Bushnell P J
Neurotoxicology Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, 27711, USA.
Fundam Appl Toxicol. 1997 Mar;36(1):30-8. doi: 10.1006/faat.1997.2287.
The risk from inhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is presently assessed on the basis of lifetime exposure to average concentrations of the vapor. This strategy yields rational predictions of risk if the product of concentration (C) and the duration of exposure (t) yields constant effects on health (Haber's Rule). The validity of this assumption was evaluated by assessing the acute behavioral effects of inhaled trichloroethylene (TCE) vapor at various values of C and t. Adult male Long-Evans rats (n = 11) were trained to perform a signal detection task in which a press on one lever produced food on trials containing a signal (a brief, unpredictable light flash); a press on a second lever produced food on trials lacking a signal. Response time (RT) and indices of sensitivity (SI) and bias (RI) derived from the theory of signal detection were calculated at three times during repeated daily 60-min tests conducted in air containing 0, 400, 800, 1200, 1600, 2000, or 2400 ppm TCE. Behavior remained stable during tests in air. In TCE, SI declined and RT increased as functions of both C and t. RI was not affected by TCE. Effects on SI and RT were not predictable from the C x t product: both endpoints were more affected by C than by t. To quantify the change in the effect of TCE across exposure times, concentration-effect relationships for inhaled TCE on SI and RT were modeled with cubic polynomial functions at each of the three exposure durations. Concentrations of inhaled TCE associated with preselected changes in SI and RT were then estimated for each animal from these functions. Criterion concentrations, SI0.1 and RT100, were defined as the concentration of TCE associated with a 0.1-unit decrease in SI or a 100-msec increase in RT, respectively. Both SI0. 1 and RT100 increased as exposure duration decreased, but did so more slowly than would be predicted by Haber's Rule. This pattern indicates that application of Haber's Rule overestimates the concentration of inhaled TCE associated with changes in signal detection and thus underestimates the risk of behavior change from short-term exposures to TCE. On the other hand, the fact that SI0.1 and RT100 did increase with shorter exposure times indicates that the converse assumption, that the toxicity of inhaled TCE is independent of the duration of exposure, yields an overly conservative estimate of risk.
目前,吸入挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)的风险是根据一生接触蒸汽平均浓度来评估的。如果浓度(C)与接触持续时间(t)的乘积对健康(哈伯法则)产生恒定影响,那么这种策略就能得出合理的风险预测。通过评估吸入不同C值和t值的三氯乙烯(TCE)蒸汽的急性行为影响,来评估这一假设的有效性。成年雄性Long-Evans大鼠(n = 11)接受训练以执行信号检测任务,即在含有信号(短暂、不可预测的闪光)的试验中按压一个杠杆会产生食物;在没有信号的试验中按压第二个杠杆会产生食物。在每天重复进行的60分钟测试过程中的三个时间点,计算来自信号检测理论的反应时间(RT)、敏感度指数(SI)和偏差指数(RI),测试在含有0、400、800、1200、1600、2000或2400 ppm TCE的空气中进行。在空气中测试时行为保持稳定。在TCE环境中,SI下降,RT增加,且都是C和t的函数。RI不受TCE影响。从C×t乘积无法预测对SI和RT的影响:两个终点受C的影响比受t的影响更大。为了量化TCE在不同暴露时间的效应变化,在三个暴露持续时间的每一个时间点,用三次多项式函数对吸入TCE对SI和RT的浓度-效应关系进行建模。然后根据这些函数为每只动物估计与SI和RT的预先选定变化相关的吸入TCE浓度。标准浓度SI0.1和RT100分别定义为与SI降低0.1个单位或RT增加100毫秒相关的TCE浓度。SI0.1和RT100都随着暴露持续时间的缩短而增加,但增加速度比哈伯法则预测的要慢。这种模式表明,应用哈伯法则高估了与信号检测变化相关的吸入TCE浓度,从而低估了短期接触TCE导致行为改变的风险。另一方面,SI0.1和RT100确实随着暴露时间缩短而增加这一事实表明,相反的假设,即吸入TCE的毒性与暴露持续时间无关,会产生过于保守的风险估计。