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Inhal Toxicol


Title:"Concentration-time extrapolation of short-term inhalation exposure levels: dimethyl sulfide, a case study using a chemical-specific toxic load exponent"
Author(s):Demchuk E; Ball SL; Le SL; Prussia AJ;
Address:"a Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry , Atlanta , GA , USA. b Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University , Atlanta , GA , USA"
Journal Title:Inhal Toxicol
Year:2018
Volume:20190102
Issue:11-Dec
Page Number:448 - 462
DOI: 10.1080/08958378.2018.1551444
ISSN/ISBN:1091-7691 (Electronic) 0895-8378 (Print) 0895-8378 (Linking)
Abstract:"OBJECTIVE: Dimethyl sulfide (DMS, CAS 75-18-3) is an industrial chemical. It is both an irritant and neurotoxicant that may be life-threatening because of accidental release. The effects of DMS on public health and associated public health response depend on the exposure concentration and duration. However, currently, public health advisory information exists for only a 1 h exposure duration, developed by the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA). In the present work, the AIHA-reviewed data were computationally extrapolated to other common short-term durations. METHODS: The extrapolation was carried out using the toxic load equation, C(n) x t = TL, where C and t are exposure concentration and duration, TL is toxic load, and n is a chemical-specific toxic load exponent derived in the present work using probit meta-analysis. The developed threshold levels were vetted against the AIHA database of clinical and animal health effects induced by DMS. RESULTS: Tier-1 levels were derived based on human exposures that resulted in an easily detectable odor, because DMS is known to have a disagreeable odor that may cause nausea. Tier-2 levels were derived from the lower 95% confidence bounds on a benchmark concentration that caused 10% incidence (BMCL(10)) of coma in rats during a 15 min inhalation exposure to DMS. Tier-3 levels were based on a BMCL(05) for mortality in rats. CONCLUSION: Emergency responders and health assessors may consider these computationally derived threshold levels as a supplement to traditional chemical risk assessment procedures in instances where AIHA developed public health advisory levels do not exist"
Keywords:"Administration, Inhalation *Air Pollutants/standards/toxicity Animals Coma/chemically induced Humans *Inhalation Exposure/adverse effects/standards *Irritants/standards/toxicity Odorants Risk Assessment *Sulfides/standards/toxicity *Threshold Limit Values;"
Notes:"MedlineDemchuk, Eugene Ball, Shannon L Le, San L Prussia, Andrew J eng CC999999/ImCDC/Intramural CDC HHS/ Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. England 2019/01/03 Inhal Toxicol. 2018 Sep-Oct; 30(11-12):448-462. doi: 10.1080/08958378.2018.1551444. Epub 2019 Jan 2"

 
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