According to the Fisher Scientific MSDS for bleach, the oral LD50 in rats is >90 mL per kilogram of body weight. So if you're worried about bleach poisoning, you'd have to drink a lot for it to kill you. It does have other harmful effects at lower doses, however.
One shot glass.
that's not true, in fact magnesium sulfate has been tested on rats and dogs, and it does have an ld50. "The LD50 values were 206 mg/kg for males and 174 mg/kg for females"
30000000 ng
LD50 relates to the compound/element, not to poisoning - it is the LD50 of mercury. It varies depending on route of exposure and the animal tested but it is around 1 to 15 mg/kg body-weight.
563 mg or about 0.8 milliliters.
The LD50/50 (50% mortality in 50 days) for strontium-90 in rats is estimated to be around 2.5 to 3 microcuries per gram of body mass. I do not know if that translates linearly to humans.
ld50 for lamotrigine
thipental
The radiation LD50 of most insects is far higher than the LD50 of mammals.
LD50 (short for lethal dose 50) is the dose of a substance at which it kills 50% of test subjects.
that's not true, in fact magnesium sulfate has been tested on rats and dogs, and it does have an ld50. "The LD50 values were 206 mg/kg for males and 174 mg/kg for females"
1mg/kg
30000000 ng
A probable value for plutonium is LD50 = 5 μg/kg (cumulated chemical and radiological effects).
true,however LD50 just provide coarse idea and specific adverse effect also need be considered.
by definition ld50 is when 50% survive or dead,,answer will be 5 if i count well
238 mg/kg (in mice)
3.333