Abstract

Although the dissolution rate of a fiber was originally defined by a measurement of dissolution in simulated lung fluid in vitro, it is feasible to determine it from animal studies as well. The dissolution rate constant for a fiber may be extracted from the decrease in long fiber diameter observed in certain intratracheal instillation experiments or from the observed long fiber retention in short-term biopersistence studies. These in vivo dissolution rates agree well with those measured in vitro for the same fibers. For those special types of fibers, the high-alumina rock wool fibers that could not be measured in vitro, the method provides a way of obtaining a chemical dissolution rate constant from an animal study. The inverse of the in vivo dissolution rate, the fiber dissolution time, correlates well with the weighted half life of long fibers in a biopersistence study, and the in vivo dissolution rate may be estimated accurately from this weighted half-life.

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