Abstract
This study was designed to evaluate and characterize any subchronic toxicity of thaumatin sterilized by electron beam irradiation (5.0 kGy) when administered at dietary levels of 0% (control), 0.3%, 1.0% and 3.0% to groups of 10 male and 10 female Crj:CD (SD) IGS rats for 13 weeks. Separate groups of both sexes received 3.0% non-irradiated thaumatin. There were no treatment-related clinical signs or adverse effects on the survival rate, body weight, food consumption, water consumption and urinalysis, ophthalmology, haematology, or blood biochemistry data. No treatment-related alterations in gross pathology or organ weights were found in any group. On histopathological examination, sporadic spontaneous lesions known to occur in this strain of rats were the only findings, with no specific relation to the test substance. Thus, the no-observed-adverse-effect-level (NOAEL) was judged to be a dietary level of at least 3.0% (2502 mg/kg body weight/day for males, 2889 mg/kg body weight/day for females) for electron beam irradiated thaumatin under the present experimental conditions. It was concluded that electron beam-irradiation of thaumatin does not cause changes of any toxicological significance.
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