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It is toxic to mammals, in all forms; exposure and oral ingestion of the toxin may cause irregular heartbeat and major maladies associated with its impact on blood clotting, depending on dose. As a "second-generation" anticoagulant, diphenadione is more toxic than the first generation compounds (e.g., warfarin). For purposes of treating toxicity on exposure, diphenadione is grouped with other vitamin K antagonists (coumarins and indandiones); despite being directed at rodents and being judged as less hazardous to humans and domestic animals than other rodenticides in use (by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency), indandione anticoagulants, nevertheless, "may cause human toxicity at a much lower dose than conventional 'first-generation anticoagulants'… and can bioaccumulate in the liver."
Bell Laboratories, Inc. July, 1990. Diphacinone Technical: MSDS. Bell Labs, Madison, WI.
Murphy, Michael J.; Talcott, Patricia A. (2013). "Anticoagulant Rodenticides (Ch. 32)". In Peterson, Michael E.; Talcott, Patricia A. (eds.). Small Animal Toxicology (3rd ed.). St. Louis, MO, US: Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 435–446, esp. 435–439. ISBN978-0323241984. Retrieved 5 April 2016.