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Sex-specific respiratory and systemic stress effects of acute acrolein and trichloroethylene inhalation
Employing acrolein, a potent airway irritant, and TCE, with low irritancy, authors hypothesized that airway injury and inflammation would be involved in eliciting neuroendocrine-mediated systemic alterations. Male and female Wistar-Kyoto rats were exposed nose-only to air, acrolein or trichloroethylene (TCE) in incremental concentrations over 30 min, followed by 3.5-hr exposure to the highest concentration (acrolein - 0.0, 0.1, 0.316, 1, 3.16 ppm; TCE - 0.0, 3.16, 10, 31.6, 100 ppm) while performing head-out plethysmography (HOP), and animals were necropsied immediately post-exposure to assess nasal and lung injury/inflammation, systemic neurohormones, circulating stress hormones and also metabolic hormones.
This dataset is associated with the following publication:
Alewel, D., T. Jackson, S. Vance, M. Schladweiler, P. Evansky, A. Henriquez, R. Grindstaff, S. Gavett, and U. Kodavanti. Sex-specific respiratory and systemic endocrine effects of acute acrolein and trichloroethylene inhalation. TOXICOLOGY LETTERS. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, USA, 382: 22-32, (2023).
Complete Metadata
| bureauCode |
[ "020:00" ] |
|---|---|
| identifier | https://doi.org/10.23719/1528189 |
| programCode |
[ "020:000" ] |
| references |
[ "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.2023.05.005" ] |
| rights | null |