Topic 3: Part H Flashcards

1
Q

Heavy Metals

A
  1. lead
  2. cadmium
  3. selenium
  4. arsenic
  5. mercury
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2
Q

environmental contaminants/pollutants

A
  • this includes industrial pollutants, toxic metals and contaminants from packaging
  • routine monitoring of chemical contaminants is carried out and a ban is imposed if levels are too high
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3
Q

Mercury

A
  • a naturally occurring element in soils and rocks, lakes, streams and oceans
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4
Q

how is mercury released into the environment?

A
  • human activities: pulp and paper processing, mining operations, and burning of garbage and fossil fuels
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5
Q

is mercy dangerous

A

high amounts of mercury can damage the nervous system of people and animals

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6
Q

Methylmercury

A

bacteria in water convert mercury into methyl mercury, which is a more toxic form
methyl mercury is water soluble and can remain within our body for extended periods of time
causes a lot of problems

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7
Q

BBB and methylmercury

A

methyl mercury can cross the blood brain barrier, which makes it extra dangerous and contributes to diseases such as Alzheimer’s

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8
Q

food chain and mercury

A

mercury tends to accumulate in the food chain so that predatory species have higher levels
this term is bioaccumulation or bioconcentration
- predators higher on the food chain have higher amounts of mercury in them

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9
Q

CFIA guideline for mercury levels

A

the guideline for mercury is that 0.5-1 ppm in fish is NOT exceeded

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10
Q

average level of mercury in fish in Canada

A

0.2 ppm, much lower than the permitted guideline

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11
Q

fish that are very high in mercury

A

swordfish, king mackerel, shark, fresh and frozen tuna (albacore)
note = these fish are higher on the food chain

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12
Q

fish or seafood lower in mercury

A

shrimp, canned tuna (skip jack), salmon, pollock, catfish

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13
Q

labels of canned tuna

A

wild ALBACORE white tuna (more mercury)

flaked light tuna (less mercury)

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14
Q

what should consumers limit their consumption of fresh/frozen tuna to?

A

150g per week (does not apply to canned light tuna)

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15
Q

what should sick people, pregnant people, or children limit their consumption of fresh/frozen tuna to?

A

1 meal per month

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16
Q

symptoms of chronic maternal fish consumption (exposure to methyl mercury)

A
  • IQ deficits
  • abnormal muscle tone
  • reduced motor function
  • lower attention and visuospatial performance
  • increased blood pressure in children (hypertension)
17
Q

at what age can the neuropsychological effects of chronic maternal fish consumption symptoms be detected?

A

in children aged 7 years following prenatal exposure to methyl mercury

18
Q

Halogens and Organic Halogens

A
  • chlorine
  • iodine
  • vinyl chloride
  • ethylene dichloride
  • trichlorenethylene
  • dioxins
  • polybrominated biphenyl (PBB)
  • **polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB’s)
19
Q

PCB’s

A
  • accumulate in the food chain
  • cause fatigue, eye irritation, growth retardation when children are exposed prenatally
  • man-made, not naturally occurring in the environment
  • banned many years ago, but they persist in the environment. highly difficult to destroy
  • very small levels cause averse health effects
20
Q

what are halogens and organic halogens often used as?

A

often used as disinfectants