Toxins and Venoms: The Bad and Good

More and more research studies are revealing that a little bit of some toxins can be quite helpful to human health, but first some background on these dangerous materials.

“Toxins surrounds us. It’s not just too much of a bad thing like arsenic that can cause trouble, it’s too much of nearly anything. Too much vitamin A, hypervitaminosis, can cause liver damage. Too much vitamin D can damage the kidneys. Too much water can result in hyponatremia, a dilution of the blood’s salt content, which disrupts brain heart and muscle function,” reports Cathy Newman. (1)

Synthetic versus natural? The three most toxic chemicals known to date are natural products—botulinum toxin (less than 1 mg needed to kill a man), tetanus toxin and diptheria toxin. (2)

The relative potency of some classes of toxic chemicals are listed in Table 1.

Table 1- Relative potency of some classes of chemicals*

Class of chemicals Lethal dose to mice

ug/kg body weight

Bacterial toxins 0.00003 to 1

Animal venoms 10 to 100

Algal toxins 10 to 1.000

Mushroom toxins 1,000s

Mycotoxins 1,000 to 10,000

Sodium cyanide 10,000

Pesticides 10,000s

* C.K. Winter et al., “Chemicals in the Human Food Chain, (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1990)

Another way to present some toxic data is shown in Table 2.

Table 2- Hold a nickel in your hand. Here’s how many lethal doses equal that nickel’s weight.*

Thallium 5

1080 Rat Poison 7

Cyanide 25

Strychnine 50

Nicotine 111

Botulinum 100,000,000

Anthrax 500,000,000

* Cathy Newman, “12 toxic tales,” National Geographic, 207, 2, May 2005

Venomous Species

There are over 200,000 venomous species of animals across the world, from tiny ants to Komodo dragons. For humans, most encounters with venom are the result of snake bites. The World Health Organization estimates that 5.4 million people are bitten every year with between 81,000 and 138,000 people dying as a result of snake bites, with far more left permanently disabled. (3)

It’s not just snakes that cause serious harm with their venom. Australia is home to the world’s deadliest spiders.

And there are over 1,000 species of venomous fish.

In the US, between 90 and 100 people die every year from allergic reactions to insect stings.

Now here’s a surprise: a little amount of some venoms and toxins can be quite helpful to human health.

Snake Venom

While venom has a bad reputation, it is being utilized by scientists to develop life saving medicines. A widely used medication for high blood pressure was developed 45 years ago using a modified version of a toxin from a the Brazilian lancehead pit viper. Today, 45 years later, it is till a 10 billion a year market. (3)

Many venoms target the same molecules that need to be controlled to treat diseases. One of the world’s most poisonous snakes might hold the key to new pain therapies in its venom. As ironic as this sounds, a protein component in black mamba venom called ‘mambalgin’ has been shown to act as a pain killer in mice.

Other research shows that seven compounds of the countless found in spider venom block a key step in the body’s ability to pass pain signals to the brain. The hunt for a medicine based on just one of these compounds, which would open up a new class of potent pain killers is now a step closer. (4)

Spider Venom

Part of the search for new medicines has focused on the world’s 45,000 species of spiders, many of which kill their prey with venoms that contain hundreds—or even thousands- of protein molecules. Some of these molecules block nerve activity.

New research shows that seven compounds of the countless found in spider venom block a key step in the body’s ability to pass pain signals to the brain. The hunt for a medicine based on just one of these compounds, which would open up a new class of potent pain killers is now a step closer. (4)

Botox

The bacterium Clostridium botulinum produces a poison so deadly that a few hundredths of an ounce can kill a million people. Small wonder it’s one of the most dreaded agents of biological warfare as evident from Table 2. Yet it is also one of the most widely used therapeutic drugs, at least in domesticated form known as Botox.

Originally developed for the treatment of uncontrollable blinking, Botox is now used to help treat some 40 ailments ranging from crippling diseases such as cerebral palsy and Parkinson’s to less than life threatening troubles like facial wrinkles and excessive sweating. It may even ease migraines for some people. (5)

Hydrogen Sulfide

Besides being an annoyance, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is highly toxic, being the second most common cause of fatal gas inhalation exposures in the workplace (at 7.7 percent, second to carbon monoxide at 36 percent).The health effects are dependent (the dose makes the poison), and at high enough concentrations, the gas can be fatal within seconds. High exposures cause respiratory failure. Lower exposures can cause a variety of symptoms, ranging from irritation to labored breathing and unconsciousness. (6)

However, hydrogen sulfide is not the devil. Beneath the danger and stench is a molecule as basic and indispensable as sodium chloride. The gas is produced in all of the body’s tissues, all the time, regardless of what was for dinner.

Studies have shown that this compound is involved in many physiological functions, and may have significant therapeutic applications. Notably, along with nitric oxide and carbon monoxide, H2S is a so-called gasotransmitter.

Mounting evidence indicates that the gas plays a beneficial role in the health of the cardiovascular system and other parts of the body.

Based on these findings, researchers are developing H2S based therapies for conditions ranging from cardiovascular disease to irritable bowel syndrome.

Recent research suggests that slower transit time—that is, longer exposure to this nasty stuff, may in fact be of benefit. Hydrogen sulfide appears to prevent inflammation and it sometime consequences, ulcerative colitis and cancer. In rodent studies, the gas has a significant anti-inflammatory effect on the walls of the digestive tract: the opposite of what aspirin does in there.

Aspirin and ibuprofen combat inflammation everywhere but the stomach and bowels; there they create inflammation. Used in tandem with hydrogen sulfide, aspirin or ibuprofen may be thousands of times as potent at preventing tumor growth—at least, in mice and in laboratory grown tumor cells. Human trials have not yet begun, reports Mary Roach. (7)

Also, physiologic role for H2S in regulating blood pressure raises the possibility that pharmacologic blood pressure enhancement of H2S formation could be an alternative approach for treatment of hypertension. (8)

Warfarin- Rat Poison

The drug label for a common rat poison called warfarin illustrates the importance of the disclosure statement. Doctors prescribe warfarin for tens of thousands of human patients every year. DuPont sells the drug under the trade name of Coumadin. Warfarin kills rats by blocking the capacity to form blood clots. As a result, the animals hemorrhage and die. Coumadin provides a textbook example that the difference between a poison and a drug is the dose.

At the right dose, Coumadin can prevent unwanted blood clots from forming in the blood. After a heart attack, and certain other cardiac events, some individuals are at great risk that the blood may coagulate and form a small clot. If this clot lodges in the brain, the result is a stroke. Clots can also form in the in the lungs, in veins of the legs and other extremities. The drug label of Coumadin describes its ability to prevent clots. (9)

Nitric Oxide

An unlikely wonder drug is the unstable free radical nitric oxide (NO) gas, which is found in cigarette smoke and smog. Not long ago, no one would have dreamed how important nitric oxide is within our bodies. Now, it is being implicated in everything from memory to blood pressure. Tiny puffs of NO mediate an extraordinary range of biological properties in our bodies, ranging from destruction of tumor cells to the control of blood pressure. (10)

NO was the first gas to be approved as a drug product. Although oxygen and N2O (laughing gas) have been used medically for many years, they never were subjected to the current rigorous approval process. Most of the anesthetic gases are actually volatile liquids; therefore, NO is unique in the pharmaceutical industry. (11)

Carbon Monoxide

Researchers have shown that carbon monoxide (CO) can be used to reverse pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), which is caused by uncontrolled proliferation of the smooth muscle cells of the pulmonary arteries—blood vessels that carry blood from the heart to the lungs. (12)

Summary

Edward Calabrese of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, is a strong proponent of hormesis, a scientific term that means low doses help and high doses hurt. He’s concerned that if researchers don’t begin regularly probing the effects of agents at very low doses, scientists will continue to miss important health impacts—both good and bad, of pollutants, drugs and other agents.

Two obvious benefits can accrue from testing effects at low doses: 1- medical help might be found from material otherwise known to be toxic and 2- if traces of certain pollutants are not as dangerous as previous estimates had suggested, perhaps some overly stringent regulations could be changed.

References

1. Cathy Newman, “12 toxic tales,” National Geographic, 207, 2, May 2005
2. C.K. Winter et al., “Chemicals in the Human Food Chain, (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1990)
3. Hannah Osborne, “Literally dying screaming: most painful and deadly toxins revealed by venom experts,” newsweek.com, October 31, 2021
4. “Spider venom reveals seven promising compounds with the potential to relieve chronic pain,” healthnewsdigest.com, March 4, 2015
5. Susan Freinkel, “New remedies from old poisons,” Discover, 23, 48, July 2002
6. Michael D. Shaw, “Hydrogen sulfide: yes, it’s nasty,” HealthNewsDigest.com, October 23, 2018
7. Mary Roach, Gulp, (New York, W. W. Norton & Company, 2013)
8. Guangdong Yang et al., “H2S as a physiologic vasorelaxant: Hypertension in mice with deletion of cystathionine -lyase,” Science 322, 587, October 24, 2008
9. Thomas J. Moore, Deadly Medicine, (New York, Simon & Schuster, 1995)
10. C. Djerassi, NO, Penguin Books, 1998
11. A. K. Taylor, “Nitric oxide- from pollutant to product,” Chemical Innovation 30, 41 (April 2000)
12. Victoria Gill, “Silent killer as treatment for heart and lung disease,” chemistryworld.com, September 20, 2006

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Comments (5)

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    T. C. Clark

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    The CIA decided that cyanide pills might be painful so sought an alternative…saxitoxin from shellfish…Francis Gary Powers supposedly had this option with him on his last U2 flight….a hollow silver dollar with a small amount of poison in a needle device and death within minutes.

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  • Avatar

    Joseph Olson

    |

    By age ten, I had wild caught coral, copperhead, water moscosin and massasauga rattlesnakes, as well as a 3 ft alligator. Dealing with dangerous and venomous reptiles was good training for dealing with shape shifting, two legged reptiles.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Roslyn Ross

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    Which is why Homeopathic medicine is so brilliant – the harmful reduced to the harmless but retaining the medicinal values.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Tom

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    I think we should add mRNA spike protein injections to the list.

    Reply

  • My Homepage

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