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© 1993 Oxford University Press

research-article

Inhalation Toxicity of 1,6-Hexanediamine Dihydrochloride in F344/N Rats and B6C3F1 Mice

CHARLES D. HÉBERT*,1, MICHAEL R. ELWELL*, GREGORY S. TRAVLOS*, ERROL ZEIGER{dagger}, JOHN E. FRENCH{dagger} and JOHN R. BUCHER*

*Experimental Toxicology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences P O Box 12233, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709 {dagger}Experimental Carcinogenesis and Mutagenesis Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences P O Box 12233, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709

Received August 31, 1992; accepted January 8, 1993

1,6-Hexanediamine (HDA) is a high production volume chemical which is used as an intermediate in the synthesis of paints, resins, inks, and textiles and as a corrosion inhibitor in lubricants. Two- and 13-week studies of the toxicity of the dihydrochloride salt of HDA (HDDC) were conducted in male and female Fischer 344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice using whole-body inhalation exposure. Both species were evaluated for histopatho-logic and reproductive effects, and rats were examined for clinical chemistry and hematologic changes. In the 2-week inhalation studies, animals were exposed to 10–800 mg HDDC/m3, 6 hr per day. All rats, all female mice, and two of five male mice in the high-exposure group died before the end of the study. Surviving mice in this group had a dose-dependent depression in body weight gain. Clinical signs were primarily related to upper respiratory tract irritation and included dyspnea and nasal discharge in both species. Treatment-related histopathologic lesions included inflammation and necrosis of the laryngeal epithelium of both species and the tracheal epithelium of mice, as well as focal inflammation and ulceration of the respiratory and olfactory nasal mucosa. In the 13-week inhalation studies, animals were exposed to HDDC at concentrations of 1.6–160 mg/ m3 for 6 hr per day, 5 days per week. In addition to the base study groups, a supplemental group of rats at each exposure level was included to assess the effect of HDDC on reproduction. No treatment-related changes in organ weights or organ-to-body-weight ratios occurred in rats, and no treatment-related clinical signs or gross lesions were seen in either species. Chemical-related microscopic lesions were limited to the upper respiratory tract (larynx and nasal passages) in the two highest exposure groups and were similar in both species. These lesions included minimal to mild focal erosion, ulceration, inflammation, and hyperplasia of the laryngeal epithelium, in addition to degeneration of the olfactory and respiratory nasal epithelium. HDDC caused no significant changes in sperm morphology or vaginal cytology and no significant adverse effects on reproduction in rats or mice. Hematologic and clinical chemistry changes in rats were minor and sporadic and were not accompanied by related histologic findings. HDDC did not increase the frequency of micronucleated erythrocytes in mice. In summary, the toxicity of HDDC to rats and mice was a result of the irritant properties of the chemical, was limited primarily to the nasal passages and upper airways, and was consistent with the effects of other irritant chemicals administered by inhalation.


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