Methyl tertiary butyl ether inhalation in rats: a single generation reproduction study

Biles, RW; Schroeder, RE; Holdsworth, CE

HERO ID

31512

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1987

Language

English

PMID

3433288

HERO ID 31512
In Press No
Year 1987
Title Methyl tertiary butyl ether inhalation in rats: a single generation reproduction study
Authors Biles, RW; Schroeder, RE; Holdsworth, CE
Journal Toxicology and Industrial Health
Volume 3
Issue 4
Page Numbers 519-534
Abstract Male rats exposed to target concentrations of methyl tertiary butyl ether (MtBE) at 300, 1300 and 3400 ppm for 6 hours/day, 5 days/week for 12 weeks were mated to female rats exposed to the same concentrations for a 3-week period. Exposures continued through the mating period and the females continued exposures during gestation and from days 5-21 lactation of the litters (F1a) (no exposures days 0-4 lactation). A second litter (F1b) was produced under the same mating and post mating exposure regimen. No adverse effect of treatment was observed with the adult animals (Fo) throughout the in-life portion of the study. The only remarkable finding was an increased incidence of dilated renal pelves in the low- and high-dose females (Fo). All gonad weights, male accessory reproductive organ weights, organ-to-body weight ratios and reproductive organ histopathology were unremarkable upon comparison of treated animals with air sham controls. The mating indices and fertility indices in exposed animals for both mating intervals (F1a and F1b) were not significantly different from controls. Pregnancy rates were comparable between treated and control females for the first litter interval (F1a) but were slightly lower (not statistically significant) than control on the second litter interval (F1b). Treated animal mean gestation length and the mean number of pups at birth were not statistically different from controls. The pup viability indices at birth were comparable for control and treated groups for the F1a generation, but the mid- and high-dose groups displayed a slight statistically significant decrease in the F1b generation; the decrease was not considered to be biologically significant and perhaps not treatment-related. Litter survival indices were comparable between control and treated groups for both litter intervals. Pups of mid- and high-dose females had slightly lower (not statistically significant) mean weights at days 14 and 21 of lactation but this was not considered treatment-related. The most frequent post-mortem observation for pups sacrificed at day 21 of lactation was dilated renal pelves. This did not appear to be related to treatment. It is concluded that MtBE inhalation in rats results in little adverse reproductive toxicity as shown in a two litter, one generation reproduction assay in rats.
Doi 10.1177/074823378700300406
Pmid 3433288
Wosid WOS:A1987L023200006
Url <Go to ISI>://WOS:A1987L023200006
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Toxicol. Ind. Health 3: 519-534.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No