This depends entirely on the type of rodenticide consumed, which in turn may well depend on where you are in the world.
Modern rodenticides in use in most industrialized nations nowadays are either blood thinners, (super-warfarins and such) or vitamin D enhancers, which cause calcification of the respiratory and circulatory systems. Vitamin D toxins tend not to show effects until they accumulate to toxic levels, then they operate swiftly, with a wide array of symptoms to extensive to describe here. Anticoagulant might manifest in non-lethal overdoses by easy bruising, bleeding from gums and mucus membranes, and such, but these symptoms are not exclusive to this toxin. If you have any thought your child may have ingested one of these toxins, call the Poison Hotline (see number below), your doctor, or an ER. These toxins may be nearly asymptomatic unless they're ingested at toxic levels, at which time the patient may be in danger. So act swiftly.
Other geographic areas may use any of the following toxin classes, or even more:
With this many types of toxin involved, it's beyond the scope of this answer to address every form of toxicity or the related symptomology. It's worth noting though that rat physiology is rather close the humans, in the way toxins work (which is why they're so often used to laboratory work). So if it poisons them, it has the potential to hurt humans as well.
US POISON CONTROL -- 1(800) 222-1222 -- available anywhere in the US,24/7/365.
YES! If a child ingests rat poison, take them to the hospital immediately!
It won't do any harm to the person, unless the person consumes a lot of it.
If a child ingests rat poison, they are likely to need charcoal, and a lot of prayer. Rat poison is toxic at even small levels, and getting it out before it starts to be digested is critical.
Rat poison contains chemicals that interfere with blood clotting, leading to internal bleeding and ultimately death. When a mouse consumes rat poison, these chemicals disrupt its ability to control bleeding, causing it to bleed internally until it dies.
To kill the pigeons with rat poison, you will have to poison their food with the rat poison. You can poison the water that the pigeons drink and the cereals that the pigeons eat.
Black rat poison.
The answer is not simple; the effect depends on: - type of the poison (chemical formula) - the quantity ingested - age - another illness - the first aid etc.
There is no rat poison in toothpaste. Never.
Rat Poison. Or, their favorite snacks.
No, it could not, because the poison was specifically designed to kill rats, and was developed as a rat poison/killer, not a human poison/killer. It would still be considered rat poison, even if the human died from the rat poison.
1 try, because if you get a poisoned one, you may die
yes