Abstract

In rats, the liver is the primary target organ of perfluoro- n-decanoic acid (PFDA) toxicity. Therefore, the effects of PFDA on hepatic ultrastructure were studied in rats. Pathological changes induced by PFDA in hamsters, mice, and guinea pigs were also examined. PFDA caused a severe reduction in body weight in all four species studied. A reduction in food intake was observed in rats and hamsters. However, hamsters continued to consume food at a reduced level, while rats stopped eating for a 5- to 6-day period about 6 days after dosing. The PFDA-induced pathological changes in the hamsters, mice, and guinea pigs resembled those seen in rats to varying degrees. As in the rat, PFDA caused a marked liver enlargement in mice and hamsters and a moderate swelling in guinea pigs. This hepatomegaly was ascribed primarily to individual cell swelling. Thymic atrophy was noted in PFDA-treated hamsters, mice, and guinea pigs. Seminiferous tubular degeneration observed in hamsters and guinea pigs, but not in mice, was not as severe as in the rat, where in some cases frank necrosis has been seen. Ultrastructural changes in the livers of all PFDA-treated animals, regardless of species, included disruption of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, rounding and swelling of the mitochondria with related structural alterations, and mild to extensive proliferation of peroxisomes. This peroxisome proliferative response was greatest in mice and almost absent in guinea pigs. Accumulation of lipid droplets in liver cells due to PFDA treatment was more pronounced in hamsters and guinea pigs than in rats and mice. PFDA-induced hepatomegaly with a concomitant increase in peroxisomes in several rodent species may be associated with an impairment of normal lipid metabolism in the liver by PFDA.

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