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818519 
Journal Article 
Developmental toxicology of industrial alcohols: A summary of 13 alcohols administered by inhalation to rats (Reprinted from Toxicology and Industrial Health, vol 6, pg 373-387, 1990) 
Nelson, BK; Brightwell, WS; Krieg, EF, Jr 
1996 
International Journal of Occupational Medicine, Immunology, and Toxicology
ISSN: 1089-0149 
29-42 
English 
has other version or edition 032264 Developmental toxicology of industrial alcohols: A summary of 13 alcohols administered by inhalation to rats
The developmental toxicology of 13 industrial alcohols (methanol, ethanol, 1-propanol, isopropanol, 1-butanol, 2-butanol, tertiary-butanol, 1-pentanol, 1-hexanol, 2-ethyl-1-hexanol, 1-octanol, 1-nonanol, and 1-decanol), and the behavioral teratogenicity of 4 of these alcohols, were assessed in a series of experiments. The results of individual alcohols have been published previously, bur the present paper summarizes the results in view of structure-activity relationships among these alcohols. The alcohols were administered by inhalation for 7 hours per day (6 hours/day for 1-decanol) on gestation days 1-19 to groups of approximately 15 pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats. For developmental toxicology evaluations, dams were sacrificed on gestation day 20. Fetuses were serially removed, weighed, sexed, and examined for external malformations. The frequency of visceral malformations and variations was determined in one-half of the fetuses, and the frequency of skeletal deviations was determined in the other half. Behavioral teratology endpoints were investigated in groups of 15 pregnant rats exposed to one of four alcohols (ethanol, 1-propanol, 1-butanol, and tertiary-butanol) and also involved groups of 18 male rats which were exposed to the same concentrations of each alcohol for 6 weeks, and then mated to untreated females, In the behavioral teratology evaluations, all litters were culled to eight pups and fostered to unexposed mothers. Offspring were tested from days 10-90 on a series of behavioral tests designed to evaluate neuromotor integrity, activity levels, learning, and memory. Additionally, brains were removed from 10 offspring per group at 21 days of age, and were dissected into cerebrum, cerebellum, brainstem, and midbrain; these samples were assayed for steady-state levels of protein and the neurotransmitters acetylcholine, dopamine, norepinephrine, 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin), substance P, beta-endorphin, and metenkephalin.

Congenital malformations were noted for methanol, 1-propanol, isopropanol, and 1-butanol, bur only at concentrations in excess of 5,000 ppm. These concentrations also produced toxicity in the maternal animals; thus, there was little evidence of selective developmental toxicity among the alcohols. Although sporadic behavioral and neurochemical deviations were detected, no consistent pattern of effects was seen for any of the alcohols we tested. it should be noted that alcohols with chain lengths longer than the butyl series could not be generated as vapors at sufficiently high concentrations to produce observable toxicity in the maternal animals. This limits the generality of these findings to the possible developmental effects of these alcohols when taken through other routes of exposure. Thus, rats are unlikely to exhibit developmental toxicity if exposed to these alcohols within current occupational limits. One adverse finding of note from this series of studies was an apparently reversible infertility observed in male rats exposed to a high concentration of 1-propanol, a finding which should be replicated. 
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