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EC number: 200-831-0 | CAS number: 75-01-4
- Life Cycle description
- Uses advised against
- Endpoint summary
- Appearance / physical state / colour
- Melting point / freezing point
- Boiling point
- Density
- Particle size distribution (Granulometry)
- Vapour pressure
- Partition coefficient
- Water solubility
- Solubility in organic solvents / fat solubility
- Surface tension
- Flash point
- Auto flammability
- Flammability
- Explosiveness
- Oxidising properties
- Oxidation reduction potential
- Stability in organic solvents and identity of relevant degradation products
- Storage stability and reactivity towards container material
- Stability: thermal, sunlight, metals
- pH
- Dissociation constant
- Viscosity
- Additional physico-chemical information
- Additional physico-chemical properties of nanomaterials
- Nanomaterial agglomeration / aggregation
- Nanomaterial crystalline phase
- Nanomaterial crystallite and grain size
- Nanomaterial aspect ratio / shape
- Nanomaterial specific surface area
- Nanomaterial Zeta potential
- Nanomaterial surface chemistry
- Nanomaterial dustiness
- Nanomaterial porosity
- Nanomaterial pour density
- Nanomaterial photocatalytic activity
- Nanomaterial radical formation potential
- Nanomaterial catalytic activity
- Endpoint summary
- Stability
- Biodegradation
- Bioaccumulation
- Transport and distribution
- Environmental data
- Additional information on environmental fate and behaviour
- Ecotoxicological Summary
- Aquatic toxicity
- Endpoint summary
- Short-term toxicity to fish
- Long-term toxicity to fish
- Short-term toxicity to aquatic invertebrates
- Long-term toxicity to aquatic invertebrates
- Toxicity to aquatic algae and cyanobacteria
- Toxicity to aquatic plants other than algae
- Toxicity to microorganisms
- Endocrine disrupter testing in aquatic vertebrates – in vivo
- Toxicity to other aquatic organisms
- Sediment toxicity
- Terrestrial toxicity
- Biological effects monitoring
- Biotransformation and kinetics
- Additional ecotoxological information
- Toxicological Summary
- Toxicokinetics, metabolism and distribution
- Acute Toxicity
- Irritation / corrosion
- Sensitisation
- Repeated dose toxicity
- Genetic toxicity
- Carcinogenicity
- Toxicity to reproduction
- Specific investigations
- Exposure related observations in humans
- Toxic effects on livestock and pets
- Additional toxicological data

Repeated dose toxicity: oral
Administrative data
- Endpoint:
- sub-chronic toxicity: oral
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- key study
- Reliability:
- 2 (reliable with restrictions)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- other: Comparable to guideline study, published in a peer-reviewed literature, adequate for assessment.
Data source
Reference
- Reference Type:
- publication
- Title:
- Observations on the oral administration of vinyl chloride in rats.
- Author:
- Feron, V.J., Speek, A.J., Willems, M.I., van Battum, D. and de Groot, A.P.
- Year:
- 1 975
- Bibliographic source:
- Fd Cosmet Toxicol 13:633-638.
Materials and methods
Test guideline
- Qualifier:
- equivalent or similar to guideline
- Guideline:
- OECD Guideline 408 (Repeated Dose 90-Day Oral Toxicity Study in Rodents)
- GLP compliance:
- no
- Limit test:
- no
Test material
- Reference substance name:
- Chloroethylene
- EC Number:
- 200-831-0
- EC Name:
- Chloroethylene
- Cas Number:
- 75-01-4
- Molecular formula:
- C2H3Cl
- IUPAC Name:
- chloroethene
- Details on test material:
- - Name of test material (as cited in study report): vinyl chloride monomer (VCM)
- Substance type: organic
- Physical state: gaseous
- Supplier: Akzo Zout Chemie, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
- Melting point: -153.8 C
- Boiling point: 13.37 C
- Density: 0.9106
Constituent 1
Test animals
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Wistar
- Sex:
- male/female
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS
- Source: a colony of Central Institute for Nutrition and Food Reseach (CIVO), TNO, Zeist, The Netherlands
- Age: weaning
- Housing: in wire-screen cages in groups of three in air-conditioned inhalation chamber
- Diet: institute stock diet, ad libitum
- Water: tap water, ad libitum
- Initial body weights: mean 44 g for both males and females
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS:
- Temperature: 22-24 C
- Relative humidity: 60%
Administration / exposure
- Route of administration:
- oral: gavage
- Vehicle:
- soya oil
- Details on oral exposure:
- PREPARATION OF DOSING SOLUTIONS:
Solutions of VCM in soya bean oil were prepared either by bubbling VCM gas through the oil or by injecting liquid VCM into the oil.
VEHICLE:
- Justification for use and choice of vehicle (if other than water): as VCM is lipophilic, VCM was administed as a solution in edible oil - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- yes
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- The stability of the solutions with regard to their VCM content was tested in storage experiments under various conditions either by weighing the vessels containing the solutions or by gas chromatography. The VCM solutions were also examined for polymerization products of VCM and for reaction products of VCM with unsaturated fatty acid moieties of the oil.
- Duration of treatment / exposure:
- 13 weeks
- Frequency of treatment:
- 6 days/week
Doses / concentrations
- Remarks:
- Doses / Concentrations:
0, 30, 100 or 300 mg/kg
Basis:
other: nominal in soya oil
- No. of animals per sex per dose:
- 15/sex/dose
- Control animals:
- yes, concurrent vehicle
Examinations
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- BODY WEIGHT:
- Individual body weights were recorded weekly.
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE:
- Food intake of each group was measured in weeks 1-4 and in weeks 11 and 12.
HAEMATOLOGY:
- Haematological indices (blood clotting time, haemoglobin content, packed cell volume and counts of erythrocytes and total and differential leucocytes) and biochemical blood values (sugar, urea nitrogen, total serum protein, serum albumin and activities of glutamic-oxalacetic transminase (GOT)m, glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT) and alkaline phosphatase) were recorded terminally in ten males and ten females of each group.
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY:
- The following histochemical enzyme determinations were carried out on cryostat sections of liver specimens from five males and five females: alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, adenosine monophosphatase, adenosine triphosphatase and glucose-6 phosphatase.
URINALYSIS:
- Kidney funcion (specific gravity and activity of GOT in urine) was examined in week 13 in ten males and ten females of the control and top-dose group. Also in week 13, urine examinations, including appearance, pH, glucose, protein, occult blood, ketones and microscopic constituents, were conducted upon pooled uring samples from ten males and ten females of each group. - Sacrifice and pathology:
- SACRIFICE:
- In week 14 all rats were killed by decapitation
GROSS PATHOLOGY:
- All rats were examined for gross changes. The heart, kidneys, liver, spleen, brain, gonads, thumus, thyroid and adrenals were weighed.
HISTOPATHOLOGY:
Samples of heart, kidneys, liver, spleen, brain, gonads, thumus, thyroid, adrenals and other organs were preserved in 10% buffered formalin. Detailed microscopic examination was performed on all organs of the high dose group and on the controls. Paraffin sections stained with haematoxylin-eosin were prepared from the weighed organs and from the lungs, salivary glands, trachea, thoracic aorta, skeletal muscle, axillary and mesenteric lymph nodes, ceruminous glands, pancreas, urinary bladder, sternum with bone marrow, prostate, epididymis, uterus, mammary glands, oesophagus, fore and glandular stomach, duodenum, ileum, caecum and colon. In rats given the other dose levels only the liver was examined microscopically. - Other examinations:
- Electron microscopy on small pieces of liver from one male and one female control rat and from two males and two females from each test group was performed.
- Statistics:
- Wilcoxon's test
Results and discussion
Results of examinations
- Clinical signs:
- no effects observed
- Mortality:
- no mortality observed
- Body weight and weight changes:
- no effects observed
- Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- no effects observed
- Food efficiency:
- not specified
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- not specified
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not examined
- Haematological findings:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Clinical biochemistry findings:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Urinalysis findings:
- no effects observed
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not examined
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Gross pathological findings:
- no effects observed
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- no effects observed
- Details on results:
- CLINICAL SIGNS AND MORTALITY
Gavage administration of VC solutions in soybean oil at levels up to 300 mg/kg/day did not cause any noticeable changes in appearance or behavior,
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN
Gavage administration of VC solutions in soybean oil at levels up to 300 mg/kg/day did not cause any noticeable changes in body weight gain
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if feeding study)
Gavage administration of VC solutions in soybean oil at levels up to 300 mg/kg/day did not cause any noticeable changes in food intake.
HAEMATOLOGY
The total number of white blood cells and the sugar content of the blood were slightly decreased in the 100 and 300 mg/kg/day groups
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
Serum GOT and GPT activities and of urinary GOT activity were decreased in males receiving 300 mg/kg/day. There were no other significant changes in the hematological or biochemical indices.
ORGAN WEIGHTS
The relative liver weights in males and females showed a tendency to increase with increasing doses of VC, but was only statistically significant at the highest dose level. In addition, a dose-related decrease in the relative adrenal weight occurred in males, but was only statistically significant at the highest dose level. The other organ weights recorded were closely comparable in all groups.
HISTOPATHOLOGY: NON-NEOPLASTIC
Minimal histologic changes in the liver, seen as one or a few foci of 40-70 hyperbasophilic hepatocytes occurred in one male and one female rats in both the 100 and 300 mg/kg/day groups. Electron microscopic examination of the liver showed hypertrophy of the endoplasmic reticulum in hepatocytes of animals given the highest dose. Lower dose levels were not examined.
OTHER FINDINGS:
Randomly distributed histopathological changes unrelated to treatment inluded small accumulations of reticulo-endothelial cells in the liver, focal tumular nephrosis, a slight degree of nephrocalcinosis, parasites in teh renal pelvis and urinary bladder, early signs of chronic respiratory disease in teh lungs, granulomatous pneumonic foci, medial hypertrophy of medium-sized pulmonary arteries, "morphological" activation of the thyroid gland, focal myocarditis, transformation of pancreatic acini into duct-like structures, "sqaumous"metaplasia of the epithelium lining excretory ducts of the sublingual salivary gland and slight prostatitis.
Effect levels
- Dose descriptor:
- NOAEL
- Effect level:
- 30 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Sex:
- male/female
- Basis for effect level:
- other: 100 mg/kg/day - decreased leukocytes and blood sugar 300 mg/kg/day - Same effects as 100 mg/kg/day. Decreased serum GOT and GPT and urinary GOT. Increased liver/bw, adrenal/bw, hypertrophy of endoplasmic reticulum of liver
Target system / organ toxicity
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
Any other information on results incl. tables
Table 1. Mean results of administering 0-300 mg VCM/kg body weight/day to rats by gavage on 6 days/week for 13 weeks, showing diferences of possible toxicological significance between test and control animals.
Values for males given VCM in doses (mg/kg) of |
Values for females given VCM in doses (mg/kg) of |
|||||||
Parameter affected |
0 |
30 |
100 |
300 |
0 |
30 |
100 |
300 |
Total leucocytes (103/mm3) |
18.5 |
18.8 |
17.0 |
16.5 |
17.3 |
17.6 |
14.6* |
14.8* |
Blood sugar (mg/100 ml) |
88 |
84 |
78** |
77** |
89 |
88 |
74*** |
79** |
Serum: GOT (R-Fu) GPT (R-Fu) |
228 53 |
217 49 |
224 48 |
201* 45* |
227 42 |
212 38 |
212 38 |
200 39 |
Urinary GOT (R-Fu) |
30 |
NE |
NE |
22* |
16 |
NE |
NE |
18 |
Liver weight (g/100 g bw) |
3.51 |
3.60 |
3.74 |
3.76* |
3.32 |
3.34 |
3.51 |
3.71*** |
Adrenal weight (g/100 g bw) |
0.0158 |
0.0147 |
0.0143 |
0.0133* |
0.0247 |
0.0241 |
0.0239 |
0.0244 |
Foci of hyperbasophilic hepatocytes (number of affected rats/group) |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
RER in liver cells |
Normal |
NE |
NE |
Ht |
Normal |
NE |
NE |
Ht |
GOT = glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase
GPT = glutamic-pyruvic transaminase
R-Fu = Reitman-Frankel units
NE = not examined
RER = rough endoplasmic reticulum
Ht = hypertrophic
Values are the means of at least ten rats, except for the electron-microscope observations on the liver which were made on one control and two test animals. Those marked with asterisks differ significantly (Wilcoxon's test) from those of the controls: *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
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