There are many side effects or harmful effects of cleaning agents in human life. Cleaning ingredients vary in the type of health hazard they pose. Some cause acute, or immediate, hazards such as skin or respiratory irritation, watery eyes, or chemical burns, while others are associated with chronic, or long-term, effects such as cancer. The most acutely dangerous cleaning products are corrosive drain cleaners, oven cleaners, and acidic toilet bowl cleaners, according to Philip Dickey of the Washington Toxics Coalition. Corrosive chemicals can cause severe burns on eyes, skin and, if ingested, on the throat and esophagus. Ingredients with high acute toxicity include chlorine bleach and ammonia, which produce fumes that are highly irritating to eyes, nose, throat and lungs, and should not be used by people with Asthma or lung or heart problems.
Phosgene
precipitating agent is a causative substance that effect the formation of suspension in solution
One example of a chemical agent considered to be a slow effect agent is asbestos. It can take several years or even decades of exposure for the harmful effects of asbestos to manifest in the body, leading to conditions such as lung cancer, mesothelioma, and asbestosis.
Detergent means cleaning agent (from the latin word detergens, -entis, the participle of detergere).
chlorine not the answer
it acts as a cleaning agent.
Ammonia is a cleaning agent.
Better cleaning agent then what?
"Bleach" is one example of a cleaning agent.
If you swallow an acid based cleaning agent, call the local poison control center immediately.
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Relevant
Windex
Yes
As a household cleaning agent and as a raising agent in baking.
yes a improper cleaning agent can kill
Sodium chloride is not a cleaning agent.