Title of article :
Synergy and other ineffective mixture risk definitions
Author/Authors :
Richard C.Hertzber ga، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Margaret M.MacDonell b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
A substantial effort has been spent over the past few decades to label toxicologic interaction outcomes as
synergistic, antagonistic, or additive.Although useful in influencing the emotions of the public and the press, these
labels have contributed fairly little to our understanding of joint toxic action.Part of the difficulty is that their
underlying toxicological concepts are only defined for two chemical mixtures, while most environmental and
occupational exposures are to mixtures of many more chemicals.Furthermor e, the mathematical characterizations of
synergism and antagonism are inextricably linked to the prevailing definition of ‘no interaction,’ instead of some
intrinsic toxicological property.For example, the US EPA has selected dose addition as the no-interaction definition
for mixture risk assessment, so that synergism would represent toxic effects that exceed those predicted from dose
addition.For now, labels such as synergism are useful to regulatory agencies, both for qualitative indications of
public health risk as well as numerical decision tools for mixture risk characterization.Efforts to quantify interaction
designations for use in risk assessment formulas, however, are highly simplified and carry large uncertainties.Several
research directions, such as pharmacokinetic measurements and models, and toxicogenomics, should promote
significant improvements by providing multi-component data that will allow biologically based mathematical models
of joint toxicity to replace these pairwise interaction labels in mixture risk assessment procedures.
Keywords :
Interaction , Synergism , Mixture , risk assessment , Joint toxicity , Additivity
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment