A poison that acts on the nervous system.
A material that affects the nerve cells and may produce emotional or behavioral abnormalities.
Any chemical poisonous to neurons.
A substance that causes defects in nerve tissue. A toxin which acts against the central nervous system.
an agent causing an adverse in the structure or function of the nervous system; the effect may produce either structural change in the nervous system, such as gross cell loss, or function changes that may be related to subtle changes in nerve cell communication.
Any toxin targeting the nervous system.
A substance that can cause damage to nerve cells or the nervous system.
poison which interferes with nerve function, usually by affecting the flow of ions through the cell membrane.
poison that effects the nervous system.
Toxic to nerve cells; includes peripheral neuropathy (predominantly motor or sensorimotor), Parkinsonism, solvent syndrome (acute or chronic), and other CNS neurotoxins. [Rom, p. 697-707; LaDou, p. 366-74
any toxin that affects neural tissues
a poison that acts directly in the tissues of the central nervous system and affects the motor skills
a substance that adversely affects the nervous system
a toxic agent or substance that inhibits, damages or destroys the tissues of the nervous system, especially neurons, the conducting cells of your body's central nervous system
a toxic substance which damages or destroys the cells of the central nervous system
a toxin A toxin is a substance that causes injury to the health of a living thing on contact or absorption, typically by interacting with biological macromolecules such as enzymes and receptors
a toxin that acts specifically on nerve cells - neurons - usually by interacting with membrane proteins and ion channels and destroys them by causing Neurotoxicity
a toxin that acts specifically on nerve cells , or neurons , typically by interacting with membrane proteins and especially ion channels
A chemical toxin that affects the nervous system. Neurotoxins from snakes usually act on the central nervous system and can shut down the cardio-vascular sysytem.
A poison which damages or affects the nervous system of living organisms.
A chemical which has a primary toxic effect on the central nervous system. Styrene, mercury, carbon disulfide.
A chemical that damages nervous tissue.
A poisonous substance, normally a protein, which attacks the nervous system, destroying nerve tissue.
A poisonous compound that acts on the nervous system.
A nerve poison which is present in the venom of most spiders and is used to immobilise prey. Only a small number of spider species have neurotoxins potent enough to be life-threatening to humans.
any substance that acts directly on the nervous system and is destructive to nerve tissue.
A poison that affects the nervous system
Poison which attacks nervous tissue.
Chemical that paralyzes nerves. Neurotoxins are produced by a variety of organisms, most notably some of the heterotrophic dinoflagellates.
Any substance that is capable of destroying or adversely affecting nerve tissue.
A substance having a toxic or harmful effect on the nervous system
A substance that is poisonous to nerve tissue.
chemical whose primary action is on the CNS (Central Nervous System). Many neurotoxins, such as some mercury compounds, are highly toxic, and must only be used under carefully-controlled conditions.
(neurotoxic) – A substance that affects nerve cells and can produce a variety of symptoms, including headaches, vomiting, shaking or twitching, sweating, emotional and/or behavioral changes, and even death.
Toxic substance that interfere with the functioning of the peripheral or central nervous system. A neurotoxin may result in various symptoms from a feeling of 'muscle weakness', loss of feeling, impaired motor control, shakes or tremors, and many other nervous system related problems.
A chemical injurious to the nervous system.
A toxin that destroys nerves or nervous tissue
A neurotoxin is a toxin that acts specifically on nerve cells – neurons – usually by interacting with membrane proteins and ion channels. Many of the venoms and other toxins that organisms use in defense against vertebrates are neurotoxins. A common effect is paralysis, which sets in extremely rapidly.