Contribution of toxicological pathology to occupational health: lung carcinogenicity of fibrous and particulate substances in rats.

Journal of toxicologic pathology(2023)

Cited 1|Views7
No score
Abstract
In this review, we focus on the rat pulmonary carcinogenicity of two solid substances, fibrous multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) and particulate indium tin oxide (ITO). Inhalation exposure to MWNT-7, a type of MWCNTs, and ITO induced lung carcinogenicity in both male and female rats. Toxicity to the alveolar epithelium is induced by macrophages undergoing frustrated phagocytosis or frustrated degradation of engulfed particles (referred to as frustrated macrophages). Melted macrophage contents contribute significantly to development of hyperplasia of the alveolar epithelium, which eventually results in the induction of lung carcinoma. MWNT-7 and ITO induce secondary genotoxicity; consequently, a no-observed-adverse-effect level can be applied to these materials rather than benchmark doses that are used for non-threshold carcinogens. Thus, establishing occupational exposure limit values for MWNT-7 and ITO based on the existence of a carcinogenic threshold is reasonable.
More
Translated text
Key words
genotoxicity,indium tin oxide,multi-walled carbon nanotube,occupational exposure limit values,phagocytic macrophage,rat pulmonary carcinogenicity
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined