Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School Newark, NJ 07103
2. Ohio State University, College of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology, Columbus, Ohio.
3. USEPA, Health Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Abstract
Chlorine dioxide (CIO2) is under consideration as an alternative to chlorination as a disinfectant for public water supplies. The primary products resulting from CIO2 disinfection of surface waters are chlorite (CIO-2) and chlorates (CIO-3). The kinetics of 36CIO-2 and 36CIO-3 was studied in rats. Radioactivity was rapidly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract following the administration of (0.17 μCi) 36CIO-2 or (0.85 μCi) 36CIO-3 orally, and 36CI in plasma reached a peak at 2 hours and 1 hour, respectively. After 72 hours, radioactivity was highest in whole blood, followed by packed cells, plasma, stomach, testes, skin, lung, kidney, duodenum, carcass, spleen, ileum, brain, bone marrow, and liver in 36CIO-2 treatment. 36CI excretion was greatest at 24 hours after the administration of 36CIO-3, but in the 36CIO-2, the excretion most likely represented saturation of the biotransformation and excretion pathways. About 40% of the total initial dose was excreted at 72 hours in the urine and feces in both treatments. No 36CI was detected in expired air throughout the 72 hours studied.
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12 articles.
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