CHRONIC TOXICITY CARCINOGENICITY STUDY OF PYRILAMINE IN B6C3F1 MICE/

Citation
Dl. Greenman et al., CHRONIC TOXICITY CARCINOGENICITY STUDY OF PYRILAMINE IN B6C3F1 MICE/, Journal of the American College of Toxicology, 14(2), 1995, pp. 148-157
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Pharmacology & Pharmacy",Toxicology
ISSN journal
07300913
Volume
14
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
148 - 157
Database
ISI
SICI code
0730-0913(1995)14:2<148:CTCSOP>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
The chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity of pyrilamine maleate were ev aluated in B6C3F1 mice by feeding for up to 2 years to groups of 60 ma le or female mice at dietary levels of 0, 150, 750, or 1,500 ppm (as t he free base). Up to 12 mice per sex and dose group were killed after 65 weeks for clinical chemistry, hematology, and histopathologic evalu ation of control and high-dose animals. Histopathology was performed o n all animals that were dead or moribund or lived until the study was terminated at 2 years. Daily exposures to pyrilamine ranged from simil ar to 16 to 176 mg/kg, compared with maximum human exposure of 3 mg/kg . Regarding longevity, pyrilamine-treated male mice tended to survive longer than controls, whereas no differences among treated and control female mice were noted. Body weights did not differ among treated and control male groups, but final body weight average of treated female mice was 6-10% lower than that for controls. Although no dose-response trends were noted in male mice for histopathologic end points, liver/ body and liver/ brain weight ratios were significantly greater in high -dose male mice than in controls. Chronic liver inflammation exhibited a positive dose-response trend in female mice, but there was no evide nce for a carcinogenic response to pyrilamine by either sex.