akcapr Posted April 25, 2005 Posted April 25, 2005 Whats is the unit of measure of how lethal or how much of sometin it takes to kill someone? like i know water even has one. I was just gonna see how much chromium oxide it takes/ how poisonous it is.
BenSon Posted April 25, 2005 Posted April 25, 2005 I think your refering to the LD50 this is the dose when 50% of the subjects died. It is usually measured in grams or milligrams depending on the subsatnce yes even water has an LD50. ~Scot
Dak Posted April 26, 2005 Posted April 26, 2005 the dose which will prove fatal to 50% of rats is the LD50 (rat). the dose which will prove fatal to 50% of humans is LD50 (human), and there is a mathmatical formula for converting LD50 (rat) --> LD50 (human), although its a bit innacurate. also, 50 isnt the only % used (although it is the most common): LD99 is also used for the 'almost always fatal level', LD0.01 is used for the 'this'll hardly ever kill someone' level etc. other toxilogical terms: LCx: lethal concentration at which x% of subjects die NOEL: no observable effect level NOAEL: no observable adverse effect level LOEL: lowest observable effect level LOAEL: lowest observable adverse effect level. couldnt find much on the toxisity of chromium oxide, the only info i could find is that its NOAEL (chronic)(rat) is estimated at 4.4mg/m31, and that it appearst to be mutagenic2 check out reference 2 for a full toxisity report on chromium oxide. (basically, dont eat it)
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