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© 1982 Oxford University Press

research-article

1,1,3,3-Tetrachloroacetone: Teratogenicity Study in Mice and Rabbits1

J.A. JOHN, F.J. MURRAY2, J.F. QUAST, P.A. KEELER, B.A. SCHWETZ and R.E. STAPLES3

Toxicology Research Laboratory, Health and Environmental Sciences Dow Chemical U.S.A., Midland, MI 48640; The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Research Triangle Park, NC 27709

1,1,3,3-Tetrachloroacetone: Teratogenicity Study in Mice and Rabbits. John, J.A., Murray, F.J., Quast, J.F., Keeler, P.A., Schwetz, B.A. and Staples, R.E. (1982). Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 2:220–225. The teratogenicity of tetrachlo-roacetone (TCA) was evaluated in CF-1 mice and New Zealand white rabbits. Mice were given 0, 5, 15 or 50 mg/kg/day of TCA by gavage on days 6 through 15 of gestation. Rabbits were given 0,1, 5, or 10 mg/kg/day on days 6 through 18 of gestation. The incidence of malformed fetuses was not significantly increased among mice given 5, 15 or 50 mg/kg/day of TCA. Sixteen fetuses in 3 litters in the 50 mg/kg/day group had cleft palate; they were from three dams which showed the most severe signs of toxicity, including depressed weight gain, decreased water consumption, and gastric ulceration. Dosage with 5 mg/kg/day, a level which was not toxic to the pregnant female, was not toxic to developing mouse fetuses. Fetal effects in rabbits were limited to a slight, but not statistically significant or dose related increase in the incidence of malformed fetuses. On the basis of these results, TCA does not appear to represent a unique hazard to the conceptus.


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