Abstract

Groups of 12 male Wistar rats, of about 400 g body weight, were dosed with 2, 6, or 15 mg/kg of 14C-labeled pyrene, dissolved in acetone, applied to 4 cm2 of a shaved area of the mid back. Three animals in each dose group were killed at 1, 2, 4, and 6 d post-dosing, and their principal organs were removed and analyzed for pyrene and [14C]pyrene equivalents. Urine and feces, as well as the area of skin to which the dose was applied, were also analyzed for [14C]pyrene equivalents. The rate of uptake from the skin was rapid (t1/2 0.5-0.8 d) relative to rate processes for the other organs, and about 50% of the applied dose was excreted over the 6 d of the study. The significant decrease in the fraction of the dose excreted and in the normalized amounts distributed to the various organs and tissues, as the dose increased for all chemical species measured, was strongly suggestive of nonlinear kinetics, as has been observed in previous studies. Levels of pyrene were highest in the liver, kidneys, and fat. Levels of metabolites were also high in the lung. It was evident that the dermal route of uptake was not insignificant for this model polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon and may represent a significant exposure route for exposed humans.

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