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Toxicant and Disease Database

 

The CHE Toxicant and Disease Database is a searchable database that summarizes links between chemical contaminants and approximately 180 human diseases or conditions. Diseases and or toxicants can be viewed by utilizing the search options below. In 2025, we have also added links to information available in the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD). See a full description of the database and our methodology. 

See also our compilation of other Databases and Resources.

For questions or comments about the database, please contact us through our Contact form.

 

Myocardial infarction (heart attack)

Causes    Grouped by strength of evidence

Strong Evidence

carbon disulfide

carbon monoxide

cyanide

dihalomethanes

hydrogen sulfide

methylene chloride

nitrates / nitrites

particulate air pollution (soot)

tobacco smoke (active smoking)

tobacco smoke (secondhand)

Good Evidence

arsenic

lead

styrene

Limited Evidence

mercury

nickel

phosphine

Notes

People with pre-existing heart disease are more susceptible to the ischemic effects of carbon monoxide. Dichloromethane (methylene chloride) and dihalomethanes are metabolized to carbon monoxide in the body. Organic nitrates exposure (mainly in the explosives industry) includes ammonium, sodium nitrate, ethylene glycol dinitrate, nitroglycerin, and TNT and can cause cardiotoxicity in the absence of heart disease.

ADDITIONAL DATA: The toxicant–disease relationships  shown above were last updated in 2011. The relationships shown here are still valid, but additional research has been conducted since that time. Additional research on this disease can be found at this link:

COMPARATIVE TOXICOGENOMICS DATABASE: CURATED RESULTS
Myocardial Infarction

This link will direct your search to an external database, the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD). This database is different from, and complementary to, our database.

More information about sources and methods

  • CHE’s Toxicant and Disease Database evaluates existing evidence and categorizes that evidence based on its strength. It is constructed using expert judgment and epidemiological causal inference.
  • The CTD, in contrast, is a continually updated resource that presents information on a broad range of literature on chemical-disease relationships. It also provides data on genes, biological processes, and phenotypes related to chemicals and diseases. It does not categorize information based on strength of evidence,  include an expert judgment process, or draw causal conclusions about toxicant-disease relationships.
  • The link we have provided on this page goes directly to CTD's curated results, which are a subset of the information available through CTD. Curated results in CTD are those for which studies are available on the toxicant-disease relationship.