Abstract

We have previously described the acute po toxicity in guinea pigs of soot from a transformer fire at the State Office Building in Binghamton, New York. The soot was determined to contain polychlorinated biphenyls, biphenylenes, dibenzodioxins, and dibenzofurans. The present study evaluates soot toxicity in guinea pigs receiving 0, 0.2, 1.9, 9.3, or 46.3 ppm soot in the feed for 90 days or 231.5 ppm for 32 days. At 231.5 ppm, body weight loss, thymic atrophy, bone marrow depletion, skeletal muscle and gastrointestinal tract epithelial degeneration, and fatty infiltration of hepatocytes were observed. Mortality had reached 35% by Day 32 (when survivors were killed), with total soot consumption of approximately 400 mg/kg. At 46.3 or 9.3 ppm soot, a reduced rate of body weight gain was observed, and at 46.3 ppm, the mortality by Day 90 was 30%. Relative (to body) thymus weights were decreased in both groups, while relative spleen weights were increased at 46.3 ppm soot only. Salivary gland interlobular duct squamous metaplasia and focal lacrimal gland adenitis were detected histopathologically, while bone marrow depletion was noted only in females at the higher dose. Diminished serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activity in both sexes and decreased serum sodium levels in male and potassium levels in female animals were detected at both dose levels. Decreased γ-glutamyl transferase activity and red blood cell count and elevated serum creatinine and triglycerides were observed only in animals fed 46.3 ppm soot. At 1.9 ppm soot, salivary gland duct metaplasia was observed in both sexes, along with decreased relative thymus weights, ALT activity, and serum sodium levels in male animals only. No effects attributable to soot exposure were noted in animals receiving 0.2 ppm soot for 90 days. Total average soot consumption for male and female animals in the 0.2, 1.9, 9.3, and 46.3 ppm dosage groups was 1.2, 12, 55, and 275 mg/kg, respectively. Although many of the observed effects were typical of acute exposure of guinea pigs to the Binghamton soot or to polychlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons in general, salivary gland duct metaplasia has not been previously reported. Toxic effects of this subchronic exposure were observed at lower total doses than with acute exposure, although variations in absorption due to the effects of different vehicles (aqueous in the acute study versus the feed in this study) could account for some or all of this difference.

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