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© 1989 Oxford University Press

research-article

A 90-Day Inhalation Toxicity Study with Benomyl in Rats

DAVID B. WARHEIT1, DAVID P. KELLY, MICHAEL C. CARAKOSTAS and ALLEN W. SINGER

E. I du Pont de Nemours and Company. Inc., Haskell Laboratory for Toxicology and Industrial Medicine P.O. Box 50. Elkton Road, Newark, Delaware 19714

Received March 17, 1988; accepted July 27, 1988

A 90-Day Inhalation Toxiaty Study with Benomyl in Rats. WARHEIT, D. B., KELLY, D. P., CARAKOSTAS, M. C., AND SINGER, A. W. (1989). Fundam Appl Toxicol./ 12, 333-345. Benomyl [methyl 1-(butylcarbamoyl)-2-benzimidazolecarbamate, CAS Registry No. 17804-35-2] is a fungicide and the possibility for inhalation exposure exists for field workers. To assess the toxicity of benomyl, groups of 20 male and 20 female CD rats were exposed nose-only 6 hr a day, 5 days a week, to concentrations of 0, 10, 50 or 200 mg/m3 of a benomyl atmosphere. At the midpoint (approximately 45 days on test) and at the end of the exposure period, blood and urine samples for clinical evaluation were collected from 10 rats/group/sex, and these animals were sacrificed for pathological examination. Similar evaluations were performad on all remaining rats at the end of the 90-day test period. After approximately 45 days on test, compoundrelated degeneration of the olfactory epithelium was observed in all males and in 8 of 10 female rats exposed to 200 mg/m3 benomyl. Two male rats exposed to 50 mg/m3 had similar, although less severe, areas of olfactory epithelial degeneration. After approximately 90 days of exposure, the remaining 10 rats/group/sex were sacrificed and examined. Of these rats, all of the males and females exposed to 200 mg/m3 had olfactory degeneration, along with 3 males exposed to 50 mg/m3 of benomyl. No other observed lesions were interpreted to have been caused by the benomyl exposure. In addition, male rats exposed to 200 mg/m3 benomyl had depressed mean body weights compared to controls and this finding correlated with a reduction in food consumption. Based on pathological observations, 10 mg/m3 represents the no-observable-effect level (NOEL) for the male rats, and 50 mg/m3 is the NOEL for the female rats.


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