Talk:Arsenic toxicity

Latest comment: 9 years ago by Smokefoot in topic This page needs updating

References

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A wealth of scientific journal articles are cited in the name-year format in this article, and yet none of them are provided in the reference list. I think it would be good to cite these properly - currently the reader must use some guesswork to establish which articles this might be referring to.Jimjamjak (talk) 23:17, 10 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

This needs to be investigated. It often means one of two things: 1) there used to be a references section that was removed by a vandal or by accident; or 2) the text was copied from somewhere else, without the references. In that case, the copy might be illegal... --Itub (talk) 17:54, 11 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
I've found proper citation info for a lot of these, and I've tagged the rest of them with {{vs}}.  —Chris Capoccia TC 15:51, 5 November 2009 (UTC)Reply
just one left: "Hu et al. 1998".  —Chris Capoccia TC 23:21, 5 November 2009 (UTC)Reply
ALL FIXED!  —Chris Capoccia TC 23:35, 5 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

Arsenic has a protective role?? Against what??

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This is stated and referenced, both here, and in the arsenic article. It's not enough. While it may be true, it's just to odd to include without a mechanism and some specifics, and also a page number from the book. Extraordinary claims need extraordinary evidence. SBHarris 21:55, 10 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Question some statements in this

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The statement that inorganic arsenic is the most toxic appears to be contradicted by other papers referenced by an EPA document. These references are listed below. If that is the case, then methylation as a pathway for detoxification is definitely questionable (hence the request for such a reference in the article is appropriate).

Le, X. C., Lu, X., Ma, M., Cullen, W.

R., Aposhian, H. V., and Zheng, 

B., (2000). Speciation of key arsenic metabolic intermediates in human urine. Anal. Chem., 72: 5172-5177. 8) Aposhian, H.V., Gurzau, E.S., Le, X. C., Gurzau, A., Healy, S. M., Lu, X., Ma, M.,Yip, L., Zakharyan, R., Maiorino, R. M., Dart, R., Tirus, M. G., Gonzalez-Ramir ez, D., Morgan, D.L., Avram,

D., and Aposhian, M. M., 

(2000). Occurrence of monomethylarson ous acid in urine of humans exposed to inorganic arsenic. Chem. Res. Toxicol., 13: 693-697. 9) Del Razo, L. M., Styblo, M., and Thomas , D. J., (2000). Presented at the 4 th International Confer ence on Arsenic Exposure and Health Effects, San Dieg o, CA, June 18-22, Abstract p 75.

AWS15 (talk) 17:48, 11 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

This page needs updating

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This detailed information cites references primarily from 2000-2009, and in this fast-moving field where >1,000 scientific papers are published annually with "arsenic" in the title (based on PubMed searches), the information is outdated. Much of this information may still be correct but should not be assumed to be. Also, citations in the text don't always coincide with the correct reference. For example, citation 6 lists a reference that does not discuss health effects.

Sciwriter23 (talk) 19:51, 24 February 2015 (UTC)Reply

By Wikipedia Chemistry standards is not bad, thank you very much. This encyclopedia makes no pretense of being newsy or cutting edge. In fields "where >1,000 scientific papers are published annually" the main chore is keeping the obscure, bloggy, and narrow stuff out so that readers do not come away with an unbalanced viewpoint. If you are willing to help, you could start by replacing specialized references with more general reviews, perhaps from the past five years. Wikipedia desperately needs experts who are willing to supply general information, without conflict of interest. --Smokefoot (talk) 01:57, 25 February 2015 (UTC)Reply