Affiliation:
1. GEO-CENTERS, Fort Detrick, Maryland, y.mil
2. U.S. Army Center for Environmental Health Research, Fort Detrick, Maryland
3. GEO-CENTERS, Fort Detrick, Maryland
4. Experimental Pathology Laboratory, Herndon, Virginia
Abstract
Japanese medaka ( Oryzias latipes) were continually exposed in a flow-through diluter system for 9 months to measured bromodichloromethan e (BDCM) concentrations of 0.018, 0.143, or 1.424 mg/L. Parameters evaluated were hepatocarcinogenicity, hepatocellular proliferation, hematology, and intrahepatic BDCM concentration. BDCM was not hepatocarcinogeni c to medaka at the concentrations tested. Chronic toxicity was evidenced at 6 and 9 months by statistically significant ( α =0.05) levels of gallbladder lesions and bile duct abnormalities in medaka treated with 1.424 mg/L BDCM. Hepatocellular proliferation was assessed after 1, 4, and 20 days of BDCM exposure. Treatment-related increases or decreases in cellular proliferation were not observed at any time point. Hematocrit, leukocrit, cell viability, and cell counts of treated fish after 9 months of BDCM exposure were not significantly different from control fish. Intrahepatic concentrations were evaluated by gas chromatography after 9 months of BDCM exposure. Fish livers from all three BDCM treatments had detectable amounts of BDCM, with median intrahepatic concentrations of 1.02, 2.89, and 21.25 mg BDCM/kg fish liver in the low, middle, and high concentrations, respectively. Medaka chronic toxicity effects of statistically significant gallbladder and bile duct abnormalities occurred at 1.424 mg/L BDCM, well above median drinking water levels.
Subject
Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献