Abstract

Striped bass (Morone .sfi.~uri/i.s) were collected from the San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary in 1982. from areas distant from pollution sources. After acclimatization. plasma cortisol concentration (primary response) and blood biochemicals indicative of energy mobilization (secondary responses) were followed in individuals exposed to sublethal levels of benzene for up to 21 d. Despite the persistence of benzene in blood and liver tissues for the exposure duration. stress responses were moderate and returned to control values within the initial 7 d. Blood and liver rapidly accumulated benzene to approximately 20 times the exposure concentrations (0.1 and 1.0 ppni). Concentrations of cortisol and secondary response varia bles were not proportional to benzene exposure or to accumulation levels. however. Plasma cortisol concentrations increased two- to three-fold at 8 h and returned to control levels prior to 48 h exposure. Glucose. lactate. H’. protein and triglyceride concentrations were elevated during the initial 4 h to 7 d. with protein and triglyceride returning to normal levels prior to the other secondary response variables. From the perspective of the general adaptation syndrome (GAS), benzene activated the hypothalamopituitary-interrenal axis. resulting in clinical stress responses characteristic of an alarm reaction. The timecourses and amplitudes of primary and secondary responses to benzene suggest the sensory perception of a noxious agent eliciting mild. acute stress followed by adaptation.

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