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Selenium (Sodium selenite)
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Selenium (Sodium selenite)
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Selenium (Sodium selenite)
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Example Content from MEDITEXT for 10102-18-8:
Please note: this is an extract of information from a larger document. Full document and details are available by subscription.
ACUTE EXPOSURE INFORMATION
- Sodium selenite is a nonflammable, water-soluble selenium salt used as an alkaloidal chemical reagent, a reagent in bacteriology, for removing green color during glass manufacture, in decorating porcelain, as a livestock feed additive, and for testing seed germination.
- Sodium selenite is a colorless to white tetragonal, prismatic crystalline solid material.
- Elemental selenium has a relatively low order of toxicity; indeed, selenium is an ESSENTIAL TRACE METAL, and CHRONIC DEFICIENCY can lead to fatal cardiomyopathies. Industrial workers exposed for up to 26 years had a normal death pattern. All selenium salts can produce toxicity by ingestion, inhalation, and percutaneous absorption, although specific information on dermal absorption of sodium selenite was not found.
- Chronic selenium poisoning resembles chronic arsenic poisoning. Nausea, vomiting, white streaks of the nails, pallor, upper respiratory irritation, paronychiae, loss of hair, skin rashes, irritability, fatigue, hyperreflexia, a garlic odor on the breath, and a metallic taste in the mouth may be noted with chronic selenium exposure.
- Screening laboratory values such as complete blood counts and liver and renal function tests are usually within normal limits. Liver and renal lesions have been seen in experimental animals.
- Acute poisonings with selenium metal and its salts are rare. SELENITE toxicity may include facial flushing, a lightheaded sensation, and muscle tenderness and tremors.
- Inhalation of selenium dusts can cause headache, cough, nasal discharge, upper respiratory tract irritation, epistaxis, and olfactory fatigue. Transient dyspnea has been seen.
- Severe eye irritation may be seen with selenium dust exposure.
- While chronic occupational selenium exposure has not been reported to result in disabling disease, paralysis and hemiplegia were noted in an endemic outbreak of dietary hyperselenosis in China.
- Anemia and marked hepatic necrosis, hemorrhage, and cirrhosis were found in experimental animals fed 5 to 15 ppm of selenium chronically in the diet. These effects have not been reported in exposed humans.
- Sodium selenite releases toxic and irritating fumes of selenium and sodium oxide when heated to decomposition.
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