RightAnswer Knowledge Solutions Search Results for Ammonia

New Search  |  Search Results (Ammonia)  |  Index of Example Chemical Results Pages
register now
RightAnswer Knowledge Solutions provides access to hundreds of data sources. Our premier and proprietary sources include fully-researched documents from well-established experts in the chemical and HazMat fields.

A search in our system for this chemical would return results – all in one place -- in the following categories from the listed data sources.
  • Chemical Identification
  • Environmental Hazards
  • First Aid/Medical Treatment
  • Handling/Storage/Shipping/Waste Management
  • MSDS Documents
  • Personal Protection
  • Physical Hazards/Corrective Response Actions
  • Physical/Chemical Properties
  • Regulatory/Standards/Labels
  • Report Abstracts and Studies
  • Reproductive Risk
  • Toxicology/Health Hazards/Exposure
Example of Acute Exposure data from MEDITEXT.

RightAnswer Proprietary Data Sources:

HAZARDTEXT™ Documentshelp
MEDITEXT® Documentshelp
REPROTEXT® Documentshelp


All Other Data Sources:

CCRIS Documentshelp
CHRIS Documentshelp
DART Documentshelp
ECOTOX Documentshelp
ERG2016 Guidebookhelp
Fisher MSDShelp
• 1-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)piperazine dihydrobromide
• 1-[(4-Methylphenyl)sulfonyl]-1H-indole-3-carbaldehyde
• 100/CS BHI BR w/VIT K HEM 5ml
Show More
More...
GENE-TOX Documentshelp
HSDB® Data Bankhelp
IRIS Documentshelp
LOLI® Listingshelp
NIOSH Documentshelp
New Jersey Fact Sheetshelp
OHM/TADS Documentshelp
REPROTOX® Documentshelp
RTECS® Registryhelp
MSDSonline®help

ChemID External Links:

Household Productshelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
ITERhelp
Ammonia
MedlinePlusAllhelp
Ammonia
MeSHhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
MeSH Headinghelp
Ammonia
NIOSH ERSH-DBhelp
Ammonia
NIOSH ICSChelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
NIST WebBookhelp
Ammonia
OSHA Chemhelp
Ammonia
OSHA ChemDBhelp
Ammonia
PubChemhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
PubMedhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
PubMed AIDShelp
Ammonia
PubMed Cancerhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
PubMed Toxicologyhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
SRC CHEMFATEhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
SRC DATALOGhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
Tox Townhelp
Ammonia
TOXLINEhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
TOXMAPhelp
Ammonia
Ammonia water [JAN]
TRI2000help
Ammonia
TRI2001help
Ammonia
TRI2002help
Ammonia
TRI2003help
Ammonia
TRI2004help
Ammonia
TRI2005help
Ammonia
TRI2006help
Ammonia
TRI2007help
Ammonia
TRI2008help
Ammonia
TRI2009help
Ammonia
TRI2010help
Ammonia
TRI2011help
Ammonia
TRI2012help
Ammonia
TRI2013help
Ammonia
TRI95help
Ammonia
TRI96help
Ammonia
TRI97help
Ammonia
TRI98help
Ammonia
TRI99help
Ammonia
USA.govhelp
Ammonia
WebWISERhelp
Ammonia

Other Government Links Searched via RegsKnowledge:

State Environmental Regulationshelp
CFR Regulationshelp

Example Content from MEDITEXT for Ammonia:


Please note: this is an extract of information from a larger document. Full document and details are available by subscription.

ACUTE EXPOSURE INFORMATION

  1. USES: Ammonia is used as a refrigerant, a fertilizer, in explosives, and as a cleaning and bleaching agent, and is widely available for household use.
  1. TOXICOLOGY: Ammonia may cause liquefaction necrosis. It can saponify the fats in the cell membrane, destroying the cell and allowing deep penetration into mucosal tissue. In gastrointestinal tissue an initial inflammatory phase may be followed by tissue necrosis (sometimes resulting in perforation), then granulation and finally stricture formation.
  1. EPIDEMIOLOGY: Ammonia is widely available in household cleaners and in fertilizers; exposure is common. Serious effects are rare in the developed world (generally only seen in adults with deliberate ingestion), largely because household ammonia is typically available in low concentrations (5% to 10% aqueous solution). Serious effects are more common in developing countries.
  1. WITH POISONING/EXPOSURE
    1. MILD TO MODERATE ORAL TOXICITY: Patients with mild ingestions may only develop irritation or grade I (superficial hyperemia and edema) burns of the oropharynx, esophagus or stomach; acute or chronic complications are unlikely. Patients with moderate toxicity may develop grade II burns (superficial blisters, erosions and ulcerations) are at risk for subsequent stricture formation, particularly esophageal. Some patients (particularly young children) may develop upper airway edema.
      1. Ammonia ingestion may produce burns to the oropharynx, upper airway, esophagus and occasionally stomach. Spontaneous vomiting may occur. The absence of visible oral burns does NOT reliably exclude the presence of esophageal burns. The presence of stridor, vomiting, drooling, and abdominal pain are associated with serious esophageal injury in most cases.
      1. PREDICTIVE: The grade of mucosal injury at endoscopy is the strongest predictive factor for the occurrence of systemic and GI complications and mortality.
    1. SEVERE ORAL TOXICITY: May develop deep burns and necrosis of the gastrointestinal mucosa. Complications often include perforation (esophageal, gastric, rarely duodenal), fistula formation (tracheoesophageal, aortoesophageal), and gastrointestinal bleeding. Upper airway edema is common and often life threatening. Hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnea and, rarely, fever may develop. Stricture formation (esophageal, less often oral or gastric) is likely to develop long term. Esophageal carcinoma is another long term complication. Severe toxicity is generally limited to deliberate ingestions in adults in the US, because ammonia products available in the home are generally of low concentration.
    1. INHALATION EXPOSURE: Mild exposure may cause cough and bronchospasm. Severe inhalation may cause upper airway edema and burns, stridor, and rarely acute lung injury.
    1. OCULAR EXPOSURE: Ocular exposure can produce severe conjunctival irritation and chemosis, corneal epithelial defects, limbal ischemia, permanent visual loss and in severe cases perforation.
    1. DERMAL EXPOSURE: Mild exposure causes irritation and partial thickness burns. Prolonged exposure or high concentration products can cause full thickness burns.
© 2011-2025 RightAnswer.com, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. No claim to original U.S. Govt. works.