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1.
The toxicity of four chemical forms of selenium (seleno-L-methionine, seleno-DL-methionine, selenized yeast, and high selenium wheat) was compared in day-old mallard ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos). In the first experiment, in which the basal diet was 75% wheat, survival after 2 weeks was lower for ducklings fed 30 g/g selenium as seleno-L-methionine (36%) than for ducklings fed 30 g/g selenium as seleno-DL-methionine (100%) or 30 g/g selenium from high selenium yeast (88%). The concentration of selenium at 2 weeks in the livers of survivors was similar for ducklings fed 15 g/g selenium as seleno-DL-methionine (12 g/g, wet weight), seleno-L-methionine (11 g/g), and high selenium wheat (11 g/g), but was lower when the selenium came from selenized yeast (6.2 g/g). When fed 30 g/g selenium from the various sources, the selenium concentrations in liver were 20 g/g for seleno-DL-methionine, 19 g/g for seleno-L-methionine, and 9.9 g/g for selenized yeast. In a second experiment, in which the basal diet was a commercial duck feed, survival after 2 weeks was 100% in ducklings fed 30 g/g selenium as seleno-DL-methionine, seleno-L-methionine, or selenized yeast. Selenium concentrations in liver were similar for ducklings fed the 30-g/g selenium diets as the DL or L forms of selenomethionine (27 and 25 g/g), but lower for ducklings fed selenized yeast (13 g/g). The greater toxicity of the L form of selenomethionine was probably related to the palatability or nutritional nature of the wheat-based diet used in experiment 1, but the exact reason for the difference between the DL and L forms is unknown. Biologically incorporated selenium, derived from high selenium wheat, was no more toxic than selenium derived from the two purified forms of selenomethionine, and the selenium in selenized yeast was not as toxic as that in the two forms of selenomethionine.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The exposure of 11 pharmaceutical plant workers to methotrexate (MTX) was studied. Personal air samples were taken during the different manufacturing processes: drug compounding, vial filling, and tablet preparation. The uptake of MTX was established by the determination of MTX in urine. MTX was analyzed using the fluorescence polarization immunoassay (FPIA), a method that is frequently used for monitoring serum levels in patients treated with MTX. The FPIA method was modified in such a way that MTX could be measured quickly and efficiently in air and urine samples. MTX was detected in air samples of all workers except for those involved in the vial filling process (range: 0.8–182 g/m3; median: 10 g/m3). The highest concentrations were observed for workers weighing MTX (118 and 182 g/m3). MTX was detected in urine samples of all workers. The mean cumulative MTX excretion over 72–96 h was 13.4 g MTX-equivalents (range: 6.1–24 g MTX-equiva g MTX-equivalents (range: 6.1–24 g MTX-equivalents). lents). A significantly lower background level of 10.2 g A significantly lower background level of 10.2 g MTX-equivalents was measured in urine of 30 control persons (range: 4.9–21 g MTX-equivalents).  相似文献   

3.
Mean mercury (0.40 g/g), and geometric mean DDE (1.6 g/g) and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) (2.3 g/g) concentrations in Forster's tern (Sterna forsteri) eggs from Lavaca Bay were higher than those in tern eggs from a reference area in San Antonio Bay, but residues were not correlated with hatching success. Nest success was similar between bays. Selenium levels in Lavaca Bay tern eggs (0.71 g/g) were also comparable to those in eggs from the reference area (0.68 g/g).Clutch size (3.1 to 3.4) of Lavaca Bay black skimmers (Rynchops niger) was no different than that (3.4) at a reference colony near Laguna Vista. Nest success was similar among three Lavaca Bay colonies, but success was lower at one Lavaca Bay colony (40%) than at Laguna Vista (65%). Mean mercury (0.46 g/g) and selenium (0.75 g/g) concentrations in skimmer eggs from Lavaca Bay were higher than those (0.19, 0.33 g/g) from Laguna Vista; however, concentrations of neither contaminant were related to hatching success. DDE concentrations in Lavaca Bay skimmer eggs (3.4 g/g) were similar to those from Laguna Vista (3.2 g/g) and DDE was negatively correlated with hatching success. PCBs were higher in eggs from Lavaca Bay (1.3 g/g) than Laguna Vista (0.8 g/g). Organochlorine and metal contaminants in most eggs were below embryotoxic levels. Eggshell thinning in Forster's terns (7%) and black skimmers (5%) was below that associated with lowered reproduction.DDE and PCBs were detected in 9 Caspian tern (S. caspia) eggs; maximum concentrations were 4.7 and 5.4 g/g. Caspian tern and least tern (S. albifrons) eggs contained low (0.9 g/g) concentrations of mercury and selenium.  相似文献   

4.
Objectives: External and internal exposure to naphthalene was examined in the most important industries that are typically concerned with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-induced diseases (cancer). Furthermore, a control collective from the general population was investigated. Methods: External naphthalene was determined by personal air sampling (n=205). The internal exposure was examined by urinary metabolites 1-naphthol and 2-naphthol (n=277). Results: Highest median concentrations of naphthalene in air were found in converter infeed (93.2 g/m3) and coal-tar distillation (35.8 g/m3). Moderate and low levels were determined in coking plants (14.5 g/m3) and in the production of refractories (6.1 g/m3) and graphite electrodes (0.7 g/m3). Biological monitoring revealed concentrations of the sum of both metabolites [(1+2)-NOL] in smokers to be increased by 1.6–6.4 times compared with that in non-smokers at the same workplaces. Among non-smokers we found high median (1+2)-NOL levels in converter bricklayers (120.1 g/l), in coal-tar distillation workers (56.0 g/l) and in coking plant workers (29.5 g/l). (1+2)-NOL concentrations around 10 g/l were found in the production of refractories and graphite electrodes. There was a rough coherency between external and internal naphthalene exposure. In the controls, median (1+2)-NOL concentrations were 10.9 g/l in non-smokers urine and 40.3 g/l in smokers urine samples. Conclusions: Actual conditions of occupational hygiene at the workplaces investigated in this comprehensive study are better than those that current limit values of 50,000 g/m3 (TLV, TRK) seem to induce. It has become obvious that tobacco smoking is a crucial confounding factor in biological monitoring of naphthalene-exposed humans, making interpretation of occupationally increased naphthol excretions very difficult at low exposure levels.  相似文献   

5.
The toxicity of mercury (HgCl2), copper (CuCl2: 5 H2O), nickel (NiSO4: 6 H2O), lead (Pb(CH3COO)2: 3 H2O) and cobalt (CoCl2: 6 H2O) was studied under standardized conditions in embryos and larvae of the zebrafish,Brachydanio rerio. Exposures were started at the blastula stage (2–4 h after spawning) and the effects on hatching and survival were monitored daily for 16 days. Copper and nickel were more specific inhibitors of hatching than cobalt, lead, and mercury. Nominal no effect concentrations determined from the dose-response relationships (ZEPs, Zero Equivalent Points) for effect on hatching time were 0.05 g Cu/L, 10 g Hg/L, 20 g Pb/L, 40 g Ni/L and 3,840 g Co/L, and those for effect on survival time were 0.25 g Cu/L, 1.2 g Hg/L, 30 g Pb/L, 80 g Ni/L, and 60 g Co/L. The no effect concentrations for Ni, Hg and Pb are consistent with previously reported MATC values for sensitive species of fish. The no effect concentrations for copper are 1–2 orders of magnitude lower than previously reported values. The major reason for the latter discrepancy was considered to be the absence of organics that can complex copper ions in the reconstituted water that we used, which had a hardness of 100 mg/L (as CaCO3) and a pH of 7.5–7.7. Unexposed controls were started with embryos from different parental zebrafishes and the parental-caused variability in early embryo mortality, median hatching time and median survival time were estimated.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The objective of this study was to assess individual human exposure to volatile halogenated hydrocarbons (VHH) under normal environmental conditions by means of biological monitoring, i.e. by the measurement of these compounds or their metabolites in body fluids, such as blood, serum, and urine. Blood samples of 39 normal subjects without known occupational exposure to these agents were examined for the occurrence of VHH. The following compounds were present in quantifiable concentrations in 60 to 95% of the blood samples examined: chloroform (median 0.2 g/l; range < 0.1–1.7 g/l), 1,1,1-trichloroethane (median 0.2 g/l; range < 0.1–3.4 g/l), tetrachloroethylene (median 0.4 g/l; range < 0.1–3.7 g/l). Trichloroethylene could be detected in 31% of all blood samples (median < 0.1 g/l; range < 0.1–1.3 g/l). In addition, the levels of trichloroacetic acid (TCA) were determined in serum and 24-h urine samples of 43 and 94, respectively, normal subjects. TCA was present in measurable concentrations in all serum and urine samples examined. The median of the TCA levels in serum was 21.4 g/l (range 4.8–221.2 g/l) and in urine 6.0 g/24 h (range 0.6–261.4 g/24 h). The results are discussed in relation to data from the literature on human exposure to VHH from the general environment, i.e. via air, food, and water. The upper normal limits calculated from the results of this investigation can be used to detect even minor excessive exposures to VHH.  相似文献   

7.
A new sublethal toxicity test was developed in this study to measure the effect of copper and lead on the motility of coral larvae. Larval motility was significantly affected by copper and lead doses immediately after dosing. The copper EC50 values for motility of Goniastrea aspera brain coral larvae (12 h, 21 g/L; 24 h, 16 g/L; 48 h, 22 g/L) were much lower than the copper LC50 values for G. aspera larval survival (6 h, 260 g/L, and 24 h, 121 g/L, for 5-day-old larvae and 6 h, 248 g/L, and 24 h, 136.64 g/L, for 6-day-old larvae) during the early part of the experiments. However, at later times, the LC50 values (48 h, 40 g/L, for 5-day-old larvae and 48- h, 87 g/L, for 6-day-old larvae) were similar to the EC50 values for larval motility. The lead 72-h EC50 value for G. aspera larval motility (2900 g/L) was much lower than the lead 72-h LC50 value for larval survival (9890 g/L). The results show that larval motility can be a useful parameter to measure in order to determine the sublethal effects of trace metals on coral larvae.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrous oxide (N2O) was assayed in 676 urine samples and 101 blood samples provided after exposure by operating theatre personnel from nine hospitals. The blood and urine assays were repeated in 25 subjects 18 h after the end of exposure. For 80 subjects, environmental N2O was also measured during intraoperative exposure. Mean urinary N2O in the 676 subjects at the end of exposure was 40 g/l (range 1–3805 g/l); in 10 of the 676 subjects, urinary N2O was in the range 279–3805 g/l (mean 1202 /l). The 98th percentile was 120 g/l. Mean blood N2O at the end of exposure, measured in 101 subjects, was 21 g/l (median 16 g/l, range 1–75 g/l). Blood and urine N2O (1.5 g/l and 4.9 g/l, respectively) in 25 subjects, 18 h after exposure, was significantly higher than in occupationally non-exposed subjects (blood 0.91 g/l, urine 1 g/l). Environmental exposure was significantly related to blood and urinary N2O (r = 0.59 andr = 0.64, respectively). Blood and urinary N2O were significantly related to each other (r = 0.71), and were equivalent to about 25% of the environmental exposure level. The mean urinary N2O of 1202 g/l in 10/676 subjects was not related to environmental exposure in the operating theatre. The highest urinary N2O levels measured in these 10/676 subjects could be explained by an asymptomatic urinary infection.  相似文献   

9.
Lymantria dispar (gypsy moth) larvae were reared on both a natural diet of oak leaves and an artificial medium contaminated independently with four different metal nitrates. Larvae were contaminated up to pupation either from 1st or 4th instars at four concentrations differing by a factor of 5. The lowest concentration levels were 2 g/g Cd, 4 g/g Pb, 10 g/g Cu, and 100 g/g Zn based on nutrient medium dry weight. Developmental rate, growth, mortality and reproductive success were determined. No-Observed-Effect-Concentrations (NOECs) calculated were dependent on the metal, the parameter investigated and the stage at which exposure commenced. In general, larvae exposed from the 4th instar were less susceptible to metal toxification than those exposed from hatching. Considering all parameters investigated, dietary NOECs were determined to be 2 g/g Cd, 4 g/g Pb, 10 g/g Cu, and 100 g/g Zn.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Rabbit cornea cells exhibited a sensitivity to 1 g aflatoxin b1 and 5 g rubratoxin B per ml of growth medium. No changes were observed in the bacteriophages tested in the presence of 25 g aflatoxin b1 or 100 g rubratoxin B per ml of medium by the plaque-forming unit method or single-step growth curves.  相似文献   

11.
Flow-through early-life-stage (ELS) toxicity tests were conducted with the pesticides aldicarb (Temik®) and fonofos (Dyfonate®) to determine their effect on the survival and growth of fathead minnows. Concentrations of 78g/L of aldicarb and 16g/L of fonofos did not affect survival and growth. However, 156g/L of aldicarb and 33g/L of fonofos were lethal to larval-juvenile exposed for 30 days post-hatch. The maximum acceptable toxicant concentration (MATC) of aldicarb and fonofos for the fathead minnow is estimated to be between 78–156g/L and 16–33g/L, respectively. The corresponding chronic values (geometric mean of MATC values) would be 110g/L and 23g/L. Acute toxicity tests gave 96-hr LC50 values of 1370g aldicarb/L and 1090g fonofos/L. The acute-chronic ratio (96-hr LC50/chronic value) is 12 for aldicarb and 47 for fonofos.  相似文献   

12.
Lead and cadmium levels in blood and deciduous teeth (shed incisors only) of 6-year-old German children were determined in 1991 in a large epidemiological study carried out in rural and urban areas of western Germany (Duisburg, Essen, Gelsenkirchen, Dortmund, Borken) and eastern Germany (Leipzig, Halle, Magdeburg, Osterburg, Gardelegen, Salzwedel). In total, blood lead and cadmium levels of 2311 German children and tooth lead and cadmium levels of 790 German children were analyzed. Blood lead levels were generally low in all study areas with geometric means between 39.3 g/1 and 50.8 g/l in the western German and between 42.3 g/1 and 68.1 g/l in the eastern German study areas. The mean blood lead level of Turkish children (n = 213) living in the western German study areas was 50.1 g/l and thus 5.6 g/1 higher than the overall geometric mean of the western German children. The higher exposure may be explained by a higher oral uptake from food and different living conditions. These children were excluded from multiple regression analysis because they were all living in the western study areas. The mean tooth lead levels ranged between 1.50 and 1.74 g/g in the western and between 1.51 g/g and 2.72 g/g in the eastern study areas. Thus, they show a distribution pattern similar to blood. Blood and tooth lead levels were higher in urban than in rural areas and higher in the eastern German than in the western German study areas. With regard to the blood and tooth cadmium concentrations, no significant differences between the study areas could be found. The mean cadmium levels in blood ranged between 0.12 g/1 and 0.14 g/l and the mean tooth cadmium concentrations between 20.8 ng/g and 27.8 ng/g. Blood and tooth lead and cadmium levels of the eastern and western German children were thus mainly at a relatively low level in all rural and urban study areas. The study demonstrates and confirms that blood and tooth lead levels are influenced by several demographic, social, and environmental variables. The results indicate that there has been a further significant decrease of lead and cadmium exposure in western German children since our last epidemiological study carried out in the same study areas in 1985/1986.  相似文献   

13.
The concentration of Pb, Cd, and Al in tissues of crayfishProcambarus clarkii were evaluated from several wetland sites located adjacent to roadways and were compared to crayfish harvested from a commercial site free from roadside influences. Abdominal muscle, hepatopancreas, alimentary tract, exoskeleton and blood were analyzed for metal content. Results indicated that levels of contamination obtained in almost all tissues of crayfish from roadside ditches contained significantly higher amounts of metals than those of the commercially harvested control crayfish (p = .05–.001). Detection limits of Pb, Cd, and Al ranged from 0.04 g Pb/g to 16.15 g Pb/g.001 g Cd/g to .13 g Cd/g, and 1.22 g Al/g to 981 g Al/g, respectively. Concentrations of Pb, Cd, and Al were highest in the hepatopancreas and alimentary tract. High levels of these elements were also detected in the exoskeleton. In contrast, muscle tissue was the least affected tissue. Several significant correlations among concentrations of metals were found when comparing a variety of tissues inProcambarus clarkii.  相似文献   

14.
The bioaccumulation and toxicity of selenium in a simple aquatic food chain was investigated by feeding a diet of seleniferous algae (Selenastrum capricornutum) to fourth instar midge (Chironomus decorus) larvae. Treatment diets consisted of S. capricornutum cultured in three concentrations of selenite (0, 10, and 40 g Se/L) and four concentrations of selenate (0, 4, 10, and 40 g Se/L). The seleniferous algae was freeze-dried and utilized as a diet for the midge larvae. The data show that, under laboratory conditions, a 96 h dietary exposure of 2.11 g Se/g dry weight significantly reduced larval growth at tissue concentrations 2.55 g Se/g dry weight. The results demonstrate that some invertebrates are very sensitive to dietary selenium exposure. When compared to similar studies with Daphnia magna, the data suggest that invertebrate primary consumers differ in the metabolism of dietary selenium.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of tributyltin (TBT) on survival, growth, morphometry, and RNA-DNA ratio in larval striped bass(Morone saxatilis) were assessed in three experiments. In Experiment I, 13 day old larvae were exposed to 0, 0.067, 0.766, or 2.284 g TBT/L for 6 days. All larvae exposed to 2.284 /L died by day 5; exposure to 0.766 g/L significantly reduced survival relative to controls (59.8% vs. 81.8%). Significant, concentration-dependent decreases in body depth occurred in larvae exposed to 0.067 and 0.766 g/L. In Experiment II, all 16 day old larvae exposed to 1.498 g/L died by day 6. Survival, weight, and morphometry parameters were not significantly different in larvae exposed to 0, 0.052, or 0.444 g/L for 7 days. In Experiment III, survival was similar in 21 day old larvae exposed to 0, 0.055, 0.218, or 0.514 /L for 7 days. Notochord length and dry weight decreased significantly in larvae exposed to 0.514 g/L. Weight and morphometry parameters were more sensitive indicators of sublethal stress than RNA-DNA ratio. Maximum TBT concentrations reported in Chesapeake Bay marinas are likely to cause increased larval mortality. Longer-term studies are needed to assess effects at <0.050 g/L, which may be more representative of habitat conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Levels of polychlorobiphenyls (PCBs), DDE, and mirex were measured in the subcutaneous fat, breast muscle, liver, and brain of sixty-three waterfowl collected in New York State during 1979 and 1980. Mean PCB levels were 7.5 g/g in fat and 1.3 g/g in breast muscle on a wet weight basis. The FDA tolerance level is 3.0 g/g in fat on a wet weight basis. Mean DDE and mirex levels were 0.34 g/g and 0.10 g/g in fat and 0.16 g/g and 0.07 g/g in breast muscle on a wet weight basis, respectively. Comparisons and correlations were made of contaminant levels in the various tissues by different concentration bases, and PCB concentrations were compared to the Aroclor® (PCB) type. Potential health hazards are discussed. Comparisons to earlier studies show declined levels. Mergansers are the most contaminated species.  相似文献   

17.
A capillary blood microsampling technique was tested among urban young children in Stockholm. Blood lead (BPb) and hemoglobin (Hb) concentrations were determined in capillary blood obtained by fingerstick from 41 children, 13–20 months old, and the accompanying parent. The quality control included control for lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd) contamination of material and equipment used for blood sampling, washing procedures for the hands and fingers to be punctured, comparisons of Pb and Cd concentrations in blood obtained by fingerstick and by brachial vein puncture from the same individuals, analysis of external quality control samples for Pb and Cd in blood together with the collected samples, and evaluation of the analytical performance using linear regression analysis.The results showed that blood sampling material may contaminate the blood samples with amounts of Pb and Cd that would seriously influence the monitoring results in the low concentration range (<100 g Pb/L and <1 g Cd/L). However, it is possible to obtain reliable BPb concentrations (>10 g Pb/L), but not BCd concentrations (<1 g Cd/L), with the capillary blood microsampling technique tested provided that a strict quality control is applied. The sampling procedure tested was well accepted by the children and their parents. The children's median BPb concentration (27 g/L; range 9–73 g/L) was similar to the median BPb concentration of their parents (27 g/L; range 7–74 g/L). However, the correlation between child and parent BPb concentrations was poor (R2=0.20), which may indicate different sources to Pb exposure in children and parents.  相似文献   

18.
Toxicity of Cadmium (Cd), Chromium (Cr), Copper (Cu), and Mercury (Hg) on the early developmental stages of Ciona intestinalis was investigated. Developmental defects of larvae after exposure of gametes throughout their development to the larval stage were assessed. Gamete exposure to increasing metal concentrations resulted in a significant decrease of the percentage of normally hatched larvae, showing median effective concentrations (EC50) of 721 g/L (6.42 M) for Cd, 12772 g/L (226 M) for Cr, 36.6 g/L (0.576 M) for Cu, and 44.7 g/L (0.223 M) for Hg. Larval attachment was significantly affected when gametes were exposed to the metals throughout development. The EC50 reducing larval attachment by 50% were 752 g/L (6.7 M) for Cd, 15026 g/L (289 M) for Cr, 67.8 g/L (1.607 M) for Cu, and 78.1 g/L (0.389 M) for Hg. Therefore, on a molar basis Hg is three times more toxic than Cu, 20–30 times more than Cd, and 700–1000 times more toxic than Cr, for both responses.  相似文献   

19.
Acute and chronic toxicity studies of Kepone® (chlordecone) and mirex were conducted with daphnids (Daphnia magna), amphipods (Gammarus pseudolimnaeus), and larvae of a midge (Chironomus plumosus). Acute toxicities of Kepone ranged from a 48-hr EC50 of 350g/L for midges to a 96-hr LC50 of 180g/L for amphipods, whereas the acute toxicities of mirex to all three taxa exceeded 1000g/L. Maximum acceptable toxicant concentrations (MATC's) for Kepone and mirex were estimated by measuring reproduction of daphnids, growth of amphipods, emergence of midges, and survival of all organisms. MATC for Kepone was estimated to be between 9 and 18g/L for daphnids, between 1 and 2g/L for amphipods, and between 8.4 and 18g/L for midges; MATC for mirex exceeded 34g/L for daphnids and midges, but less than 2.4g/L for amphipods. The concentration of Kepone and mirex accumulated by daphnids was 760 and 8025 times, respectively, the concentration in water. Estimated times for elimination of 50% of the residues by daphnids were 141 hr for Kepone and 12 hr for mirex.  相似文献   

20.
In acute tests of toxicity, two cladocerans,Daphnia galeata mendotae andCeriodaphnia lacustris, and the calanoid,Diaptomus oregonensis, were more sensitive to fenvalerate thanDaphnia magna, the organism used in standard laboratory bioassays. The 48-hr EC50s for each species/stage in order of increasing sensitivity were adultD. magna — 2.52 g/L;D. magna (48-hr old) — 0.83 g/L; adultD. galeata mendotae — 0.29 g/L; adultC. lacustris — 0.21 g/L;D. galeata mendotae (48-hr old) — 0.16 g/L; adultDiaptomus oregonensis — –0.12 g/L. No toxicity was observed when these organisms were exposed to a range of concentrations of the emulsifiable concentrate without fenvalerate (the EC blank).Rates of filtration of the14C-labelled alga,Chlamydomonas reinhardii byD. galeata mendotae, C. lacustris andD. oregonensis were decreased significantly at sublethal concentrations of fenvalerate after only 24-hr exposure.Ceriodaphnia lacustris showed the greatest sensitivity with rates of filtration significantly decreased at 0.01 g fenvalerate/ L. Concentrations of fenvalerate 0.05 g/L resulted in decreased rates of filtration byD. galeata mendotae. A concentration of 0.10 g fenvalerate/ L caused rates of filtration to increase inD. oregonensis. whereas 0.05 and 0.5 g/L resulted in a decrease in these rates.Rates of assimilation of algae byD. galeata mendotae, C. lacustris andD. oregonensis exposed to similar concentrations of fenvalerate were decreased at concentrations 0.05 g fenvalerate/L. Changes in rates of assimilation were not as sensitive a parameter of toxicity as changes in rates of filtration. The EC blank had no significant effects on rates of filtration or assimilation for all three species.  相似文献   

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