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© 1997 Oxford University Press

research-article

Eight-Week Toxicity Study of 60 Hz Magnetic Fields in F344 Rats and B6C3F1 Mice

G. A. BOORMAN*, J. R. GAUGER{dagger}, T. R. JOHNSON{dagger}, M. J. TOMLINSON{ddagger}, J. C. FINDLAY{dagger}, G. S. TRAVLOS* and D. L. MCCORMICK{dagger}

*National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences P.O. Box 12233, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709 {dagger}IIT Research Institute, 10 West 35th Street Chicago, Illinois 60616 {ddagger}Pathology Associates, Inc. 10 West 35th Street, Chicago, Illinors 60616

Received June 10, 1996; accepted September 10, 1996

Toxicity studies were performed by exposing F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice (10 animals per sex per species per group) to transient-free, linearly polarized 60 Hz magnetic fields for 8 weeks. Targeted magnetic fields strengths used were 0 gauss (G; sham control fields did not exceed 0.001 G), 0.02 G, 2 G, and 10 G. Exposure was whole-body and continuous for 18.5 hr per day, 7 days per week. An additional group of rats and mice was exposed intermittently (1 hr on/1 hr off) to 10 G fields for the same period of time. Endpoints evaluated included morbidity, mortality, gross pathology, histopathology, body/organ weights, clinical chemistry (rats only), and hematology (rats only). All mice and all male rats survived until the end of the study. One female rat (2-G exposure group) died during Week 7 of the study; the death was not attributed to magnetic field exposure. In both studies, the mean body weight gains of exposed animals were similar to those of the respective controls. There were no gross, histological, hematological, or biochemical lesions attributed to magnetic field exposure. Statistically significant increases in liver weight and liver to body weight ratio occurred in female rats of all exposure groups but only at the termination. These data suggest that, for the variables evaluated in these studies, an 8-week exposure to linear-polarized, transientfree 60 Hz magnetic fields at field intensities of up to 10 G is not associated with significant toxicity in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. Furthermore, there was no toxicity observed in animals receiving intermittent (1 hr on/l hr off) exposures to 10-G fields. A 2-year study in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice is nearing completion of the in-life phase without overt toxicity in any exposed group. It is premature, however, to make any prediction concerning the possible influence of exposure to 60 Hz magnetic fields on cancer rates.


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