Glyphosate ingestion by humans has a certain mortality rate, but if treated promptly, the effect of general treatment is good.
Glyphosate is a relatively common herbicide that poses a relatively large threat to human health. Excessive intake of glyphosate can endanger liver tissue health, damage skin mucosa and the digestive tract, and in severe cases, can be life-threatening.
1. Can glyphosate ingestion lead to death?
Ingestion of this herbicide has a certain mortality rate, but early and correct treatment can significantly improve its prognosis. The treatment method generally includes gastric lavage, purgation, intravenous injection of energy mixture, fluid infusion, diuretic treatment, drinking plenty of water to promote excretion of toxic substances.
2. The harms of glyphosate to human body
Glyphosate is the largest pesticide variety in production. Excessive use of glyphosate can endanger human health, cause liver damage, damage the digestive tract, skin mucosa, and in severe cases, damage the respiratory and cardiovascular systems, endangering life. Both the long-term toxicity and chronic toxicity of glyphosate deserve clinical attention. Long-term exposure to low doses of glyphosate by pregnant women can lead to birth defects in infants. Glyphosate may disrupt the normal secretion and regulation of liver-brain endocrine, disrupt the normal production of reproductive hormones, and cause metabolic abnormalities of women's progesterone and estrogen, leading to adverse consequences.