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hemotoxic

Hemotoxic describes agents that are toxic to the blood or hematopoietic system. The term combines Greek haima (blood) and toxicon (poison), and is used in toxicology to refer to substances that damage blood cells, blood vessels, or bone marrow, often leading to anemia, bleeding tendencies, or impaired blood cell production.

Hemotoxicity can arise through several mechanisms. Some agents cause direct red blood cell destruction (hemolysis) or

Clinical features of hemotoxic exposure vary by mechanism but commonly include signs of anemia (pallor, fatigue),

Treatment is agent-specific. Hemotoxic envenomation requires prompt antivenom therapy when available, along with supportive measures. Bleeding

platelet
dysfunction,
while
others
disrupt
coagulation
pathways,
promote
consumption
of
clotting
factors,
or
damage
vascular
endothelium,
resulting
in
hemorrhage
or
coagulopathy.
Many
snake
venoms,
particularly
from
vipers,
contain
enzymes
such
as
metalloproteinases
and
serine
proteases
that
degrade
tissue,
alter
clotting,
and
promote
bleeding.
Other
hemotoxic
agents
include
certain
industrial
chemicals,
heavy
metals,
and
drugs
that
suppress
bone
marrow
or
impair
hematopoiesis.
easy
bruising,
mucosal
bleeding,
epistaxis,
hematochezia
or
melena,
and
laboratory
abnormalities
such
as
anemia,
thrombocytopenia,
or
prolonged
coagulation
times.
Diagnosis
relies
on
history
of
exposure
and
laboratory
tests,
including
complete
blood
count
and
coagulation
studies.
or
coagulopathy
may
necessitate
blood
product
transfusions
and
correction
of
hemodynamic
instability.
In
non-envenomation
contexts,
management
focuses
on
removing
exposure,
treating
organ-specific
toxic
effects,
and
monitoring
hematologic
recovery.
See
also
hematotoxicology
and
cytotoxicity.