Poison is a very popular means of killing in literature. Books about Hercule Poirot and Sherlock Holmes developed a love of fast-acting, undetectable poisons among readers. But poisons are common not only in literature, there are also real cases use of poisons. Here are ten known poisons that have been used to kill people over time.

10. Hemlock Hemlock, also known as Omega, is a highly toxic flower found in Europe and South Africa. It was very popular among the ancient Greeks, who used it to kill their prisoners. The fatal dose for an adult is 100 milligrams of omega (about 8 leaves of the plant). Death occurs as a result of paralysis, consciousness remains clear, but the body stops responding and the respiratory system soon fails. The most famous case poisoning with this poison is the death of the Greek philosopher Socrates. In 399 BC, he was sentenced to death for disrespect for the Greek gods - the sentence was carried out using a concentrated infusion of Hemlock.

9. Aconite
Aconite is obtained from the borax plant. This poison leaves behind only one post-mortem sign - suffocation. The poison causes severe arrhythmia, which ultimately leads to suffocation. You can get poisoned even by simply touching the leaves of the plant without gloves, since the substance is very quickly and easily absorbed. Due to the difficulty in finding traces of this poison in the body, it has become popular among people attempting to commit untraceable murder. Despite this, aconite has its own famous victim. Emperor Claudius poisoned his wife Agrippina using aconite in a mushroom dish.

8. Belladonna
This is a favorite poison among girls! Even the name of the plant from which it is obtained comes from Italian language and means " Beautiful woman" The plant was originally used in the Middle Ages for cosmetic purposes - eye drops were made from it, which dilated the pupils, which made women more seductive (at least they thought so). If they rubbed their cheeks a little, it would give them a reddish tint, which is now achieved with blush. It seems that the plant is not very scary? In fact, even one leaf can be lethal if ingested, which is why it was used to make poisonous arrow tips. Belladonna berries are the most dangerous - 10 attractive berries can become fatal.

7. Dimethylmercury
It is a slow killer made by man. But this is precisely what makes him much more dangerous. Taking a dose of 0.1 milliliter leads to death. However, the symptoms of poisoning become apparent only after several months, which greatly complicates treatment. In 1996, a chemistry teacher at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire dropped a drop of poison on her hand - dimethylmercury passed through her latex glove, symptoms of poisoning appeared four months later, and she died ten months later.

6. Tetrodotoxin
This substance is contained in sea ​​creatures - Blue-ringed octopus(blue-ringed octopus) and puffer fish (fugu). The octopus is more dangerous, since it deliberately poisons the victim with this poison, which causes death within a few minutes. The amount of venom released in one bite is enough to kill 26 adults in a few minutes, and the bites are usually so painless that the victim only realizes he has been bitten when paralysis sets in. Pufferfish are only dangerous if you intend to eat them. If a pufferfish fugu dish is prepared correctly, then all its poison completely evaporates, and it can be consumed without any consequences, except for the adrenaline rush from the thought that the cook made a mistake when preparing the dish.

5. Polonium
Polonium is a slow-acting radioactive poison for which there is no cure. One gram of polonium can kill about 1.5 million people in a few months. Most famous case polonium poisoning - murder former employee KGB-FSB Alexander Litvinenko. Residues of polonium were found in his body in a dose 200 times greater than necessary to cause death. He died within three weeks.

4. Mercury
There are three very dangerous types of mercury. Elemental mercury can be found in glass thermometers. It is harmless if touched, but is fatal if inhaled. Inorganic mercury is used in making batteries and is only lethal if ingested. Organic mercury is found in fish such as tuna and swordfish (you should not eat more than 170 grams of their meat per week). If these types of fish are consumed for too long, the harmful substance can accumulate in the body. A famous death from mercury is that of Amadeus Mozart, who was given mercury tablets to treat syphilis.

3. Cyanide
This poison was used in Agatha Christie's books. Cyanide is very popular (spies use cyanide tablets to kill themselves if captured) and there are many reasons for its popularity. First of all: a huge number of substances serve as sources of cyanide - almonds, apple seeds, apricot kernels, tobacco smoke, insecticides, pesticides, etc. The murder in this case can be explained by an everyday accident, such as the accidental ingestion of a pesticide. The fatal dose of cyanide is 1.5 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. Secondly, cyanide kills quickly. Depending on the dose, death occurs within 15 minutes. Cyanide in gas form (hydrogen cyanide) was used by Nazi Germany in gas chambers during the Holocaust.

2. Botulinum Toxin
If you have read books about Sherlock Holmes, you have heard about this poison. Botulinum toxin causes botulism, a disease that can be fatal if not treated promptly. Botulism causes muscle paralysis, eventually leading to paralysis of the respiratory system and death. The bacterium enters the body through open wounds or contaminated food. Botulinum toxin is the same substance that is used in Botox injections.

1. ArsenicArsenic is called the “King of Poisons” for its stealth and strength - traces of it were previously impossible to find, so it was often used for murder and in literature. This continued until the invention of the Marsh test, with which one can find poison in water, food, etc. The “King of Poison” claimed many lives: Napoleon Bonaparte, George III and Simon Bolivar died from this poison. Like belladonna, arsenic was used in the Middle Ages for cosmetic purposes. A few drops of poison made the woman’s skin white and pale.

Dictionary of toxic substances

Aconite. This is the name of two plants: one of them is from the daisy family - aconite. (Aconite napellus), and the second member of the buttercup family is Buttercup aconitifolia (Ranunculus aconilifolius). The same name is used when talking about an alkaloid that is obtained from the root of a relative of the buttercup, which is also called aconite or wolfsbane (“wolf root”).

Aconitine. A medicine as well as a poison obtained from aconite.

Alkaloid. A nitrogen-containing base produced by plants. Most alkaloids are biologically active substances, and since many of them are nothing more than strong poisons, it is for this reason that herbivores do not favor them too much... Morphine, codeine, nicotine, cocaine, hyoscyamine, ephedrine, strychnine and atropine - all these are alkaloids.

Aniline. Also known as aminobenzene. This is a toxic industrial solvent that can enter the human body through the skin, food or inhalation.

Anticoagulants. In the strict sense of the word, these are not poisons, but they kill because they prevent the blood from clotting. Poultry farm owners use these substances against rats and mice, since anticoagulants have almost no effect on birds. They are also used in a number of medical applications.

Atropine see Belladonna

Belladonna. This plant (also called belladonna, sleeping stupor, mad cherry - or nightshade) produces atropine, and this alkaloid is also known as daturin. Atropine leads to increased contraction of the heart muscle, causing hallucinations and delirium.

Hemlock (hemlock). Similar to parsley, this plant can slowly kill a person (by paralyzing the respiratory muscles) - and without the convulsions and suffocation that another plant, which is poisonous, causes (Cicula virosa)- and although in English it is called “water hemlock”, it is not related to hemlock. Hemlock is widely known as a poison used in Ancient Greece: by decision government agencies, a person sentenced to death had to drink hemlock juice (as the ancient Greeks called it).

Botox. Toxic substance produced by anaerobic bacteria Closlridium botulinum. It is used for medical and cosmetic purposes.

Mushrooms. Many types of mushrooms are poisonous, and some have a stronger toxic effect in the presence of alcoholic beverages. Fly agaric is used both as a poisonous substance and (as is clear from its name) as a means against flies.

Mustard gas. Its chemical name is dichlorodiethyl sulfide, but it became much better known as mustard gas after the substance was first used near the Belgian city of Ypres as a chemical warfare agent during the First World War. It is capable of depositing on surrounding objects and poisoning through contact, and therefore was considered useful for creating “forbidden zones”...

DDT. An insecticide that has been proven to harm wildlife, but has not yet been found to have any serious effects on humans.

Digitalis (digitalis). The common foxglove produces a range of toxins with similar names: digitalin, digitalalein, digitonin and digitoxin. All of them are poisonous, although some are used for medicinal purposes.

Dioxins. A class of organic substances containing chlorine. They appear to be somehow capable of influencing DNA and, in any case, have an effect on the offspring of those who have had direct contact with these substances. Dioxins are also formed as pollutants during combustion, for example in the case of underground combustion of peat.

Diethylene glycol. Typically used as one of the components of antifreeze, this substance was previously considered harmless, but alcohol dehydrogenase decomposes this solvent, so that poisonous oxalic acid is released. In case of diethylene glycol poisoning, the patient can be cured by giving him... alcohol!

Datura. Scientific name Datura stramonium, and among the people they call it both “stinking dope” and “devil’s trumpet”. Seeds, fruits and leaves: This plant contains high concentrations of atropine and scopolamine (hyoscine).

Yellow chrome. Also known as lead chromate. A toxic substance, but not so toxic that it cannot be used in doses sufficient to color food.

Indian berry. Latin name Cocculus indicus, used by thieves and murderers to deprive their victims of the ability to move (this drug gives complete motor paralysis). It was also used by unscrupulous English pub owners to ensure that the diluted beer still gave a certain stupefying feeling.

Calabar bean cm. Physostigma poisonous

Cantharides, or Spanish flies. This poison is believed to cause unbridled lust, but it is more accurately described as a dangerous toxin. It was obtained by keeping crushed, macerated (that is, soaked) beetles in chloroform. I wonder: what were they all thinking about - both those who made this product and those who took it internally?!

Oxygen. This gas is a poison for anaerobic bacteria, but it is so necessary for human life that the mechanism of action of a number of poisons is precisely to sharply impair the access of oxygen to the human body.

Colocynth or bitter gourd. It has been known since biblical times, when it was used as a rather radical medicine, but it could also lead to death.

Methyl ester of isocyanic acid. Intermediate product in the production of insecticides; in 1984, an accident in Bhopal (India) showed that this substance is both highly toxic and increases the corrosion of metals.

Carbon monoxide. Also known as carbon monoxide. Released during incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels and flammable substances. It is toxic because it binds to hemoglobin in the blood more strongly than oxygen, as a result of which the processes of transporting oxygen or carbon dioxide are blocked.

Arsenic. Both arsenic itself and all its compounds are poisonous. It is usually used in the form of oxides. It is used quite often in cosmetic formulations, and some people have even taken it “for the purpose of improving intestinal gases.” In the 19th century, it was easy to purchase in a pharmacy, and, apparently, in connection with this, the Marsh test was created at the same time - so that it could be easily detected.

Laudanum. Opium solution, which was popular in the 19th century as a medicine (and also as a so-called “recreational drug”); sometimes the tincture was also used for poisoning purposes.

Nerve gases. Different types of poisons that have the same effect: by affecting the transmission of nerve impulses, these gases lead to paralysis of the victim.

Nicotine. This alkaloid is quite harmful even in the amount found in cigarette smoke, but it would also be fatal if it were ingested or if it got under the skin.

Organophosphates. A group of common insecticides that attack the nervous system of insects, blocking the transmission of nerve impulses.

Nerve agents cm. Organophosphorus compounds.

Penicillin. It is a deadly poison for bacteria, but not for people.

Lamellar mushrooms. These include the relatively harmless russula and the red fly agaric, a deadly poisonous mushroom.

PCB. Or polychlorinated biphenyls, substances that were once considered fairly harmless, but today attitudes towards them have changed greatly. This is because they appear to accumulate in the food chain, and there is evidence that they can cause damage to the fetus in the womb.

Ricin. A poison produced by the castor bean (the fruit of the castor plant).

"Roger". This is what workers at caustic soda producing plants in England called a cloud of chlorine gas in the 19th century.

Rotenone. A garden pesticide derived from the root of Piscidia vermilion. (Piscidia etythrina). In the past, it was used to stun fish so that they could be caught almost with bare hands.

Mercury. A toxic heavy metal that is often used in industry. Mercury can also accumulate in fish and seafood and become hazardous to humans.

Lead. A toxic heavy metal, the salts of which are also very toxic. Lead breaks down disulfide bonds in proteins, changing their appearance and blocking their action.

Cardiac glycoside. Steroids that cause maximum damage to the heart and kidneys. Found in some plants, it appears to act as a repellent for herbivores.

Hydrocyanic acid cm. Cyanide.

Alcohol (ethyl alcohol). Or, as it is also commonly called, “alcohol,” that is, drinks containing ethyl alcohol or ethanol. It is a poison even in small doses, but it is one of those poisons that makes most people sick even before they are able to inject themselves with a lethal dose. True, inveterate drunkards can sometimes overcome this reaction and, as a result, die...

Ergot. A fungal disease of grass that produces up to 20 different toxins.

Strychnine. Alkaloid obtained from ripened, dried seeds of the plant Strychnos fir vomica(chilibukha, or emetic nut). It was widely used as a rat repellent, but also as... a tonic! This substance can accumulate in the body, and it is believed that this is why the famous Australian horse Phar Lap died.

Antimony. A heavy metal that is toxic both in itself and in the form of various chemical compounds.

Thallium. Another heavy metal that, when exposed to humans, leads to a curious side effect - the victim’s hair falls out. Therefore, its compounds are sometimes used for cosmetic hair removal. The toxic properties of thallium are such that they began to successfully use it as rat poison: it acts very slowly, so rats manage to eat a lethal dose before they feel the first symptoms of poisoning.

Tetrodoxin. Also known by the abbreviation TTX. This toxin is found in many living organisms. It is apparently produced by a certain single cell organism, perhaps a bacterium, and it then moves up the food chain.

bitter gourd, cm. Colocynthus

Heavy metal. A member of a group of elements with similar chemical properties (including lead, arsenic, antimony, mercury and cadmium). They are all toxic, both in the form of metals and especially in the form of compounds. These metals typically accumulate in tissues and as they move up the food chain.

Carbon dioxide. Also known as carbon dioxide and carbon dioxide. It is more likely not a poison, but a suffocating agent: this gas kills without allowing the victim to inhale oxygen.

Physostigma is poisonous. In the fruit of a plant Physostigma venenosum, from the legume family, it contains a very strong poison - physostigmine. The lethal dose is apparently small - about a quarter of one bean, but in West Africa, where these beans were used to find out whether a person was telling the truth, the test was simple: eat half a bean and survive!

Phosgene. A mixture of chlorine and carbon monoxide (carbon monoxide) that was used as a poisonous gas during the First World War. Phosgene caused so much fluid to accumulate in the lungs that its victims could not breathe, as if they had drowned...

Phosphorus. White phosphorus is a highly toxic substance that affects many human organs. It was used in rat poison, but apparently was hardly used against people.

Sodium fluoroacetate. Also known under the code “1080” - this poison is used when baiting baits to get rid of rabbits and foxes.

Chlorine. A lethal gas that was used during the First World War. It causes aggressive corrosion, is toxic, and has a suffocating effect on people.

Cyanide. It is also hydrogen cyanide, or hydrocyanic acid. How detective writers adored this substance! True, this is indeed a deadly poison, since it blocks the mechanism in the blood for transmitting oxygen to cells. Sodium cyanide and potassium cyanide are also extremely dangerous poisons.

Cyanide cacodile. Dimethylarsine cyanide, a substance that produces toxic fumes when exposed to air. As a result of the explosion of this substance, Robert Bunsen lost an eye. And during the Crimean War, it was proposed to use it for military purposes, but the prevailing opinion in the then British Ministry of Defense was that this was barbarity...

Cycad plants. Also: cycads. Primitive, palm-like plants in which the carpels are collected in cones - their seeds are poisonous.

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People often think of poisons as a myth from Shakespeare's dramas, or ripped from the pages of Agatha Christie's novels. But in fact, poison can be found everywhere: in cute little bottles under the kitchen sink, in our drinking water, and even in our blood. Below are ten of the world's most under-the-radar poisons, some exotic, others frighteningly common.

10. Hydrogen Cyanide

Although cyanide carries a terrible stigma, its history is rich and fruitful. Some scientists even believe that cyanide may have been one of the chemicals that helped form life on earth. Today it is better known as the lethal substance, the active ingredient in Zyklon B, which the Nazis used to exterminate Jews in showers. Cyanide is a chemical used as capital punishment in the gas chambers of the United States. Those who have been in contact with the substance describe its odor as similar to that of sweet almonds. Cyanide kills by binding to the iron in our blood cells and destroying them, making them unable to carry oxygen throughout the body. Most states in the United States have stopped using the gas chamber, as this type of death penalty is considered unnecessarily cruel. Death can take several minutes and is often horrific to watch as the condemned convicts writhe in agony and salivate profusely as the body attempts to prevent death.

9. Hydrofluoric acid or hydrofluoric acid(Hydrofluoric Acid)


Hydrofluoric acid is used in a number of industries, such as metallurgy and even in the manufacture of Teflon. There are much more powerful acids in the world than hydrofluoric acid, but few of them are as dangerous to humans. In gaseous form it can easily burn out the eyes and lungs, but in liquid form it is especially insidious. Initially, when it comes into contact with human skin, it is completely imperceptible. Due to the fact that it does not cause pain upon contact, people can become seriously poisoned without noticing it. It penetrates the skin into the bloodstream, where it reacts with calcium in the body. In the worst cases, it seeps through the tissue and destroys the bone underneath.

8. Batrachotoxin


Fortunately for most of us, our chance of encountering batrachotoxin is incredibly small. Batrachotoxin is one of the most potent neurotoxins in the world and is found in the skin of tiny dart frogs. Frogs do not produce the poison themselves, it is produced in their bodies by the food they eat, most likely from eating tiny bugs. There are several different versions of the poison depending on the type of frog, the most dangerous is the type of batrachotoxin produced by the Colombian frog called the terrible leaf creeper. This frog is so tiny that it can fit on the tip of your finger, but the poison on the skin of one frog is enough to kill about two dozen people, or a couple of elephants. The toxin attacks nerves, opening their sodium channels and causing paralysis, essentially shutting down the entire body's ability to communicate with itself. There is no antidote in the world, and death occurs very quickly.

7. VX Nerve Gas


Banned from use by the Chemical Weapons Convention (global supplies of this gas are gradually decreasing), VX nerve gas is considered the most powerful nerve gas in the world. The danger of this gas, discovered completely by accident in 1952 during chemical testing of organophosphates, was quickly discovered. Marketed as a pesticide under the name "Amiton", it was soon withdrawn due to its being too dangerous to society. It soon came to the attention of world governments as it was a time of political turmoil in the Cold War, and the gas was stockpiled for potential use in war. Luckily, no one started a war and the VX was never used in combat. A cultist from the Japanese group Aum Shinriyko stole some of this gas and used it to kill a man - this was the only famous death human caused by VX gas. The gas stops the production of enzymes in the nerves, causing the nerves to be in a constant state of activity, creating a “storm” in the nervous system that quickly overloads and destroys the body.

6. Agent Orange


Almost everyone has heard of the defoliant Agent Orange, created by Dow Chemical and Monsanto (which are considered the most evil corporations in the world). Agent Orange was used during the Vietnam War to eradicate trees that provided cover for enemy soldiers and to destroy crops in rural areas. Unfortunately, in addition to being a plant-killing agent, the herbicides contained a chemical dioxin called TCDD (tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin), a known carcinogen that causes a significant increase in the risk of cancer, especially lymphoma, in those exposed to it. In addition, tens of thousands of Vietnamese children were born stillborn or with birth defects such as cleft palate, extra fingers and toes, and mental retardation. Vietnam remains very polluted to this day.

5. Ricin


Derived from the castor bean plant, ricin is one of the deadliest poisons. A small dose, comparable to a few grains of salt, is enough to kill an adult. The venom stops the production of proteins that the body needs to survive, causing victims to go into shock. Because of its simple production process, ricin has been weaponized by many governments around the world, and was used at least once for murder, when Bulgarian dissident writer Georgi Markov was shot with ricin pellets on a London street in 1978. It is believed that the Bulgarian secret police and/or the KGB were responsible for the murder.

4. Arsenic


The metalloid arsenic has been used for centuries for a variety of purposes, from weapons production to cosmetics during the Victorian era (when sickly pallor was considered a fashion statement among women). During the Dark Ages, arsenic became a popular poison for assassins due to its effect - arsenic poisoning has symptoms similar to cholera, which was widespread during those times. Arsenic attacks adenosine triphosphatases in human cells, cutting off the flow of energy. Arsenic is a very unpleasant substance that, in strong concentrations, can cause different kinds gastrointestinal disorders with bleeding, convulsions, coma and death. In small amounts taken on a regular basis (for example, through arsenic-contaminated water), arsenic has been linked to a number of diseases, such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

3. Lead


Lead is one of the very first metals used by man. Its first smelting was made 8,000 years ago. However, its dangerous effects on the body became known only a few decades ago - lead affects every organ in the human body, so lead poisoning manifests itself through a range of symptoms, from diarrhea to mental retardation. Children are especially at risk of poisoning; fetal exposure to lead causes pathological neurological disorders. Strangest of all, many criminologists believe that the widespread decline in violent crime is at least partly the result of increased restrictions on the use of lead. Children born after 1980 were much less likely to be exposed to lead and, as a result, were less likely to become violent.

2. Brodifacoum


Immediately after the end of World War II, the poison warfarin began to be used as a rodenticide (and interestingly enough, it was also used as an anticoagulant for people with bleeding disorders). But rats are known for their ability to survive at all costs, and over time, many of them have become resistant to warfarin. Therefore, it was replaced by brodifacoum. An extremely lethal anticoagulant, brodifacoum reduces the amount of vitamin K in the blood. Due to the fact that vitamin K is necessary for the blood clotting process, the body over time is subject to severe internal bleeding as blood spreads throughout the body from the rupture of tiny capillaries. Brodifacoum, which is sold under brands such as Havoc, Talon, and Jaguar, must be handled with great care because it penetrates the skin easily and remains in the body for many months.

1. Strychnine


Derived primarily from a tree called chilibuha, which is native to India and southeast Asia, strychnine is an alkaloid substance and is used as a pesticide, especially in rodent control. Death caused by strychnine poisoning is terribly painful. As a neurotoxin, strychnine attacks the spinal nerves, causing seizures and violent muscle contractions. Oskar Dirlewanger, a Nazi SS commander during World War II, injected his prisoners with strychnine and amused himself by watching them writhe. Strychnine is one of the few substances on this list that is both cheap and available on the market. It's possible that strychnine is sold at your local hardware store under a name like "Rodent Killer" or something similar.

It is difficult to determine the most powerful poison. This definition includes any substance that provokes serious pathological changes in the body. Poisons act in different ways. Some slowly and imperceptibly bring a person to a critical point, others cause unbearable pain.

You can predict the effect and take measures to eliminate serious consequences by finding out the exact cause of the poisoning. There is an antidote for each toxic substance.

Poisonous chemical origin

The most dangerous poisons are developed by humans. Not all were created as chemical warfare agents; for example, sarin was created as a result of the synthesis of pesticides. Its production stopped in the 90s of the 20th century.

The existing reserves were not destroyed, so this poison is used by terrorists and the military. This deadly gas is odorless and colorless and inhaling it can cause chest tightness, nausea, nasal discharge, respiratory failure, spasms, convulsions and coma. As a result, the person loses control of his own body and dies from suffocation.

Widely known Negative influence hydrocyanic acid and substances that contain it. Even a small dose can cause death.

Impact white powder, characterized by severe toxicity, is blocked by glucose. Contact with this gaseous substance causes seizures and respiratory failure.

Death occurs due to the binding of gas molecules to hemoglobin. Oxygen does not reach the internal organs, and the person simply suffocates.

Another type of poison is methyl alcohol. It is often confused with ethanol. Because of this, people who abuse counterfeit alcohol die due to intoxication. If rescue measures are taken on time, the likelihood of death will be significantly reduced. There is a high risk of complete loss of vision.

V-Ex is considered one of the most dangerous poisons. This gas is used as a chemical weapon of mass destruction. To penetrate the body, inhalation for a few minutes or short contact with the skin is sufficient.

A fast-acting remedy leads to death in just a quarter of an hour.

Don't forget about mercury and arsenic. The first slowly poisons the body, causing partial dysfunction of the central nervous system and subsequent mental disorder. All vital organs suffer from exposure to this metal. Vapors and soluble mercury compounds are formed already at room temperature, so you need to be careful when using a thermometer.

It is impossible to imagine a list of “The most powerful poisons” without arsenic. The 33rd element of Mendeleev's Periodic Table has been used as a poison for more than one century.

Symptoms of intoxication are similar to the clinical manifestations of cholera. It is possible to provoke chemical poisoning through potassium chloride. This substance is intended to fertilize the earth, but its penetration into the body is fraught with sudden cardiac arrest.

Plant substances


Some biological components are also dangerous; such poisons are presented in no less variety than synthetic ones. You can cause death using chilibuja nuts. One of the most famous poisons, strychnine, is obtained from them.

Severe intoxication is accompanied by convulsions that lead to death. This substance is used in small quantities in the treatment of paralysis and to accelerate metabolic metabolism.

A dangerous poison called ricin is produced from castor beans. It is several times stronger than potassium cyanide, but due to technical difficulties it cannot be used as a weapon of mass destruction.

The outcome of poisoning directly depends on the method of penetration of the toxic substance into the body.

If inhaled, death is unlikely, but if even a few grains enter the bloodstream, there is practically no chance of a favorable outcome.

Among plant poisons, curare is considered the most famous. It was prepared on the basis of herbs growing in South America. Death caused by this substance is very painful. The person gradually dies from paralysis of the respiratory system, remaining fully conscious but unable to move.

Poisons produced by representatives of the animal world


The world full of dangers from which man is not immune. Often culinary preferences become the cause of his disability or even death. Fugu dishes are quite popular in Japan due to their “extreme” nature.

Due to the slightest mistake in the cooking process, the visitor can be poisoned. A similar reaction is explained by tetrodotoxin. It is found in the organs of puffer fish, the skin and eggs of aquatic inhabitants living in the tropics.

Neurotoxins, particularly batrachotoxin, are present in the skin of amphibians from Colombia. Their body does not produce poison. It is formed as a result of dart frogs eating their normal food. The toxic substance “kills” the nervous system and causes respiratory failure.

TO tropical fish and you can add snakes and spiders to frogs. 250 species have been recorded in nature poisonous snakes. Unfortunately, there is no universal anti-snake serum. To administer the necessary antidote, you need to know what type of animal attacked.

Intoxication occurs when poison enters the bloodstream. A similar effect is caused by the penetration of chiriquitotoxin (chiriqui toad), alpha-latrotoxin (karakurt spider) into the body.

Pathogenic microflora


Poisoning can be caused by poisons produced by pathogenic microorganisms, including:

  • Bacteria Clostridium botulinum. They cause botulism, a toxic infectious disease that affects the central and peripheral parts of the body. nervous system.
  • Anthrax bacilli. There are two forms of development: intestinal and cutaneous. The first type of pathology leads to death in 95% of cases. With the second, 80% of patients survive.
  • Rods of the genus Clostridium. These are the causative agents of tetanus. Infection occurs when damp soil gets into an open wound. Characteristic symptoms include convulsive syndrome, respiratory and heart failure, and impaired swallowing reflex. In the absence of timely treatment, the likelihood of death is high.

The risk of intoxication of the body increases when consuming spoiled food. For example, if the storage conditions for potatoes are not met, solanine accumulates in them. Even bread can be poisonous if cereals infected with ergot were ground during the production of flour.

Poisonous mushrooms


The most common poisons are amatoxins.

They are found in fly agarics and toadstools. The first signs of poisoning may appear after 10-12 hours. Such slowness is fraught with serious complications.

First aid is too late, so prevent a negative impact on internal organs impossible. This will subsequently have a negative impact on your overall health.

10 fastest-acting toxic substances


There are several classifications of poisons. The defining characteristic is the minimum dose that can cause death.

The top ten included only natural substances:

  1. Diamphotoxin has the greatest toxic power. It is produced in the body of the larva of the leaf beetle of the genus Diamphidia. Its distribution range is in South Africa. The most dangerous poison can disrupt the electrolyte balance and greatly reduce the level of hemoglobin in the blood. The dose may not exceed 0.000025 mg/kg.
  2. The action of a cytotoxic poison called palytoxin becomes fatal at a dosage of 0.00015 mg/kg. It is formed as a result of the vital activity of coral polyps Palythoa toxica, P. Сaribacorum.
  3. Batrachotoxin is found in the skin of dart frogs of the genus Phyllobates. The lethal rate is 0.002 mg/kg.
  4. Typotoxin is produced by the Australian taipan. At least 0.002 mg/kg of snake venom must enter the blood.
  5. Tetrodotoxin poisoning can occur from eating improperly prepared puffer fish. The critical dose is 0.008 mg/kg.
  6. Titutoxin is the venom of the yellow scorpion. A rapid lethal outcome is possible even when 0.009 mg/kg penetrates the body.
  7. Chiriquitotoxin is found in the skin of toads belonging to Atelopus chiriquiensis. The lethal dose is 0.01 mg/kg.
  8. Alpha-conotoxin is found in a substance secreted by the mollusk Conus geographus. The minimum sufficient amount is 0.012 mg/kg.
  9. Alpha-latrotoxin is produced by the Latrodectus spider (black widow). Death occurs from 0.045 mg/kg.
  10. Neurotoxin II is produced by the Central Asian cobra. The lethal dose is 0.085 mg/kg.

The list of dangerous substances does not end after listing these poisons.

Be careful, do not take unfamiliar drugs and do not touch animals if you are not sure of the safety of your plan. If poison gets inside, be sure to call ambulance. Delay costs lives.

Foods and drinks that are very familiar to us can turn out to be deadly. And the simplest objects contain poison. It turns out that the most powerful poisons are sometimes close to us, and we don’t even suspect it.

Dangerous poisons

- Methanol, or methyl alcohol, is a very dangerous poison. This is explained by the fact that it is easy to confuse it with ordinary wine alcohol, since they are indistinguishable in taste and smell. Fake alcoholic drinks sometimes they are made on the basis of methyl alcohol, but without an examination it is impossible to determine the presence of methanol. Unfortunately, the consequences of consuming such drinks are irreversible; at best, a person becomes blind.


Mercury. Everyone at home has the most common item - a mercury thermometer. It turns out that if you spill mercury from two or three thermometers in a medium-sized room, this will be enough to cause serious poisoning. True, elemental mercury itself is not dangerous, its vapors are dangerous, and it begins to evaporate already at room temperature. In addition to thermometers, the same type of mercury is found in fluorescent lamps. So be careful with them.


Snake poison. There are more than two and a half thousand species of reptiles, but only about 250 species are poisonous. The most famous - common vipers, cobras, rattlesnakes, black mambas, small snakes - sand ephs.


People have long found out that snake venom is dangerous only when it enters the human bloodstream. And, since humanity has been dealing with snakes for many millennia, it is not surprising that it was while studying the effects of snake venom on the bodies of animals and people that the first antidote was created in 1895 - anti-snake serum. By the way, there is no universal antidote even in case of poisoning by snake venom; for each type of snake, its own antitoxin is created - for king cobra- one, for vipers - another, for rattlesnakes - a third.

The fastest poison

There are many poisons, but potassium cyanide is still considered one of the fastest-acting. It has been used since ancient times, it is probably the most famous "spy" poison: many agents in films and books use cyanide in ampoules or tablets. And everyone probably read about such a sign as the smell of “bitter almonds” in Agatha Christie’s wonderful detective stories.


You can be poisoned by cyanide not only by ingestion, but also by inhalation or touching. Potassium cyanide is found in some plants and foods, as well as cigarettes. It is used in the extraction of gold from ore. Cyanide kills by binding iron in blood cells, thereby preventing them from delivering oxygen to vital organs.

Cyanide can be determined using a solution of ferric salts

By the way, they tried to poison Grigory Rasputin with potassium cyanide, but they couldn’t because they added the poison to a sweet pie. Glucose is an antidote to potassium cyanide.


The most accessible poisons

In summer and autumn, the time comes for seasonal mushroom poisoning - by the way, these are the most accessible poisonous substances today. The most famous poisonous mushrooms are false mushrooms, toadstools, lines and fly agarics. The most poisoned mushroom is the toadstool, since it has many varieties, sometimes indistinguishable from edible mushrooms, and one such mushroom can lead to the death of several people.


Although the Germans have learned to prepare fly agarics in such a way that they are not poisoned by them, it is true that it takes them a lot of time to prepare these mushrooms - they boil them for days. True, the question arises - why do they need fly agarics when they can simply take other mushrooms for food? And of course, we must remember the rules for storing cooked mushrooms; even edible mushrooms can become poisonous if the shelf life is violated.


Regular potatoes or bread can also be poisonous. When stored improperly, potatoes accumulate the substance solanine, which causes poisoning to the body. And bread becomes poisonous if flour was used to make it and contained cereals contaminated with ergot. We are not talking about fatal poisoning, but it is quite possible to ruin your health with such products.


In addition, there are many household chemicals and fertilizers, which can also cause poisoning. For example, potassium chloride is the most common fertilizer, but if it gets into the blood it becomes deadly, since potassium ions block the activity of the heart.

The most famous poison

IN South America the most famous poison is curare, a poison plant origin, there are several subtypes of this poison. It causes paralysis of the respiratory system. Initially it was used for hunting animals, but in the 20th century it was successfully used in medicine.


There is also strychnine powder white, which is sometimes used in some drugs (such as heroin and cocaine). Although it is much more often used in the manufacture of pesticides. To obtain this powder, take the seeds of the chilibuha tree, whose homeland is Southeast Asia and India.


But the most famous poison is, of course, arsenic; it can be called the “royal poison”. It has been used since ancient times (its use is also attributed to Caligula) to eliminate their enemies and competitors in the struggle for the throne, no matter the papal or royal one. It was the favorite poison of European nobility in the Middle Ages.


The most famous poisoners

The story of the Italian Borgia dynasty of poisoners, who elevated poisoning almost to the level of art, is unique. Everyone without exception was afraid of their invitation to the feast. The most famous representatives of this family for their treachery are Pope Alexander VI Borgia and his children: son Cesare, who became a cardinal, and daughter Lucrezia. This family had their own poison, "cantarella", supposedly containing arsenic, phosphorus and copper salts. It is known that the head of the family himself ultimately paid with his life for his treachery, having mistakenly drunk a cup of poison that he had prepared for another.


In France, arsenic was used by women, the most famous of them was Catherine de Medici, who became Queen of France. There were also poisoners of lower rank - favorites of kings, marquises, baronesses and wives of jewelers. It is believed that Napoleon was poisoned with arsenic.

The most powerful poison in the world

And now scientists will not answer the question of what poison is the most powerful in the world. Some of the most strong poisons- These are botulism and tetanus toxins.


From natural poisons Batrachotoxin is very dangerous; it is secreted by the skin of small but dangerous amphibians - dart frogs, fortunately, they can only be found in Colombia. One such frog contains so much poisonous substance that it is enough to destroy several elephants.


In addition, there are radioactive poisons, such as polonium. It acts slowly, but only 1 gram of this substance is needed to destroy one and a half million people. Snake venom, curare, potassium cyanide - they are all inferior to the above poisons.

It's not just snakes that are poisonous. As the editors of the site found out, the most poisonous creature on Earth is the jellyfish.
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