poisoning Shellfish : Seafood toxins : based on a symposium sponsored by the Division of Agricultural and Food Chemistry at the 186th meeting of the American Chemical Society, Washington, D.C., August 28-September 2, 1983 / Edward P. Ragelis, editor
1984
1
Poisoning -- Social aspects : Poison on the early modern English stage : plants, paints and potions / edited by Lisa Hopkins, Bill Angus
2023
1
poisoning Solvents : Gulf War and health. Volume 2, Insecticides and solvents / Committee on Gulf War and Health: Literature Review of Pesticides and Solvents, Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
2003
1
poisoning Strychnine : Report of the case of Geo. C. Hersey, indicted for the murder of Betsy Frances Tirrell, before the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts : including the hearing on the motion in arrest of judgment, the prisoner's petition for a commutation of sentence, the death warrant, officer's return upon it, and the confession / by James M.W. Yerrinton
1862
1
poisoning Tetrodotoxin : Passage of darkness : the ethnobiology of the Haitian zombie / by Wade Davis
Disorders associated with acute or chronic exposure to compounds containing ARSENIC (ARSENICALS) which may be fatal. Acute oral ingestion is associated with gastrointestinal symptoms and an encephalopathy which may manifest as SEIZURES, mental status changes, and COMA. Chronic exposure is associated with mucosal irritation, desquamating rash, myalgias, peripheral neuropathy, and white transverse (Mees) lines in the fingernails. (Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p1212)
Systemic inflammatory response syndrome with a proven or suspected infectious etiology. When sepsis is associated with organ dysfunction distant from the site of infection, it is called severe sepsis. When sepsis is accompanied by HYPOTENSION despite adequate fluid infusion, it is called SEPTIC SHOCK
Disorders associated with acute or chronic exposure to compounds containing ARSENIC (ARSENICALS) which may be fatal. Acute oral ingestion is associated with gastrointestinal symptoms and an encephalopathy which may manifest as SEIZURES, mental status changes, and COMA. Chronic exposure is associated with mucosal irritation, desquamating rash, myalgias, peripheral neuropathy, and white transverse (Mees) lines in the fingernails. (Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p1212)
Neurologic disorders caused by exposure to toxic substances through ingestion, injection, cutaneous application, or other method. This includes conditions caused by biologic, chemical, and pharmaceutical agents
Disorders associated with acute or chronic exposure to compounds containing ARSENIC (ARSENICALS) which may be fatal. Acute oral ingestion is associated with gastrointestinal symptoms and an encephalopathy which may manifest as SEIZURES, mental status changes, and COMA. Chronic exposure is associated with mucosal irritation, desquamating rash, myalgias, peripheral neuropathy, and white transverse (Mees) lines in the fingernails. (Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p1212)
Poisoning by the ingestion of plants or its leaves, berries, roots or stalks. The manifestations in both humans and animals vary in severity from mild to life threatening. In animals, especially domestic animals, it is usually the result of ingesting moldy or fermented forage
Poisonous animals -- Alabama : Poisonous plants and venomous animals of Alabama and adjoining states / Whit Gibbons, Robert R. Haynes, Joab L. Thomas ; with a foreword by Robert J. Geller