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Pharmacology Mentor > Blog > miscellaneous > Chelating Agents for Heavy Metal Poisoning: What You Need to Know
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Chelating Agents for Heavy Metal Poisoning: What You Need to Know

Last updated: January 20, 2025 5:04 pm
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Introduction

Chelating agents are specialized chemical compounds that bind to metal ions, forming one or more stable complexes in the process. By effectively “grabbing” metals, these agents can help treat metal poisoning, mitigate metal overload, and manage various conditions where toxic or excess metals threaten physiological homeostasis (Goodman & Gilman, 2018). The word “chelate” derives from the Greek “chela,” meaning claw—symbolizing how these molecules enclasp metal ions much like a claw. In pharmacotherapy, chelating agents have a significant role in conditions such as lead poisoning, arsenic or mercury intoxication, iron overload, copper overload, and others. Although the concept of metal sequestration is centuries old, an expanding appreciation for the toxicological consequences of heavy metals has prompted a robust development and usage of modern chelators.

Contents
IntroductionBackground: Heavy Metals and ToxicityClassification of Chelating AgentsMechanisms of ActionFormation of Stable ComplexesInfluence on Metal Transport and ExcretionSelectivity and Potential CompetitionAdjunctive MeasuresRepresentative Chelating AgentsDimercaprol (British Anti-Lewisite, BAL)Edetate Calcium Disodium (CaNa2EDTA)PenicillamineSuccimer (DMSA)DeferoxamineDeferasiroxTrientineDTPA (Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid)DMPS (2,3-Dimercaptopropane-1-sulfonate)Clinical Applications by Specific MetalsLead PoisoningMercury PoisoningArsenic PoisoningCopper OverloadIron OverloadRadioactive MetalsPharmacokineticsAbsorptionDistributionMetabolism and ExcretionAdverse Effects and ChallengesHypersensitivity and Allergic ReactionsEssential Metal DepletionRenal ToxicityOtotoxicity, RetinopathyNeurological ExacerbationClinical Administration and MonitoringDosage RegimensRoute of AdministrationLaboratory and Clinical MonitoringDuration of TherapyDrug InteractionsCo-Use with Nutritional SupplementsCombination ChelationInterference with Lab TestsEmerging and Experimental AgentsPolyamine and Polyhydroxamate DerivativesSiderophore-Based Antibiotic Co-AdministrationGene Therapy for Wilson’s Disease or HemochromatosisPhytochelatins and Natural ChelatorsPractical Considerations and Clinical StrategiesAdjuvant Therapies and SupportSymptomatic and Supportive CareNutritional and Vitamin SupplementationRBC or Plasma ExchangeControversies and MisinformationEDTA “Chelation Therapy” for Atherosclerosis“Detox” SupplementsChronic Low-Level Exposure vs. Indiscriminate ChelationFuture DirectionsImproved SelectivityPersonalized MedicineCombined ModalitiesConclusionReferences (Book Citations)

This comprehensive article explores the pharmacology of chelating agents, delving deep into their mechanisms of action, classification, pharmacokinetics, clinical applications, adverse effects, and future directions. Drawing upon established references like “Goodman & Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics,” “Katzung’s Basic & Clinical Pharmacology,” and “Rang & Dale’s Pharmacology,” we aim to provide essential insights for healthcare professionals, toxicologists, and researchers interested in optimizing the management of metal toxicity and exploring new therapeutic frontiers.

Background: Heavy Metals and Toxicity

Heavy metals, such as lead, mercury, arsenic, copper, iron, and others, are naturally occurring elements, but their industrial usage, widespread distribution, and potential for bioaccumulation make them significant public health concerns. Upon entering the human body—often via ingestion, inhalation, or dermal contact—some metals can overwhelm normal excretory pathways, leading to toxic accumulation in tissues. Chronic heavy metal exposure disrupts vital enzyme systems, induces oxidative stress, and can cause multi-organ dysfunction (Katzung, 2020).

For centuries, attempts at binding or eliminating metals have been documented, but effective medical chelators only emerged comprehensively in the 20th century. The transformative impact of agents like British Anti-Lewisite (BAL) for arsenic poisoning and subsequently Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid (EDTA) for lead validated the principle that “competing” molecules can reduce toxic metal loads and alleviate symptoms (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Classification of Chelating Agents

Several frameworks exist for classifying chelating agents. One conventional approach delineates them by chemical structure, affinity for specific metals, or clinical application:

  1. Nitrogen-Sulfur Chelators – e.g., Dimercaprol (British Anti-Lewisite, or BAL).
  2. Polyaminocarboxylic Acids – e.g., EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid), DTPA (Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid).
  3. Dithiol Chelators – e.g., Dimercaptopropane sulfonate (DMPS), Dithiol-based derivatives.
  4. Hydroxamic Acids – e.g., Desferrioxamine for iron.
  5. Penicillamine and Trientine – used for copper overload.
  6. Oral Iron Chelators – e.g., Deferasirox for chronic iron overload.

Each class and agent holds characteristics that match specific metals or toxicological profiles. Their usage demands carefully balancing efficacy, potential side effects, route of administration, and patient compliance.

Mechanisms of Action

Formation of Stable Complexes

At the foundation of chelation therapy is the capacity to form stable coordinate bonds with a metal cation. Chelators typically feature electron-rich donor atoms (oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur) that bind to the electron-accepting metal. By encompassing the metal ion in a ring-like or multi-binding arrangement, they render it unable to engage in harmful biochemical interactions (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Influence on Metal Transport and Excretion

Once bound, the resultant chelate complex generally becomes more water-soluble or less likely to deposit in tissue compartments. Consequently, the excretion of metals—via the urine, bile, or feces—accelerates, lowering total body burden. This principle underlies the main therapeutic effect of chelators: facilitating safe metal removal from critical sites like the CNS, liver, or bone (Katzung, 2020).

Selectivity and Potential Competition

Chelators vary in their affinity for specific metal ions. For instance, EDTA strongly complexes with lead, calcium, and zinc, while penicillamine is especially used in copper overload. Selectivity ensures that the correct agent can bind the target metal more avidly than it binds essential trace elements, minimizing disruptions to normal physiological processes (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Adjunctive Measures

Often, successful chelation therapy demands supportive measures, including intravenous fluids, correction of electrolyte imbalances, and monitoring for ties to essential minerals. For example, EDTA-based therapy can chelate vital metals like zinc, requiring supplementation in some cases to prevent deficiency (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Representative Chelating Agents

Dimercaprol (British Anti-Lewisite, BAL)

  1. History and Structure
    • Developed during World War II as an antidote to Lewisite (an arsenical war gas).
    • Contains two thiol (–SH) groups that bind arsenic, mercury, and lead strongly, forming stable mercaptide complexes (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Clinical Indications
    • Arsenic poisoning: Combined with supportive therapy.
    • Lead poisoning: Often co-administered with EDTA.
    • Mercury poisoning: Efficacious if quickly administered.
  3. Administration and Pharmacokinetics
    • Given intramuscularly (IM), rapidly distributed in tissues.
    • Short plasma half-life (~1-3 hours), requiring repeated doses in acute toxicity (Katzung, 2020).
  4. Adverse Effects
    • Commonly triggers hypertension, tachycardia, pain at injection site, and possible fevers.
    • Potentiates certain toxicities if used incorrectly—for instance, it can redistribute arsenic into CNS if not well-timed with certain other measures (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Edetate Calcium Disodium (CaNa2EDTA)

  1. Mechanism
    • A polyaminocarboxylic acid that complexes with Pb2+ more effectively than calcium ions. The preformed calcium salt prevents EDTA from removing calcium from the body.
    • Primarily used for lead poisoning but also complexes with zinc, manganese, and certain other metals (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Usage
    • Must be administered intravenously or intramuscularly.
    • In lead encephalopathy or severe plumbism, typically combined with dimercaprol or succimer (Katzung, 2020).
  3. Toxicities
    • Nephrotoxicity (renal tubular damage) possible with excessive or prolonged infusions. Adequate hydration can mitigate kidney stress.
    • Chelates essential minerals (zinc), risking deficiency if used chronically (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Penicillamine

  1. Overview
    • A D-isomer derivative of penicillin, exerts remarkable copper-chelating capacity.
    • Commonly used in Wilson’s disease (hepatolenticular degeneration), where copper accumulation in tissues is pathologic (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Applications
    • Rheumatoid arthritis: Anti-rheumatic properties presumably from modulating immune responses.
    • Cystinuria: Binds cystine in urine, forming a more soluble complex that reduces kidney stone formation (Katzung, 2020).
  3. Adverse Effects
    • Hypersensitivity reactions, including rashes and bone marrow suppression.
    • Nephrotoxicity, proteinuria, and potential lupus-like syndrome.
    • Taste disturbances or neurologic issues occur occasionally (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Succimer (DMSA)

  1. Properties
    • Water-soluble analog of dimercaprol. Given orally, it’s used mainly for mild to moderate lead poisoning in children.
    • Binds lead in the bloodstream and tissues, forming excretable water-soluble complexes (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Clinical Use
    • Less effective in acute severe poisoning but helpful for outpatient management or bridging therapy.
    • Also has some activity against arsenic and mercury, albeit not first-line (Katzung, 2020).
  3. Advantages
    • Oral availability, improved tolerability compared to dimercaprol or EDTA.
    • Lower risk of essential metal depletion than EDTA (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Deferoxamine

  1. Structure and Mechanism
    • Hydroxamate siderophore produced by Streptomyces pilosus. Binds ferric iron (Fe3+) with high affinity, creating ferrioxamine complexes excreted renally.
    • Minimally affects iron in hemoglobin or transferrin, primarily removing “free” or loosely bound iron.
  2. Indications
    • Acute iron toxicity (commonly in pediatric accidental ingestion).
    • Chronic iron overload due to multiple blood transfusions in thalassemia or sickle cell disease (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  3. Routes and Effects
    • Typically administered IV or subcutaneously (for chronic therapy).
    • “Vin rose” urine can appear from ferrioxamine excretion; hypotension possible with rapid IV infusion (Katzung, 2020).
  4. Adverse Reactions
    • Ocular and auditory disturbances (retinal changes, hearing impairment) if used long-term.
    • Hypersensitivity, injection site reactions, and growth retardation in children with extended usage (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Deferasirox

  1. Mechanism
    • An oral iron chelator that complexes selectively with iron (Fe3+), facilitating fecal excretion.
    • Key agent in managing chronic iron overload in transfusion-dependent anemias (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Pharmacokinetics
    • Taken once daily. Undergoes hepatic metabolism via UGT1A1.
    • Biliary excretion of the iron-chelate complexes is the main elimination route (Katzung, 2020).
  3. Safety Considerations
    • Renal impairment, hepatic dysfunction, and gastrointestinal bleeding are major concerns.
    • Requires surveillance of renal, hepatic function, and serum ferritin levels (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Trientine

  1. Profile
    • A polyamine that chelates copper, used as an alternative to penicillamine in Wilson’s disease or in patients intolerant to penicillamine (Rang & Dale, 2019).
  2. Therapeutic Aspects
    • Less incidence of hypersensitivity reactions versus penicillamine.
    • Still necessitates monitoring of copper indices and potential deficiency of essential trace metals (Katzung, 2020).

DTPA (Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid)

  1. Overview
    • Similar to EDTA but with an extended chain, giving more binding sites for metal cations.
    • Used for chelating plutonium, americium, and curium radioisotopes in nuclear accidents or contamination scenarios (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).
  2. Administration
    • Typically intravenous, though inhaled forms exist for specific radioactive exposures.
    • Requires repeated doses, with close monitoring for renal function and other metal depletions (Rang & Dale, 2019).

DMPS (2,3-Dimercaptopropane-1-sulfonate)

  1. Structure
    • A water-soluble dithiol derivative resembling BAL but more hydrophilic.
    • Proposed benefits in mercury, arsenic, and possibly gold poisoning (Katzung, 2020).
  2. Availability
    • Not FDA-approved in some regions, but used in others for chelation of heavy metals. Warranting caution, as with all dithiol chelators, for potential side effects (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Clinical Applications by Specific Metals

Lead Poisoning

  • Lead can disrupt heme synthesis, cause neurological deficits, and hamper multiple organ systems (especially in children).
  • For blood lead levels significantly elevated, EDTA (CaNa2EDTA) plus or minus dimercaprol or succimer is a mainstay.
  • Succimer is often first-line for moderate pediatric lead poisoning with BLL >45 µg/dL but without encephalopathy (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Mercury Poisoning

  • Dimethylmercury, elemental mercury vapors, or inorganic salts can exert neurotoxic or nephrotoxic effects.
  • Dimercaprol, succimer, or DMSA can mitigate acute mercury exposures.
  • DMPS or D-penicillamine occasionally used, though the latter is less favored (Katzung, 2020).

Arsenic Poisoning

  • Arsenic damages capillaries, disrupts cellular respiration, and can be carcinogenic upon chronic exposure.
  • Dimercaprol remains a classic therapy. DMSA or DMPS represent alternative or adjunct options.
  • Supportive measures (IV fluids, correct electrolyte abnormalities) are crucial in acute arsenic crises (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Copper Overload

  • In Wilson’s disease, copper accumulates in the liver, brain, and other tissues. Manifestations range from hepatic dysfunction to neuropsychiatric issues.
  • Penicillamine or trientine effectively chelate copper and curb further deposition.
  • Zinc supplementation or other strategies also help by inducing metallothionein (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Iron Overload

  • Acute ingestion in children can lead to hemorrhagic necrosis, metabolic acidosis, shock. Deferoxamine is the gold standard for severe iron toxicity.
  • Chronic iron overload (e.g., secondary hemochromatosis in transfusion-dependent patients) uses deferasirox or deferiprone to manage sideroblastic burden (Katzung, 2020).

Radioactive Metals

  • Plutonium, americium, or curium contamination: DTPA forms stable complexes excreted renally.
  • Repeated dosing might be required, monitored by excretion rates or radiation measurements (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Pharmacokinetics

Absorption

  • Chelators like penicillamine and succimer are well-absorbed orally.
  • Many agents (e.g., dimercaprol, CaNa2EDTA) are only effective parenterally due to poor GI bioavailability or severe local gut effects (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Distribution

  • Tissue penetration is crucial. Dimercaprol readily enters tissues but can redistribute metals (lead, arsenic) into the CNS if used singly.
  • Agents crossing the blood-brain barrier effectively, such as succimer (to some extent) or physostigmine (in a different context), may better clear CNS metal burdens (Katzung, 2020).

Metabolism and Excretion

  • Many chelator-metal complexes are excreted unchanged in the urine (e.g., EDTA).
  • Some, like deferasirox, undergo hepatic metabolism and are eliminated via feces.
  • Adequate kidney or liver function is vital for successful metal clearance (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Adverse Effects and Challenges

Hypersensitivity and Allergic Reactions

From mild rashes to anaphylaxis, certain chelators (e.g., penicillamine) can provoke immune-mediated responses. Vigilance and potential alternative therapy (like trientine) are required in severe cases (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Essential Metal Depletion

Chelators often lack perfect specificity. Zinc, manganese, or other essential trace minerals may be lost. Monitoring and supplementation might be essential in prophylaxis (Katzung, 2020).

Renal Toxicity

Kidney stress emerges when large metal-chelate complexes must be excreted. Agents like EDTA can induce tubular damage at high doses if hydration is inadequate (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Ototoxicity, Retinopathy

Observed with extended deferoxamine therapy for chronic iron overload, requiring periodic auditory and ophthalmic evaluations (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Neurological Exacerbation

Dimercaprol may exacerbate CNS involvement in lead or arsenic poisoning if used without synergy from other agents (Katzung, 2020).

Clinical Administration and Monitoring

Dosage Regimens

Determined by severity of poisoning, patient weight, and specific agent’s guidelines. For instance, CaNa2EDTA is often dosed at 1 g/m^2/d divided into multiple infusions for 5 days in serious lead intoxication. Dimercaprol traditionally used in 3–5 mg/kg IM injections every 4 hours in acute arsenic or lead crises (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Route of Administration

  • IV: EDTA, deferoxamine (in acute iron toxicity), DTPA in nuclear exposures.
  • IM: Dimercaprol, EDTA (less favored route due to local pain).
  • Oral: Succimer, penicillamine, deferasirox for chronic therapy (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Laboratory and Clinical Monitoring

  1. Metal Levels: Blood lead concentration, ferritin levels, copper levels, or urinary excretion metrics help gauge response.
  2. Renal and Liver Function: Baseline and periodic checks for potential toxicity.
  3. Hematologic Indices: RBC morphology, reticulocyte counts, RBC protoporphyrin can shift in lead therapy. Also, watch for neutropenia or thrombocytopenia with certain agents (Katzung, 2020).

Duration of Therapy

Varies widely. Some acute intoxications (e.g., arsenic) might require days to weeks, while chronic conditions like iron overload or Wilson’s disease can necessitate indefinite prophylactic therapy (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Drug Interactions

Co-Use with Nutritional Supplements

High doses of certain minerals (calcium, magnesium, iron supplements) can hamper or compete with a chelator’s metal-binding capabilities or saturate excretory pathways. Conversely, necessary supplementation (zinc) might offset secondary deficiencies (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Combination Chelation

In severe lead encephalopathy, combining dimercaprol and CaNa2EDTA offers synergy, improving CNS penetration and overall metal removal. Similarly, synergy or sequential usage for certain poisonings may reduce complications (Katzung, 2020).

Interference with Lab Tests

Chelators altering metal distribution or excretion can skew standard diagnostic assays (e.g., RBC zinc protoporphyrin, serum copper), demanding careful interpretation of labs during therapy (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Emerging and Experimental Agents

Polyamine and Polyhydroxamate Derivatives

Ongoing research explores improved iron chelators or multi-metal binders with enhanced oral bioavailability, longer half-lives, and more selective affinity to minimize side effects. Examples include novel hydroxamate-based compounds or synthetic siderophores (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Siderophore-Based Antibiotic Co-Administration

Some strategies harness siderophores for antibiotic delivery, reducing bacterial iron acquisition while also sparing human iron stores. Although not purely chelation therapy, it underscores the broadening horizon of metal-ligand chemistry in medicine (Katzung, 2020).

Gene Therapy for Wilson’s Disease or Hemochromatosis

Beyond chelation, advanced genetic interventions or CRISPR-based corrections could drastically reduce dependence on chelation for inherited disorders of copper or iron metabolism. This research remains in early phases but could redefine management in future decades (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Phytochelatins and Natural Chelators

Plants produce peptides like phytochelatins to sequester toxic metals. Investigations into harnessing or modifying these molecules for human therapy are ongoing. They might offer cross-tolerance to different metals or less toxicity, though feasibility is uncertain (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Practical Considerations and Clinical Strategies

  1. Timely Intervention: For acute poisonings, early chelation significantly improves outcomes. Delay allows metals to penetrate deeper tissues, complicating therapy.
  2. Appropriate Chelator Selection: Understanding each agent’s metal binding preferences, route, and side effect profile is vital. One size rarely fits all.
  3. Dosed Freedoms vs. Over-Chelation: Overzealous usage of these agents can degrade essential metals and hamper enzyme function. Titration for minimal effective dose is key (Katzung, 2020).
  4. Prevention: Regular screening for high-risk groups (industrial workers, children in older homes with lead paint) assists in preventing advanced toxicity requiring intensive chelation.
  5. Monitoring and Follow-Up: Laboratory checks, clinical response, adverse effect observation, and re-tox testing are integral to therapy success (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Adjuvant Therapies and Support

Symptomatic and Supportive Care

Alongside chelation, addressing shock, seizures, electrolyte imbalances, or organ dysfunction is paramount. In severe overdoses (like iron or arsenic), aggressive critical care might be essential (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Nutritional and Vitamin Supplementation

Folate, B vitamins, or minerals like zinc can be judiciously supplemented to replenish losses that occur during chelation. The timing and dosage must be individualized to avoid interfering with the chelator’s action (Katzung, 2020).

RBC or Plasma Exchange

In life-threatening metal loads (e.g., lead encephalopathy with extremely high BLL), exchange transfusion or hemodialysis in synergy with chelators can accelerate removal. However, these interventions are rare and used only in specialized settings (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Controversies and Misinformation

EDTA “Chelation Therapy” for Atherosclerosis

A fringe practice claims EDTA chelation helps atherosclerosis by removing calcium from plaques. Scientific consensus and multiple trials find minimal or no robust benefit in reversing arterial plaque. The mainstream medical approach does not support routine use for coronary disease absent heavy metal toxicity (Rang & Dale, 2019).

“Detox” Supplements

A myriad of OTC “detox” agents claim to rid the body of heavy metals. Their efficacy and safety remain unsubstantiated or minimal. Medical-grade chelators must be used under clinical supervision due to potential for serious side effects, and unproven regimens can cause harm (Katzung, 2020).

Chronic Low-Level Exposure vs. Indiscriminate Chelation

Some practitioners advocate prophylactic chelation for “hidden” metal burdens. Without clear documentation of a toxic metal load or validated biomarker evidence, routine chelation risks essential nutrient depletion and iatrogenic complications (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Future Directions

Improved Selectivity

Advanced chelators featuring enhanced specificity and fewer side effects top the research agenda. Dormant lines of inquiry include receptor-targeted carriers or nanoparticle-based chelators that limit off-target binding (Rang & Dale, 2019).

Personalized Medicine

Given genetic variants that shape metal metabolism (e.g., G6PD deficiency, specific polymorphisms in iron transporters), a personalized approach to chelation therapy—tailoring agent choice and dosing—may emerge, promising more precise and safer outcomes (Katzung, 2020).

Combined Modalities

Future protocols might integrate novel pharmaceuticals (like antioxidants or molecular chaperones) and standard chelators to ameliorate organ damage from metal-induced oxidative stress. Carefully designed clinical trials will validate synergy or sequential regimens (Goodman & Gilman, 2018).

Conclusion

Chelating agents stand as pivotal therapeutic tools in the fight against heavy metal toxicity. By forming stable complexes with harmful metals such as lead, mercury, arsenic, copper, or iron, they avert catastrophic organ damage and reduce morbidity and mortality. Agents like Dimercaprol (BAL), EDTA, Penicillamine, Succimer, Deferoxamine, Deferasirox, and others underline the diverse approaches to reversing or preventing metal overload.

Advanced knowledge of each compound’s mechanism, metal specificity, pharmacokinetic profile, and toxicity underpins successful therapy. Moreover, synergy with supportive care, thoughtful monitoring, and an awareness of potential pitfalls (e.g., allergic reactions, essential mineral depletion, renal impairment) remain essential elements of safe chelation protocols (Katzung, 2020). With continuing innovation—from refined drug design to personalized approaches—chelation science is poised to evolve further, offering finer, more selective interventions against the pervasive threats of metal overexposure. The ultimate goal is to optimize the beneficial aspects of metal-ligand chemistry while minimizing adverse outcomes, thereby ensuring that chelating agents sustain their vital role in modern pharmacology and toxicology (Goodman & Gilman, 2018; Rang & Dale, 2019).

References (Book Citations)

  • Goodman & Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 13th Edition.
  • Katzung BG, Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 14th Edition.
  • Rang HP, Dale MM, Rang & Dale’s Pharmacology, 8th Edition.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always seek the advice of a healthcare provider with any questions regarding a medical condition.
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TAGGED:DeferoxamineDimercaptosuccinic AcidDMSADrug interactionsEDTAheavy metal poisoningPenicillaminePharmacology

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