Tissue residue (original) (raw)
Tissue residue is the concentration of a chemical or compound in an organism's tissue or in a portion of an organism's tissue. Tissue residue is used in aquatic toxicology to help determine the fate of chemicals in aquatic systems, bioaccumulation of a substance, or bioavailability of a substance, account for multiple routes of exposure (ingestion, absorption, inhalation), and address an organism's exposure to chemical mixtures. A tissue residue approach to toxicity testing is considered a more direct and less variable measure of chemical exposure and is less dependent on external environmental factors than measuring the concentration of a chemical in the exposure media.
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dbo:abstract | Tissue residue is the concentration of a chemical or compound in an organism's tissue or in a portion of an organism's tissue. Tissue residue is used in aquatic toxicology to help determine the fate of chemicals in aquatic systems, bioaccumulation of a substance, or bioavailability of a substance, account for multiple routes of exposure (ingestion, absorption, inhalation), and address an organism's exposure to chemical mixtures. A tissue residue approach to toxicity testing is considered a more direct and less variable measure of chemical exposure and is less dependent on external environmental factors than measuring the concentration of a chemical in the exposure media. In general, tissue residue approaches are used for chemicals that bioaccumulate or for bioaccumulative chemicals. The majority of these substances are organic compounds that are not easily metabolized by organisms and have long environmental persistence. Examples of these chemicals include polychlorinated dibenzodioxins, furans, biphenyls, DDT and its metabolites, and dieldrin. The use of tissue residues in assessing toxicity and bioaccumulation may also be referred to as the tissue residue-effects approach (TRA), critical body residue (CBR), or tissue residue-based toxicity tests. (en) |
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dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Toxicokinetic dbr:Biphenyl dbr:Aquatic_toxicology dbr:Risk_assessment dbr:Endangered_Species_Act dbr:Tributyltin dbr:DDT dbc:Toxicology dbr:Bioaccumulation dbr:Bioavailability dbr:Biomonitoring dbr:Biotic_Ligand_Model dbr:Biotransformation dbr:Toxicant dbr:Toxicity dbr:Dieldrin dbr:Aquatic_Toxicology_Databases dbr:Metabolites dbr:Organic_compounds dbr:Exposure_assessment dbr:Octanol-water_partition_coefficient dbr:Polychlorinated_dibenzodioxins dbr:Organometallic_compounds dbr:PAHs dbr:PCBs dbr:Furans dbr:In-situ |
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gold:hypernym | dbr:Concentration |
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rdfs:comment | Tissue residue is the concentration of a chemical or compound in an organism's tissue or in a portion of an organism's tissue. Tissue residue is used in aquatic toxicology to help determine the fate of chemicals in aquatic systems, bioaccumulation of a substance, or bioavailability of a substance, account for multiple routes of exposure (ingestion, absorption, inhalation), and address an organism's exposure to chemical mixtures. A tissue residue approach to toxicity testing is considered a more direct and less variable measure of chemical exposure and is less dependent on external environmental factors than measuring the concentration of a chemical in the exposure media. (en) |
rdfs:label | Tissue residue (en) |
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