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Heavy metal poisoning

The term heavy metal may have various more general or more specific meanings. more...

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According to one definition, the heavy metals are a group of elements between copper and lead on the periodic table of the elements—having atomic weights between 63.546 and 200.590 and specific gravities greater than 4.0. Living organisms require trace amounts of some heavy metals, including cobalt, copper, manganese, molybdenum, vanadium, strontium, and zinc, but excessive levels can be detrimental to the organism. Other heavy metals such as mercury, lead and cadmium have no known vital or beneficial effect on organisms, and their accumulation over time in the bodies of mammals can cause serious illness.

A stricter definition restricts the term to those metals heavier than the rare earth metals, at the bottom of the periodic table. None of these are essential elements in biological systems; all of the more well-known elements with the exception of bismuth and gold are horribly toxic. Thorium and uranium are sometimes included as well, but they are more often called simply "radioactive metals".

In medical usage, the definition is considerably looser, and "heavy metal poisoning" can include excessive amounts of iron, manganese, aluminium, or beryllium (the second-lightest metal) as well as the true heavy metals.

Also, often the elements beyond mercury, e.g., the actinides such as uranium and plutonium, are not excluded from the heavy metals. In the context of nuclear power plants, tHM means tons of heavy metal.

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Heavy metal poisoning
Heavy metal poisoning is the toxic accumulation of heavy metals in the soft tissues of the body.
Heavy metal poisoning
Heavy metal poisoning is the toxic accumulation of heavy metals in the soft tissues of the body.
Inhalational nickel carbonyl poisoning in waste processing workers
Background: Nickel carbonyl is formed when carbon monoxide comes into contact with active nickel. The inhaled nickel carbonyl is rapidly absorbed and ...
Heavy metal - a case of mercury poisoning
A pathologist examined the corpse of a 35-year-old man who had succumbed to a very sudden attack of pneumonia. The cause was found to be mercury poisoning.
Lead poisoning
Lead poisoning occurs when a person swallows or inhales lead in any form. The result can be damaging to the brain, nerves, and many other parts of the body. Acute lead poisoning, which is somewhat rar
Lead Therapy Won't Help Most Kids - chelation therapy found ineffective for most childrern with lead poisoning - Brief Article
Drugs exist that will bind to lead and remove the toxic heavy metal from a person's blood. This therapy, called chelation, has saved the lives of people ...
Medicinal herbs: a potential source of toxic metal exposure for man and animals in India
To explore the possibility of translocation of heavy metals into humans and animals, the authors studied 28 commonly used medicinal plants and estimated ...
Chelation therapy
Chelation therapy is the administration of a drug that draws toxic metals from the bloodstream so that the body can pass them more effectively in urine ...

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