Oral (drinking water) two-generation reproductive toxicity study of dibromoacetic acid (DBA) in rats

被引:33
|
作者
Christian, MS
York, RG
Hoberman, AM
Frazee, J
Fisher, LC
Brown, WR
Creasy, DM
机构
[1] Argus Res Labs Inc, Horsham, PA USA
[2] Toxicol Regulatory Serv Inc, Charlottesville, VA USA
[3] Res Pathol Serv Inc, New Britain, PA USA
[4] Huntingdon Life Sci Ltd, E Millstone, NJ USA
关键词
chlorination; DBA; dibromoacetic acid; rats; reproductive toxicity; testes;
D O I
10.1080/10915810290096432
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
In a two-generation study of dibromoacetic acid (DBA), Crl SD rats (30 rats/sex/group/generation) were provided DBA in drinking water at 0 (reverse osmosis - deionized water), 50, 250, and 650 ppm (0, 4.4 to 11.6, 22.4 to 55.6, and 52.4 to 132.0 mg/kg/day, respectively; human intake approximates 0.1 mug/kg/day [0.0001 mg/kg/day]). Observations included viability, clinical signs, water and feed consumption, body and organ weights, histopathology, and reproductive parameters (mating, fertility, abortions, premature deliveries, durations of gestation, litter sizes, sex ratios and viabilities, maternal behaviors, reproductive organ weights, sperm parameters and implantation sites, sexual maturation). Histopathological evaluations were performed on at least 10 P and F1 rats/sex at 0 and 650 ppm (gross lesions, testes, intact epididymis; 10 F1 dams at 0, 250, and 650 ppm for primordial follicles). Developmental observations included implantations, pup numbers, sexes, viabilities, body weights, morphology, and reproductive performance. At 50 ppm and higher, both sexes and generations had increased absolute and relative liver and kidneys weights, and female rats in both generations had reduced absolute and relative adrenal weights; adrenal changes were probably associated with physiological changes in water balance. The livers and kidneys (10/sex/group/generation) had no histopathological changes. Other minimal effects at 50 ppm were reduced water consumption and a transient reduction in body weight. At 250 and 650 ppm, DBA reduced parental water consumption, body weight gains, body weights, feed consumption, and pup body weights. P and F1 generation male rats at 250 and 650 ppm had altered sperm production (retained step 19 spermatids in stages IX and X tubules sometimes associated with residual bodies) and some epididymal tubule changes (increased amounts of exfoliated spermatogenic cells/residual bodies in epididymal tubules, atrophy, and hypospermia), although inconsistently and at much lower incidences. Unilateral abnormalities of the epididymis (small or absent epididymis) at 650 ppm in four F1 generation male rats were considered reproductive tract malformations. The no-observable-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) and reproductive and developmental NOAELs for DBA were at least 50 ppm (4.5 to 11.6 mg/kg/day), 45, 000 to 116,000 times the human adult exposure level. Reproductive and developmental effects did not occur in female rats exposed to DBA concentrations as high as 650 ppm. Based on the high multiples of human exposure required to produce effects in male rats, DBA should not be identified as a human reproductive or developmental risk.
引用
收藏
页码:237 / 276
页数:40
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Oral (drinking water) two-generation reproductive toxicity study of bromodichloromethane (BDCM) in rats
    Christian, MS
    York, RG
    Hoberman, AM
    Fisher, LC
    Brown, WR
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY, 2002, 21 (02) : 115 - 146
  • [2] Rebaudioside A: Two-generation reproductive toxicity study in rats
    Curry, Leslie L.
    Roberts, Ashley
    Brown, Nigel
    FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY, 2008, 46 (07) : S21 - S30
  • [3] Two-generation reproductive toxicity study of resorcinol administered via drinking water to Crl:CD(SD) rats
    Welsch, F.
    Nemec, M. D.
    Lawrence, W. B.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY, 2008, 27 (01) : 43 - 57
  • [4] Acrylic acid: Two-generation reproduction toxicity study in Wistar rats with continuous administration in the drinking water
    Hellwig, J
    Gembardt, C
    Murphy, SR
    FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY, 1997, 35 (09) : 859 - 868
  • [5] Two-generation reproductive toxicity study of aluminium sulfate in rats
    Hirata-Koizumi, Mutsuko
    Fujii, Sakiko
    Ono, Atsushi
    Hirose, Akihiko
    Imai, Toshio
    Ogawa, Kumiko
    Ema, Makoto
    Nishikawa, Akiyoshi
    REPRODUCTIVE TOXICOLOGY, 2011, 31 (02) : 219 - 230
  • [6] Study on the two-generation reproductive toxicity of paclobutrazol in SD rats
    Chen, Run-tao
    Deng, Ying-yu
    Chen, Xiao-yan
    TOXICOLOGY LETTERS, 2008, 180 : S165 - S165
  • [7] The Reproductive Toxicity of Mequindox in a Two-Generation Study in Wistar Rats
    Liu, Qianying
    Lei, Zhixin
    Wu, Qin
    Awais, Ihsan
    Shabbir, Muhammad A. B.
    Ahmed, Saeed
    Fatima, Zainab
    Wang, Xu
    Pan, Yuanhu
    Xie, Shuyu
    Yuan, Zonghui
    FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 9
  • [8] An oral two-generation reproductive toxicity study of S-111-S-WB in rats
    Stump, Donald G.
    Holson, Joseph F.
    Murphy, Sandra R.
    Farr, Craig H.
    Schmit, Bruno
    Shinohara, Motoki
    REPRODUCTIVE TOXICOLOGY, 2008, 25 (01) : 7 - 20
  • [9] A Two-Generation Reproductive Toxicity Study of Lanthanum Nitrate in SD Rats
    Lang Yan
    Fangyuan Gao
    Wenjing Shi
    Bijiang Geng
    Jiqianzhu Zhang
    Jingjing Mao
    Yijun Tian
    Lijun Ren
    Xiaoyu Dai
    Jikuai Chen
    Jiangbo Zhu
    Xiaofang Zhang
    Biological Trace Element Research, 2022, 200 : 2268 - 2282
  • [10] Two-generation reproduction study of ammonium perchlorate in drinking water in rats evaluates thyroid toxicity
    York, RG
    Brown, WR
    Girard, MF
    Dollarhide, JS
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY, 2001, 20 (04) : 183 - 197