidemiology, and the study of risk. End material includes a brief bibliography, a list of abbreviations, a glossary, and an explanation of moles and Avogadro's number. The text is illustrated with a few photographs, illustrations, graphs, and chemical diagrams.

I found this book quite clear and accessible, even though the material covered can be rather complex. The authors' descriptions of such topics as LD50 or the importance of routes of exposure are quite easy to follow and helpful for making sense of toxicology reports. As I read through the book, however, I kept getting the sense of a hidden agenda: virtually all the examples and discussion point out that toxins aren't as dangerous as people might think. The authors even note how the tragedy of the Bhopal disaster was due to shoddy manufacturing processes, not the pesticides being produced. This claim may be true, but there certainly must be other cases where pesticides and other poisons have caused demonstrable harm to humans; however, such examples are never brought out in this text. Readers are cautioned to note the source and quality of toxicity information they encounter, and to avoid exaggerated ire from anti-chemical demagogues, but the importance of carefully examining and perhaps discounting research supported by industry giants showing the supposed safety of their products is avoided in this text.

Risk assessment, one of the key foundations of toxicology, receives only a brief discussion at the end of the book. It would have been useful to have a little more in-depth coverage of this topic, or at least a practical example or two. Overall, the information in the book seems to be accurate. But there is an odd claim towards the end of the book, "there are no documented cases of human cancer from exposure to trace quantities of chemical carcinogens." What about arsenic in drinking water? Given long enough exposures, arsenic at concentrations of 50 ppb, or perhaps even less, is associated with increased risk of skin, lung, bladder, liver, prostrate, and breast cancer; such exposures, and their resultant cancers, are becoming more common as populations shift to drinking groundwater without prior testing for toxic metals. Perhaps the authors meant that, as with tobacco, no particular case of cancer can be specifically linked to a particular exposure, or that a single exposure to a trace quantity of toxin does not lead to cancer; at the very least, the statement is unclear, ambiguous, or misleading, given the clear links between chronic exposures to trace quantities of certain chemicals and cancer. Thus, while the book is informative and clear, readers should keep in mind a possible bias towards understating the dangers of chemicals.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The word chemical has become a dirty word in our modern American vocabulary. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
poison paranoia, practicing risk management, nonpersistent pesticides, toxic acutely, primary carcinogens, chronic toxicity testing, chronic toxic effects, more toxic form, foreign chemicals, systemic damage, background incidence, harmful properties, influence toxicity
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Suggested Reading, Federal Register, World War, Los Angeles, Delaney Clause, Agent Orange, Hazardous Substances Labeling Act, Houghton Mifflin, Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, University of California
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