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Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.

Organohalides formed through the reaction of chlorine and organic compounds in natural and waste waters pose potential health hazards. For this reason, alternative water disinfectants that do not form organohalides are being investigated with great interest. Limited data are available on the health...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carlton, B D, Barlett, P, Basaran, A, Colling, K, Osis, I, Smith, M K
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1986
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3816727
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author Carlton, B D
Barlett, P
Basaran, A
Colling, K
Osis, I
Smith, M K
author_facet Carlton, B D
Barlett, P
Basaran, A
Colling, K
Osis, I
Smith, M K
author_sort Carlton, B D
collection PubMed
description Organohalides formed through the reaction of chlorine and organic compounds in natural and waste waters pose potential health hazards. For this reason, alternative water disinfectants that do not form organohalides are being investigated with great interest. Limited data are available on the health effects, in particular reproductive toxicity effects, of these compounds. In our laboratory, we have examined the reproductive effects of chloramine and chlorine administered by gavage in Long-Evans rats. Animals were treated for a total of 66 to 76 days. Males were treated for 56 days and females for 14 days prior to breeding and throughout the 10-day breeding period. Females were treated throughout gestation and lactation. Following breeding, the males were necropsied and evaluated for sperm parameters and reproductive tract histopathology. Adult females and some pups were necropsied at weaning on postnatal day 21. Other pups were treated postweaning until 28 or 40 days of age. These pups were evaluated for the day of vaginal patency and thyroid hormone levels. No differences were observed between control rats and those rats exposed to up to 5 mg/kg/day chlorine or 10 mg/kg/day chloramine when fertility, viability, litter size, day of eye opening, or day of vaginal patency were evaluated. No alterations in sperm count, sperm direct progressive movement (micron/sec), percent motility, or sperm morphology were observed among adult male rats. In addition, male and female reproductive organ weights were comparable to their respective control groups, and no significant histopathologic changes were observed among chlorine- or chloramine-treated male and female rats.
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spelling pubmed-14743262006-06-09 Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants. Carlton, B D Barlett, P Basaran, A Colling, K Osis, I Smith, M K Environ Health Perspect Research Article Organohalides formed through the reaction of chlorine and organic compounds in natural and waste waters pose potential health hazards. For this reason, alternative water disinfectants that do not form organohalides are being investigated with great interest. Limited data are available on the health effects, in particular reproductive toxicity effects, of these compounds. In our laboratory, we have examined the reproductive effects of chloramine and chlorine administered by gavage in Long-Evans rats. Animals were treated for a total of 66 to 76 days. Males were treated for 56 days and females for 14 days prior to breeding and throughout the 10-day breeding period. Females were treated throughout gestation and lactation. Following breeding, the males were necropsied and evaluated for sperm parameters and reproductive tract histopathology. Adult females and some pups were necropsied at weaning on postnatal day 21. Other pups were treated postweaning until 28 or 40 days of age. These pups were evaluated for the day of vaginal patency and thyroid hormone levels. No differences were observed between control rats and those rats exposed to up to 5 mg/kg/day chlorine or 10 mg/kg/day chloramine when fertility, viability, litter size, day of eye opening, or day of vaginal patency were evaluated. No alterations in sperm count, sperm direct progressive movement (micron/sec), percent motility, or sperm morphology were observed among adult male rats. In addition, male and female reproductive organ weights were comparable to their respective control groups, and no significant histopathologic changes were observed among chlorine- or chloramine-treated male and female rats. 1986-11 /pmc/articles/PMC1474326/ /pubmed/3816727 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Carlton, B D
Barlett, P
Basaran, A
Colling, K
Osis, I
Smith, M K
Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title_full Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title_fullStr Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title_short Reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
title_sort reproductive effects of alternative disinfectants.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474326/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3816727
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