Relative acute neurotoxicity of solvents: Isoeffective air concentrations of 48 compounds evaluated in rats and mice

Frantík, E; Hornychová, M; Horváth, M

HERO ID

67510

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1994

Language

English

PMID

8055839

HERO ID 67510
In Press No
Year 1994
Title Relative acute neurotoxicity of solvents: Isoeffective air concentrations of 48 compounds evaluated in rats and mice
Authors Frantík, E; Hornychová, M; Horváth, M
Journal Environmental Research
Volume 66
Issue 2
Page Numbers 173-185
Abstract Effect-air concentration regressions of 48 common solvents (aromatic, aliphatic, and chlorinated hydrocarbons, alcohols, ketones, acetates) were determined for 4-hr inhalation exposures in male rats and for 2-hr exposures in female mice. Inhibition of propagation and maintenance of the electrically evoked seizure discharge was used as a criterion of the acute neurotropic effect. The isoeffective concentrations in air were estimated by interpolation on the level of one-third of the maximum effect (ECC). ECC estimates ranged from 90 to 24,000 ppm and were several times lower than concentrations evoking behavioral inhibition and by one to two orders lower than concentrations inducing narcosis. Correlations between corresponding values in both species were high (r > 0.9), indicating a relative independence of the estimates from experimental conditions. The relative potency estimates had only negligible correlation with octanol:water distribution coefficients or other physicochemical predictors for the whole sample of solvents, but moderate to high correlation (r = 0.5 to 0.9) in homogenous groups of nonpolar solvents, permitting cautious predictions. When applied to known effective concentrations of some solvents on human performance and subjective state, the comparative potency procedure suggests that ceiling and STEL values of some solvents may not reliably protect workers from acute nervous depression.
Doi 10.1006/enrs.1994.1053
Pmid 8055839
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments acute accents over i in Frantik, a's in Hornychova and Horvath.Environ. Res. 66: 173-185.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Biochemical Studies-General</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Nervous System-Pathology</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Toxicology-General</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Toxicology-Environmental and Industrial Toxicology</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Public Health: Environmental Health-Occupational Health</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Public Health: Environmental Health-Air</kw>; <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><kw>Muridae</kw>
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