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Inhalation toxicity of dimethyl piperidinone.

A mixture of 1,3-dimethyl-2-piperidinone and 1,5-dimethyl-2-piperidinone (DMPD) (approximately 63-37 parts by weight) was tested for its inhalation toxicity in rats following 90-day repeated exposures. Male and female rats were exposed whole-body to either 0, 51, 230, or 310 mg/m(3) DMPD for 6 h/day, 5 days/weak for 90 days. Clinical signs, growth, clinical pathology, tissue pathology, neurobehavior, neuropathology, and semen quality were evaluated. No compound-related adverse effects were noted in clinical signs, body weights, food consumption, clinical laboratory evaluations, neurobehavioral evaluations, neuropathology, or sperm counts. Laryngeal changes consisting of minimal squamous epithelial hyperplasia and degeneration/necrosis of the cartilage were present in male and female rats exposed to 310 mg/m(3) both immediately following exposure and after the 1-month recovery period Male rats exposed to DMPD had increased relative kidney weights, increased formation of hyaline droplets and granular casts, and increased incidence of chronic progressive nephropathy. These kidney effects are consistent with increased accumulation of the urinary protein alpha(2 mu)-globulin, which has been well essential for several xenobiotics. The subsequent increased incidence of progressive nephropathy was specific to male rats with the alpha(2 mu) syndrome. Male and female rats exposed to 230 or 310 mg/m(3) had centrilobular hepatocellular hypertrophy, and male rats exposed to 310 mg/m(3) had increased relative liver weights. These liver changes were reversible following the recovery period and were considered not to represent adverse toxicological effects of treatment. Since the male rat-specific renal findings do not connote adversity for man and are net considered relevant to human hazard assessment, the no-observed-effect level in male and female rats was 230 mg/m(3), based on the microscopic changes in the larynx exposed to 310 mg/m(3).[1]

References

  1. Inhalation toxicity of dimethyl piperidinone. O'Neill, A.J., Ross, P.E., Elliott, G.S., Malley, L.A., Kennedy, G.L. Toxicology (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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