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Reproductive Toxicity and Toxicokinetics of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. 2. Problem of Paternally-mediated Abnormalities in the Progeny of Rat

Overview
Journal Arch Toxicol
Specialty Toxicology
Date 1991 Jan 1
PMID 2043047
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Abstract

Possible effects on the next generation after long-term exposure (subcutaneous administration) of male rats to very high doses of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) were studied. Two dose regimes were applied: TCDD-25 (initial dose: 25 micrograms/kg body wt; maintenance dose: 5 micrograms/kg body wt, once weekly) and TCDD-75 (initial dose: 75 micrograms/kg body wt; maintenance dose: 15 micrograms/kg body wt). Male rats were treated for 10 weeks before mating and then throughout the entire 12 week mating period. They were mated to unexposed virgin females. One group of pregnant females was used for teratological evaluations, and another group was allowed to deliver. No significant differences were observed in the number of implantations or fetuses per litter, and resorption rate, and fetal weight between the controls and TCDD-treated groups. No gross-structural anomalies occurred in any of the fetuses sired by TCDD-treated males. In the TCDD-25 group an increased frequency of two types of variations was observed which also occur in controls: incompletely ossified fingers (TCDD-25 = 5.1%, controls = 2.6%), and incompletely ossified ossa zygomatica (TCDD-25 = 1.8%, controls = 0.5%). In the TCDD-25 group a slight but statistically significant increase was observed in the rate of stillbirths (TCDD-25 = 1.3%, controls = 0.1%), apparently due to an unusually low frequency occurring in the controls (overall historical controls = 0.6%). There was no difference in postnatal mortality (TCDD-25 = 1.3%, controls = 1.3%). Taken together, despite the very high doses of TCDD used, the data do not provide evidence for biologically significant paternally-mediated developmental toxicity in the fetuses and newborn.

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