46 results on '"Ayres PH"'
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2. The Influence of Music on Speed in the Six Day Bicycle Race
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P D Leonard Ayres Ph.
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Race (biology) ,Advertising ,Gender studies ,General Medicine ,Psychology ,Physical education - Abstract
(1911). The Influence of Music on Speed in the Six Day Bicycle Race. American Physical Education Review: Vol. 16, No. 5, pp. 321-324.
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- 1911
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3. Toxicological evaluation of smokeless tobacco: 2-year chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity feeding study in Wistar Han rats.
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Theophilus EH, Hayes JR, Ayres PH, Morgan WT, Potts RJ, Garner CD, Fallacara DM, Hejtmancik MR, and Singer AW
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- Animals, Carcinogenicity Tests, Female, Male, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Neoplasms chemically induced, Plant Extracts toxicity, Tobacco, Smokeless toxicity
- Abstract
Unlabelled: A comprehensive 2-year oral chronic toxicity/carcinogenicity study was conducted with smokeless tobacco using modern toxicological test methods and well-accepted standards. The study included a 1-year interim subgroup to assess toxicity at that intermediate time point. Test groups consisted of a tobacco blend (B) used in snus, and an aqueous tobacco extract of that tobacco blend (E) administered at 0.2, 2, or 5 mg nicotine/kg body weight/day via dosed feed to male and female Wistar Han rats. The dosages were selected to simulate potential exposure in humans ingesting smokeless tobacco or an aqueous extract of smokeless tobacco (the latter intended to simulate a snus extract, to enable bridging these data to snus epidemiology data). The following endpoints were evaluated: clinical observations, body weights, feed consumption (FC), ophthalmic exams, toxicokinetics, clinical pathology, gross pathology, and histopathology. During the 2-year study, clear treatment-related, dose-responsive effects included: (1) increases in plasma nicotine and cotinine (indicating that animals were appropriately exposed to levels relevant to human exposure) and (2) decreases in body weights with some alterations in FC. At the 2-year time point, two tumor types (in the highest B doses) displayed statistically significantly increased incidence trends vs., Controls: (1) uterine carcinoma in females and (2) epididymal mesothelioma in males. Three tumor types displayed statistically significantly decreased incidence trends: (1) mammary gland adenomas in females, (2) skin basal cell carcinomas in females, and (3) thyroid follicular cell adenomas in males. These increases (and decreases) in tumor trends were interpreted as not being treatment-related because: (1) there were no preneoplastic or related non-neoplastic histopathological findings in the treated rats at the 1-year or 2-year time points to suggest that any of these neoplastic findings were treatment-related and (2) the tumor morphologies and incidences were generally within the expected range of historical controls for Wistar Han rats. Findings from this study indicate that chronic exposure of male and female Wistar Han rats to either a tobacco blend used in snus, or a tobacco extract of that blend does not lead to increased toxicity or carcinogenicity, based on the specified outcomes measured., (Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier GmbH.)
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- 2015
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4. Toxicological evaluation of smokeless tobacco: 90-day rodent feeding studies.
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Theophilus EH, Hayes JR, Potts RJ, Ayres PH, Williams CD, and Garner CD
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- Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Cotinine blood, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Endpoint Determination, Female, Male, Maximum Tolerated Dose, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Nicotine blood, Organ Size drug effects, Organ Specificity, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Extracts pharmacokinetics, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Tobacco, Smokeless chemistry, Tobacco, Smokeless pharmacokinetics, Plant Extracts toxicity, Tobacco, Smokeless toxicity, Toxicity Tests, Subchronic
- Abstract
This manuscript presents data from 90-day toxicology studies designed to characterize the subchronic effects of a smokeless tobacco blend and an aqueous extract of that blend when administered to rodents in NTP-2000 feed. Positive control (nicotine tartrate) and treatment groups were matched for a range of nicotine levels. The doses evaluated were 0.3, 3, and 6 mg nicotine/kg body weight/day in Wistar Hannover rats and 6, 60, and 120 mg nicotine/kg/day in CD-1 mice. Variables evaluated included plasma nicotine and cotinine, body weights, feed consumption, clinical observations, clinical and anatomic pathology (including organ weights), and histopathology. Plasma nicotine and cotinine levels were dose-responsive. Key effects such as body weight reductions and organ weight changes occurred in rats and mice predominantly at the highest doses of test articles and positive control in the absence of treatment-related gross or histopathological changes. Organ weight changes were attributed mainly to the lower body weights of treated vs. control groups. The blend- and extract-induced effects generally paralleled each other and the nicotine-induced effects. Based on these studies, the doses evaluated spanned the no observable adverse effect level, the lowest observable adverse effect level and the maximum tolerated dose., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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5. A Bayesian statistical analysis of mouse dermal tumor promotion assay data for evaluating cigarette smoke condensate.
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Kathman SJ, Potts RJ, Ayres PH, Harp PR, Wilson CL, and Garner CD
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- 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene toxicity, Animals, Bayes Theorem, Carcinogens toxicity, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Skin Neoplasms epidemiology, Carcinogenicity Tests methods, Models, Biological, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Nicotiana toxicity, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
The mouse dermal assay has long been used to assess the dermal tumorigenicity of cigarette smoke condensate (CSC). This mouse skin model has been developed for use in carcinogenicity testing utilizing the SENCAR mouse as the standard strain. Though the model has limitations, it remains as the most relevant method available to study the dermal tumor promoting potential of mainstream cigarette smoke. In the typical SENCAR mouse CSC bioassay, CSC is applied for 29 weeks following the application of a tumor initiator such as 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA). Several endpoints are considered for analysis including: the percentage of animals with at least one mass, latency, and number of masses per animal. In this paper, a relatively straightforward analytic model and procedure is presented for analyzing the time course of the incidence of masses. The procedure considered here takes advantage of Bayesian statistical techniques, which provide powerful methods for model fitting and simulation. Two datasets are analyzed to illustrate how the model fits the data, how well the model may perform in predicting data from such trials, and how the model may be used as a decision tool when comparing the dermal tumorigenicity of cigarette smoke condensate from multiple cigarette types. The analysis presented here was developed as a statistical decision tool for differentiating between two or more prototype products based on the dermal tumorigenicity., (Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2010
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6. A summary of toxicological and chemical data relevant to the evaluation of cast sheet tobacco.
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Potts RJ, Bombick BR, Meckley DR, Ayres PH, and Pence DH
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- Animals, CHO Cells, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Smoke adverse effects, Plant Preparations chemistry, Plant Preparations toxicity, Smoking adverse effects
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy based on a comparative chemical and biological testing program has been developed to evaluate the potential of tobacco processes, ingredients, or other technological developments to change the biological activity that results from burning tobacco. Cast sheet tobacco is a specific type of reconstituted tobacco sheet that can be used in the manufacture of cigarettes. The comparative chemical and biological testing program was used to compare the mainstream smoke and cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) from a Reference cigarette that did not contain cast sheet to that collected from Test cigarettes containing cast sheet at a final blend level of either 10% or 15%. Testing included mainstream cigarette smoke chemistry studies, in vitro studies (Ames assay, sister chromatid exchange assay, and neutral red cytotoxicity assay), and in vivo toxicology studies (13-week rat nose-only inhalation assay and 30-week mouse dermal tumor promotion assay). Certain statistically significant differences were observed in the chemical and biological studies when the Reference cigarette was compared to each of the Test cigarettes. However, when viewed collectively, the chemical and biological studies demonstrated that inclusion of cast sheet up to 15% in the final blend did not increase the inherent biological activity of mainstream cigarette smoke or CSC., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
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- 2010
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7. Upper airways sensory irritation responses of mice exposed to mainstream smoke from four cigarette types.
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Williams CD, Potts RJ, Steichen TJ, Doolittle DJ, and Ayres PH
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- Animals, Inhalation Exposure, Mice, Pulmonary Ventilation drug effects, Respiratory Function Tests, Respiratory Insufficiency physiopathology, Respiratory System physiopathology, Tidal Volume drug effects, Tobacco Products, Irritants toxicity, Respiratory Insufficiency chemically induced, Respiratory Rate drug effects, Respiratory System drug effects, Smoking adverse effects
- Abstract
Relative sensory irritation responses for Swiss-Webster mice exposed nose-only to mainstream tobacco smoke were evaluated for several cigarette types using a smoking regimen consisting of a 35-ml puff, 2 s in duration, taken once per minute. The degree of sensory irritation for each cigarette type was evaluated as the smoke concentration inducing a 50% reduction in breathing frequency. The smoke concentration inducing 50% respiratory depression is called the RD(50) value. Study findings suggest that mainstream tobacco smoke from the Eclipse cigarette, which primarily heats rather than burns tobacco, yielded an RD(50) that was significantly higher (approximately twofold) than a tobacco-burning leading ultralight or the 2R4F or 1R5F reference cigarettes. This is indicative of reduced upper airways irritation by Eclipse that may be due to its distinct design. Study findings suggest that the irritating nature of mainstream tobacco smoke from different cigarette types can be evaluated effectively in terms of smoke concentration using the relative sensory irritation assessment. These findings constitute the first report about use of the RD(50) sensory irritation response during comparative evaluations of mainstream tobacco smoke.
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- 2010
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8. Safety assessment of diammonium phosphate and urea used in the manufacture of cigarettes.
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Stavanja MS, Curtin GM, Ayres PH, Bombick ER, Borgerding MF, Morgan WT, Garner CD, Pence DH, and Swauger JE
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- 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene toxicity, Animals, Body Weight drug effects, CHO Cells, Cocarcinogenesis, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Female, Inhalation Exposure, Male, Organ Size drug effects, Organ Specificity, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Tars chemistry, Tars toxicity, Tobacco Industry standards, Toxicity Tests, Carcinogens toxicity, Consumer Product Safety, Mutagens toxicity, Phosphates toxicity, Urea toxicity
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been employed to evaluate the potential for new ingredients, tobacco processes, and technological developments to alter the mainstream smoke or biological activity that results from burning cigarette tobacco. The foundation of this evaluation strategy is comparative testing, typically including chemical and biological assessments. In the manufacture of cigarettes, diammonium phosphate (DAP) and urea have been historically used as ingredients added to tobacco, to reconstituted tobacco sheet, and to other processed tobaccos. As part of ongoing stewardship efforts, a toxicological assessment of cigarettes with and without DAP and urea was conducted. Chemical and biological analyses were conducted for test cigarettes added 0.5% DAP and 0.2% urea in the final blend and also for those added 1.0% DAP and 0.41% urea in the final blend compared to reference cigarettes without added DAP or urea. Principal components of this evaluation included a determination of selected mainstream smoke constituent yields, an Ames assay in Salmonella typhimurium strains TA98 and TA100, a sister chromatid exchange assay in Chinese hamster ovary cells, a 13-week inhalation study of mainstream cigarette smoke in Sprague-Dawley rats, and a 30-week dermal tumor-promotion evaluation of mainstream cigarette smoke condensate in SENCAR mice. Comparative evaluations demonstrated that the addition of DAP and urea to cigarettes at up to 1% and 0.41%, respectively, does not alter the biological activity compared to reference cigarettes without DAP or urea.
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- 2008
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9. Toxicological evaluation of cigarettes with two banded cigarette paper technologies.
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Theophilus EH, Pence DH, Meckley DR, Keith Shreve W, Ayres PH, Bombick BR, Borgerding MF, Garner CD, and Swauger JE
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- Administration, Inhalation, Administration, Topical, Animals, CHO Cells drug effects, CHO Cells metabolism, CHO Cells pathology, Cell Survival drug effects, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Immunosuppressive Agents toxicity, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Neutral Red, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Sister Chromatid Exchange genetics, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Smoke analysis, Tars chemistry, Tars toxicity, Toxicity Tests, Tobacco Products, Paper, Smoke adverse effects, Technology, Tobacco Industry methods
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been employed to evaluate the potential of tobacco processes, ingredients, or technological developments to change the biological activity resulting from burning cigarette tobacco. The strategy is based on comparative chemical and biological testing. The introduction of banded cigarette papers in cigarettes to meet New York state "Fire Safety Standards for Cigarettes" constitutes an example of a technological development evaluated utilizing this tiered testing strategy that included a comparison of the chemical and biological effects of cigarettes with and without the banded cigarette paper technologies (BCPT) (representative of current marketed technologies). Specific testing included mainstream cigarette smoke chemistry studies; in vitro studies included genotoxicity (Ames and sister chromatid exchange) and cytotoxicity studies (neutral red); in vivo studies included a 13-week inhalation study in Sprague-Dawley rats and a 30-week dermal tumor promotion study in SENCAR mice. Collectively, data indicated that cigarettes with and without BCPT had a similar toxicological profile in this test battery.
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- 2007
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10. Comparative 13-week inhalation study of cigarette smoke from cigarettes containing cast sheet tobacco.
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Potts RJ, Meckley DR, Shreve WK, Pence DH, Ayres PH, Doolittle D, Swauger JE, and Sagartz JW
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- Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Body Weight physiology, Female, Male, Particle Size, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Tidal Volume drug effects, Tidal Volume physiology, Time Factors, Tobacco Products, Inhalation Exposure analysis, Smoking adverse effects, Smoking pathology
- Abstract
A subchronic, nose-only inhalation study was conducted to compare the effects of mainstream smoke from a reference cigarette containing conventional reconstituted tobacco sheet at 30% of the finished blend to mainstream smoke from cigarettes containing 10% or 15% cast sheet (a specific type of reconstituted tobacco sheet) substituted for part of the conventional reconstituted tobacco. Male and female Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed for 1 h/day, 5 d/wk, for 13 wk to mainstream smoke at 0, 0.06, 0.20, or 0.80 mg wet total particulate matter per liter of air. Clinical signs, body and organ weights, clinical chemistry, hematology, carboxyhemoglobin (COHb), serum nicotine, plethysmography, gross pathology, and histopathology were determined. Exposure to cigarette smoke induced a number of changes in respiratory physiology, histopathology, and serum nicotine and COHb levels when compared to sham animals. When corresponding dose groups of reference and cast sheet mainstream smokes were compared, no biological differences were noted. At the end of the exposure period, subsets of rats from each group were maintained without smoke exposures for an additional 13 wk (recovery period). At the end of the recovery period, there were no statistically significant differences in histopathological findings observed between the reference and either cast sheet cigarette. Substitution of 10% or 15% cast sheet tobacco for conventional reconstituted tobacco sheet does not alter the inhalation toxicology of the mainstream smoke when compared to mainstream smoke from a reference cigarette containing conventional reconstituted tobacco sheet.
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- 2007
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11. Comparative 13-week cigarette smoke inhalation study in Sprague-Dawley rats: evaluation of cigarettes with two banded cigarette paper technologies.
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Theophilus EH, Keith Shreve W, Ayres PH, Garner CD, Pence DH, and Swauger JE
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- Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis, Carboxyhemoglobin metabolism, Female, Hematologic Tests, Histocytochemistry, Inhalation Exposure, Lung Diseases blood, Lung Diseases pathology, Male, Nicotine blood, Random Allocation, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Respiratory Function Tests, Smoking blood, Statistics, Nonparametric, Lung Diseases etiology, Smoking adverse effects
- Abstract
This study compared the toxicological responses of Sprague-Dawley rats exposed nose-only to mainstream smoke (MS) from Test cigarettes (1, 2, and 3) to those of Control cigarettes without banded cigarette paper technologies (BCPT). Test cigarettes 1 and 2 had bands based on one technology (different band weight application) while Test cigarette 3 had bands based on another technology. The banded papers are representative of current marketed technologies. Rats were exposed to humidified HEPA filtered air (Sham) or to MS at concentrations of 0.06, 0.20, or 0.80 mg wet total particulate matter per liter air. Each exposure group contained 30 animals/sex (sentinel had 20 animals/sex). The study had two phases (13 weeks each): MS exposure (1 h/day, 5 days/week) and recovery without smoke exposure. Endpoints included clinical observations, respiratory physiology, hematology, serum chemistry, blood carboxyhemoglobin (COHb), serum nicotine, body/organ weights, gross pathology, and histopathology. Comparisons conducted were: Sham exposed vs. all cigarettes, Control cigarette vs. all Test cigarettes, and Test 1 vs. Test 2. Control and Test MS had comparable effects on respiratory physiology, COHb, serum nicotine, serum chemistry, and hematology. While some minor differences were observed, Control and Test MS had comparable effects on clinical signs, body/organ weights, and gross pathology/histopathology. Consequently, exposure of rats to equivalent MS concentrations from the four cigarettes induced similar toxicological responses in this study.
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- 2007
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12. DBA/2 mouse skin is unresponsive to dermal tumor promotion by cigarette smoke condensate.
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Stavanja MS, Meckley DR, Curtin GM, Nelson PR, Ayres PH, and Swauger JE
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- 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene, Animals, Body Weight, Male, Methylnitronitrosoguanidine, Mice, Mice, Inbred DBA, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons toxicity, Skin Neoplasms etiology, Smoke adverse effects, Nicotiana adverse effects
- Abstract
Previous studies demonstrated that repetitive application of cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) to 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-initiated SENCAR mouse skin for 29 weeks at doses of 10, 20 and 40 mg "tar"/application results in time- and dose-dependent dermal tumor formation. To evaluate CSC-induced tumor promotion in other mouse skin models, male DBA/2 mice were treated with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) (300 microg) or DMBA (75 or 150 microg) followed by promotion with 1R4F CSC at concentrations ranging from 9 to 45 mg "tar"/application. Both MNNG and DMBA have previously been shown to adequately initiate tumor development. Study end-points included clinical signs, body weights, and mass tracking. Neither the DMBA-initiated/acetone-promoted control groups, nor DMBA-initiated/CSC-promoted groups produced grossly observable skin tumors. For MNNG-initiated groups, a total of four tumors were observed. Based on these findings, it would appear the DBA/2 mouse was unresponsive to CSC dermal tumor promotion. It is not possible, based on the study design employed, to determine the underlying basis for the apparent resistance exhibited by this mouse strain to CSC-induced tumor promotion.
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- 2006
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13. Safety assessment of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) as an ingredient added to cigarette tobacco.
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Stavanja MS, Ayres PH, Meckley DR, Bombick ER, Borgerding MF, Morton MJ, Garner CD, Pence DH, and Swauger JE
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- Administration, Inhalation, Animals, CHO Cells, Carcinogenicity Tests, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Smoke analysis, Fructose toxicity, Smoking, Sweetening Agents toxicity
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been developed to evaluate the potential for new ingredients, tobacco processes, and technological developments to alter the biological activity that results from burning tobacco. A series of studies was initially conducted with cigarettes containing 3% high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) as an alternate tobacco casing material to corn syrup/invert sugar, including determination of selected mainstream cigarette smoke (MS) constituent yields, Ames assay, sister chromatid exchange (SCE) assay in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, a 30-week dermal tumor-promotion evaluation of cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) in SENCAR mice, and a 13-week subchronic inhalation study of MS in Sprague-Dawley rats. A second series of studies was conducted with cigarettes containing 3%, 4% and 5% HFCS including MS chemistry, Ames assay, SCE assay in CHO cells, and a neutral red cytotoxicity assays. Collectively, mainstream smoke chemistry, genotoxicity, dermal tumor-promotion, and inhalation toxicity studies demonstrated no differences between cigarettes with 3% HFCS and cigarettes with 3% corn syrup/invert sugar. Also, mainstream smoke chemistry and genotoxicity of cigarettes with 4% and 5% HFCS were not different from cigarettes with 3% HFCS. In conclusion, the addition of up to 5% HFCS to cigarette does not alter the mainstream smoke chemistry or biological activity of mainstream smoke or mainstream smoke condensate as compared to cigarettes with 3% corn syrup/invert sugar with regard to the parameters investigated and presented.
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- 2006
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14. Lung tumorigenicity in A/J and rasH2 transgenic mice following mainstream tobacco smoke inhalation.
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Curtin GM, Higuchi MA, Ayres PH, Swauger JE, and Mosberg AT
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- Administration, Intranasal, Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Lung pathology, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred A, Mice, Transgenic, Genes, ras genetics, Lung Neoplasms chemically induced, Smoke adverse effects, Smoking pathology
- Abstract
Hypothesizing that their respective genetic backgrounds would confer an increased sensitivity to lung tumorigenesis, the plausibility of selected rodent models for the inhalation testing of mainstream tobacco smoke (MTS) was evaluated. Strain A/J and rasH2 transgenic (Tg) mice were exposed to MTS from Kentucky 1R4F research cigarettes using either a whole-body or nose-only exposure regimen. The whole-body regimen consisted of a 20-week exposure period [0.200 mg wet total particulate matter/liter (WTPM/l), 6 h/day, 5 days/week]; nose-only dosing proceeded for 28 weeks [0.040, 0.125, or 0.400 mg WTPM/l, 3 h/day, 5 days/week]. Both regimens included a 16-week recovery period. Gross and microscopic examinations of the lungs were used to evaluate tumor formation, with experimental results supporting the following conclusions: 1. Evaluation of MTS-induced tumorigenicity based on gross evaluation versus microscopic confirmation provides strikingly disparate results, indicating that serial sectioning is necessary for a definitive assessment of lung tumors. 2. While the dosing regimens employed do not allow for a definitive comparison, whole-body exposure appeared to be more effective for inducing statistical changes in tumor multiplicity and incidence compared to nose-only exposure. 3. Exposure-related stress, evidenced as reductions in both body weight gain and background tumor formation, represents a potential confounder during inhalation testing of MTS tumorigenicity, with additional investigation warranted to validate the specificity of exposure-related responses. 4. Comparative findings between A/J and rasH2 Tg mice suggest that the former may be overly sensitive to exposure-related stress, potentially influencing tumorigenic responses.
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- 2004
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15. Comparative study of smoke condensates from 1R4F cigarettes that burn tobacco versus ECLIPSE cigarettes that primarily heat tobacco in the SENCAR mouse dermal tumor promotion assay.
- Author
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Meckley DR, Hayes JR, Van Kampen KR, Ayres PH, Mosberg AT, and Swauger JE
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- 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene administration & dosage, 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene toxicity, Administration, Topical, Animals, Biological Assay, Carcinogens administration & dosage, Carcinogens toxicity, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Hot Temperature, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Mutagenicity Tests, Mutagens administration & dosage, Skin Neoplasms epidemiology, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Tobacco Products, Mutagens adverse effects, Skin drug effects, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Smoke adverse effects
- Abstract
Numerous chemical and toxicological studies indicate that smoke from ECLIPSE, a cigarette that primarily heats rather than burns tobacco, is simplified and reduced in specific chemicals believed to be associated with smoking-related diseases, and demonstrates reduced smoke toxicity and biological activity in vitro when compared to conventional tobacco burning cigarettes. These data led to the hypothesis that cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) from ECLIPSE should have lower tumorigenicity than 1R4F condensate in the SENCAR mouse dermal tumor promotion assay. Female SENCAR mice were initiated with a single topical application of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) followed by promotion with ECLIPSE or 1R4F CSC. Dermal application of 10, 20, or 40 mg ECLIPSE or 1R4F CSC three times/week for 29 weeks did not alter body weights, survival or other indicators of subchronic toxicity. In DMBA-initiated mice, there were significant increases in both the number of microscopically confirmed tumor-bearing animals and total number of microscopically confirmed dermal tumors at all 1R4F CSC doses and the high-dose ECLIPSE CSC. However, the number of ECLIPSE tumor-bearing animals were reduced 83%, 93% and 67% at the low-, mid- and high-doses, respectively, compared to the 1R4F. Similarly, the total number of dermal tumors was reduced 91%, 94% and 87% at the low-, mid- and high-dose, respectively, compared to the 1R4F CSC. ECLIPSE CSC demonstrated dramatic reductions in dermal tumor promotion potential compared to 1R4F CSC.
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- 2004
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16. Toxicological evaluation of expanded shredded tobacco stems.
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Theophilus EH, Pence DH, Meckley DR, Higuchi MA, Bombick BR, Borgerding MF, Ayres PH, and Swauger JE
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- Animals, Cricetinae, Male, Mice, Rats, Carcinogenicity Tests, CHO Cells, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Skin drug effects, Skin pathology, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Tobacco Industry methods, Tobacco Products, Plants, Toxic toxicity, Smoke adverse effects, Smoke analysis, Smoking, Nicotiana toxicity
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been developed to evaluate the potential of tobacco processes, ingredients, or technological developments to change the biological activity resulting from burning tobacco. The strategy is based on comparative chemical and biological testing. Expanded shredded tobacco stems (ESS) constitute an example of a common tobacco components expansion process currently used in the manufacture of cigarettes to increase the tobacco blend filling capacity. As part of the toxicological evaluation of ESS, test cigarettes containing 9.5%, 18.5%, and 25% ESS were compared to control cigarettes containing 0% ESS. Testing included mainstream cigarette smoke chemistry studies, genotoxicity studies (Ames and sister chromatid exchange), a 13-week inhalation study in Sprague-Dawley rats, and a 30-week dermal tumor promotion study in SENCAR mice. Collectively, data indicated that cigarettes with and without ESS had a similar toxicological profile in this test battery.
- Published
- 2004
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17. Comparative subchronic inhalation study of smoke from the 1R4F and 2R4F reference cigarettes.
- Author
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Higuchi MA, Sagartz J, Shreve WK, and Ayres PH
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- Animals, Blood Cell Count, Blood Chemical Analysis, Body Weight drug effects, Carboxyhemoglobin metabolism, Female, Humidity, Inhalation Exposure adverse effects, Longevity drug effects, Male, Nicotine blood, Organ Size drug effects, Plethysmography, Rats, Reference Standards, Respiratory System pathology, Temperature, Smoke adverse effects, Nicotiana toxicity
- Abstract
A subchronic, nose-only inhalation study compared the effects of mainstream smoke from a 1R4F research cigarette to that of a 2R4F research cigarette. Male and female rats were exposed for 1 h/day, 5 days/wk, for 13 wk to mainstream smoke at 0, 0.06, 0.20, or 0.80 mg wet total particulate matter per liter of air. Clinical signs, body and organ weights, clinical chemistry, hematology, carboxyhemoglobin, serum nicotine, pulmonary plethysmography, gross pathology, and histopathology were determined. When histological changes resulting from exposure to smoke from the two types of cigarettes were compared, no biologically significant differences were observed. At the end of the exposure period, subsets of rats from each group were maintained without smoke exposures for an additional 13 wk (recovery period). At the end of the recovery period, there were no statistically significant differences in histopathological findings observed between the 1R4F and the 2R4F cigarettes. The complete toxicological assessment in this comparative inhalation study of 1R4F and 2R4F cigarettes suggests no overall biologically significant differences between the rats exposed to the two cigarettes.
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- 2004
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18. Toxicological evaluation of dry ice expanded tobacco.
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Theophilus EH, Poindexter DB, Meckley DR, Bombick BR, Borgerding MF, Higuchi MA, Ayres PH, Morton MJ, Mosberg AT, and Swauger JE
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- Administration, Inhalation, Animals, CHO Cells, Carboxyhemoglobin metabolism, Carcinogenicity Tests, Chlorofluorocarbons, Methane, Cricetinae, Female, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred SENCAR, Mutagenicity Tests, Nicotine blood, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Sister Chromatid Exchange, Smoking blood, Tobacco Products, Dry Ice, Smoking adverse effects, Tobacco Industry methods
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been developed to evaluate the potential of tobacco processes, ingredients, or technological developments to change the biological activity resulting from burning tobacco. The strategy is based on comparative chemical and biological testing. Dry ice expanded tobacco (DIET) is an example of a common tobacco expansion process currently used in the manufacture of cigarettes to increase tobacco filling capacity. As part of the toxicological evaluation of DIET, test cigarettes containing DIET were compared with control cigarettes containing tobacco expanded with a traditional expansion agent (Freon-11, also known as trichlorofluoromethane). Testing included mainstream cigarette smoke chemistry studies, genotoxicity studies (Ames and sister chromatid exchange, SCE), a 13-week inhalation study in Sprague-Dawley rats, and a 30-week dermal tumor promotion study in SENCAR mice. Cigarettes containing DIET or Freon-11 expanded tobacco were similar in biological activity.
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- 2003
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19. Toxicological evaluation of honey as an ingredient added to cigarette tobacco.
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Stavanja MS, Ayres PH, Meckley DR, Bombick BR, Pence DH, Borgerding MF, Morton MJ, Mosberg AT, and Swauger JE
- Subjects
- 9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene toxicity, Administration, Inhalation, Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Carcinogenicity Tests, Carcinogens toxicity, Female, In Vitro Techniques, Male, Mutagenicity Tests, Organ Size drug effects, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Sister Chromatid Exchange drug effects, Skin Neoplasms chemically induced, Smoke analysis, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate toxicity, Honey toxicity, Smoking
- Abstract
A tiered testing strategy has been developed to evaluate the potential for new ingredients, tobacco processes, and technological developments to increase or reduce the biological activity that results from burning tobacco. In the manufacture of cigarettes, honey is used as a casing ingredient to impart both aroma and taste. The primary objective of this document is to summarize and interpret chemical and toxicological studies that have been conducted to evaluate the potential impact of honey on the biological activity of either mainstream cigarette smoke or cigarette smoke condensate. As part of ongoing stewardship efforts, cigarettes produced with honey (5% wet weight) as an alternative to invert sugar in tobacco casing material were subjected to extensive evaluation. Principal components of this evaluation were a determination of selected mainstream smoke constituent yields, Ames assay, sister chromatid exchange assay in Chinese hamster ovary cells, a 30-wk dermal tumor promotion evaluation of cigarette smoke condensate in SENCAR mice, and a 13-wk inhalation study of cigarette smoke in Sprague-Dawley rats. Comparative analytical evaluations demonstrated that the substitution of honey for invert sugar as a casing material in cigarettes had no significant impact on mainstream smoke chemistry. In addition, in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that cigarettes containing tobacco cased with honey had comparable biological activity to cigarettes containing invert sugar. Collectively, these data demonstrate that the use of honey as an alternative casing material in the manufacture of cigarettes does not alter the potential toxicity of cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) or cigarette smoke; therefore the use of honey as an ingredient added to cigarette tobacco is acceptable from a toxicological perspective.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Rat subchronic inhalation study of smoke from cigarettes containing flue-cured tobacco cured either by direct-fired or heat-exchanger curing processes.
- Author
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Kinsler S, Pence DH, Shreve WK, Mosberg AT, Ayres PH, and Sagartz JW
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis, Body Weight drug effects, Body Weight ethnology, Carbon Monoxide analysis, Carboxyhemoglobin analysis, Female, Inhalation Exposure analysis, Male, Nasal Mucosa drug effects, Nasal Mucosa pathology, Nicotine blood, Organ Size, Plethysmography, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Smoke analysis, Tidal Volume drug effects, Time Factors, Nitrosamines analysis, Respiration drug effects, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
A subchronic, nose-only inhalation study compared the effects of mainstream smoke from a cigarette containing 100% flue-cured tobacco cured by a direct-fired process to that of a cigarette containing 100% flue-cured tobacco cured by a heat exchanger process. The tobaccos and mainstream smoke from tobaccos cured by the heat exchanger process have been shown to have significantly lower levels of tobacco-specific nitrosamines than tobaccos cured by a direct-fired process. Male and female rats were exposed for 1 h/day, 5 days/wk, for 13 wk to mainstream smoke at 0, 0.06, 0.20, or 0.80 mg wet total particulate matter per liter of air. Clinical signs, body and organ weights, clinical chemistry, hematology, carboxyhemoglobin, serum nicotine, plethysmography, gross pathology, and histopathology were determined. When histologic changes resulting from exposure to smoke from the two types of cigarettes were compared, the only significant difference was increased epithelial hyperplasia of the anterior nasal cavity in males in the high-exposure group for the heat-exchanger cigarette. At the end of the exposure period, subsets of rats from each group were maintained without smoke exposures for an additional 13 wk (recovery period). At the end of the recovery period, there were no statistically significant differences in histopathological findings observed between the heat-exchanger-cured tobacco cigarette when compared to the direct-fired cured tobacco cigarette. The complete toxicological assessment in this study of heat exchanger and direct-fired tobaccos suggests no overall biologically significant differences between the two cigarettes.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Quantification of continuous glass filaments on eclipse cigarettes retrieved from the test market.
- Author
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Higuchi MA, Ayres PH, Swauger JE, Deal PA, Guy T, Morton M, and Mosberg AT
- Subjects
- Consumer Product Safety, Humans, Drug Contamination, Filtration instrumentation, Glass analysis, Smoking adverse effects, Nicotiana adverse effects
- Abstract
ECLIPSE cigarettes utilize a special form of continuous glass filament (CGF) as an insulator around the carbon heat source. The average numbers of CGFs on the external barrel and cigarette filter end were determined subsequent to manufacture, subsequent to real-world consumer handling and subsequent to simulated consumer handling. The following were not statistically significantly different: the average number of CGFs on the external barrel of cigarettes retrieved from the test market compared to the average external barrel counts from cigarettes subsequent to manufacture or when subjected to simulated consumer handling, and the average number of CGFs on the external barrel of cigarettes subsequent to manufacture compared to the average external barrel counts from cigarettes subjected to simulated consumer handling. The average number of CGFs on the filter end of cigarettes retrieved from the test market was statistically significantly higher than average cigarette filter end counts from cigarettes subsequent to manufacture. The average number of CGFs on the cigarette filter end of cigarettes retrieved from the test market was statistically significantly lower than average cigarette filter end counts from cigarettes subjected to simulated consumer handling. Overall, results from this study suggest that consumer handling does increase the average numbers of CGFs on the external surfaces of the cigarette. Further, the results of this study demonstrate that for the purpose of CGF quantification, the simulated consumer handling protocol used in this study (i.e., based on laboratory measurements of forces) is a reasonably good model for actual consumer handling of cigarettes. Based on the minimal number of CGFs that could be transferred to the smoker and the deposition pattern governed by their physical characteristics, the potential to deposit CGFs from these cigarettes to the lungs of smokers is extremely remote. Therefore, no convincing information exists to suggest that smokers would be exposed to CGFs from any ECLIPSE-related source at a biologically significant level.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The effect of a 2-h exposure to cigarette smoke on the metabolic activation of the tobacco-specific nitrosamine 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone in A/J mice.
- Author
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Brown BG, Richter E, Tricker AR, Ayres PH, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Carcinogens administration & dosage, Carcinogens toxicity, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, DNA drug effects, DNA metabolism, DNA Adducts, Drug Interactions, Female, Guanine metabolism, Hydroxylation drug effects, Injections, Intraperitoneal, Liver drug effects, Liver metabolism, Lung drug effects, Lung metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Nitrosamines administration & dosage, Nitrosamines toxicity, Carcinogens metabolism, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Nitrosamines metabolism, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a tobacco-specific nitrosamine, induces lung adenomas in A/J mice following a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. However, inhalation of mainstream cigarette smoke does not induce or promote NNK-induced lung tumors in this mouse strain purported to be sensitive to chemically-induced lung tumorigenesis. The critical events for NNK-induced lung tumorigenesis in A/J mice is thought to involve O(6)-methylguanine (O(6)MeG) adduct formation, GC-->AT transitional mispairing, and activation of the K-ras proto-oncogene. The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that a smoke-induced shift in NNK metabolism led to the observed decrease in O(6)MeG adducts in the lung and liver of A/J mice co-administered NNK with a concomitant 2-h exposure to cigarette smoke as observed in previous studies. Following 2 h nose-only exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke (600 mg total suspended particulates/m(3) of air), mice (n=12) were administered 7.5 micromol NNK (10 microCi [5-3H]NNK) by i.p. injection. A control group of 12 mice was sham-exposed to HEPA-filtered air for 2 h prior to i.p. administration of 7.5 micromol NNK (10 microCi [5-3H]NNK). Exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke had no effect on total excretion of NNK metabolites in 24 h urine; however, the metabolite pattern was significantly changed. Mice exposed to mainstream cigarette smoke excreted 25% more 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL) than control mice, a statistically significant increase (P<0.0001). Cigarette smoke exposure significantly reduced alpha-hydroxylation of NNK to potential methylating species; this is based on the 15% reduction in excretion of the 4-(3-pyridyl)-4-hydroxybutanoic acid and 42% reduction in excretion of 4-(3-pyridyl)-4-oxobutanoic acid versus control. Detoxication of NNK and NNAL by pyridine-N-oxidation, and glucuronidation of NNAL were not significantly different in the two groups of mice. The observed reduction in alpha-hydroxylation of NNK to potential methylating species in mainstream cigarette smoke-exposed A/J mice provides further mechanistic support for earlier studies demonstrating that concurrent inhalation of mainstream cigarette smoke results in a significant reduction of NNK-induced O(6)MeG adduct formation in lung and liver of A/J mice compared to mice treated only with NNK.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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23. Subchronic inhalation by rats of mainstream smoke from a cigarette that primarily heats tobacco compared to a cigarette that burns tobacco.
- Author
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Ayres PH, Hayes JR, Higuchi MA, Mosberg AT, and Sagartz JW
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbon Monoxide analysis, Carboxyhemoglobin metabolism, Female, Hot Temperature, Humidity, Male, Nicotine analysis, Nicotine blood, Nose physiology, Organ Size drug effects, Particle Size, Plethysmography, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Smoke analysis, Smoking pathology, Smoking adverse effects
- Abstract
A subchronic, nose-only inhalation study comparing the potential biological activity of mainstream smoke from a cigarette that primarily heats tobacco (Eclipse) to mainstream smoke from a 1R4F reference cigarette was conducted using Sprague-Dawley rats of each gender. Smoke exposures were for 1 h/day, 5 days/wk for 13 wk, at concentrations of 0, 0.16, 0.32, or 0.64 mg wet total particulate matter (WTPM)/L air. Smoke was generated at the Federal Trade Commission standard of a 2-s puff of 35 ml, taken once per minute. Clinical signs, body and organ weights, clinical chemistry, hematology, carboxyhemoglobin, serum nicotine, plethysmography, gross pathology, and histopathology were determined. Plethysmography indicated that respiratory rate was decreased at all concentrations of 1R4F smoke, but only at the high concentration of Eclipse smoke. Tidal volume was depressed and minute volume was lower for all smoke-exposed rats. Rats exposed to Eclipse smoke inhaled more smoke at the low and mid-concentration exposures than rats exposed to equivalent concentrations 1R4F smoke. Carboxyhemoglobin and serum nicotine were directly related to the exposure concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO) and nicotine in an exposure-dependent manner. Body weights were slightly lower in smoke-exposed rats, while no treatment-related effects were seen in clinical signs, clinical chemistry, hematology, or gross changes at necropsy. The only treatment-related effect seen in organ weights was an increase in heart weight in females in the Eclipse high-concentration exposure group, attributed to higher CO in the Eclipse exposure atmosphere. Higher CO resulted from the lower dilution of Eclipse smoke required to maintain WTPM concentrations equal to those of the 1R4F smoke, and not from a higher CO yield from Eclipse cigarettes. Nasal epithelial hyperplasia and ventral laryngeal squamous metaplasia were noted after exposure to either the 1R4F or Eclipse smoke. The degree of change was less in Eclipse smoke-exposed rats. Lung macrophages were increased to a similar extent in the Eclipse and 1R4F smoke-exposed groups. Brown/gold pigmented macrophages were detected in the lungs of rats exposed to 1R4F smoke, but not those exposed to Eclipse smoke. Subsets of rats from each group were maintained for an additional 13 wk without smoke exposures. Most of the changes noted at the end of the smoke exposures had disappeared, while those that remained were regressing toward normal. Evaluation of these findings indicated the overall biological activity of Eclipse smoke was less than 1R4F smoke at comparable exposure concentrations.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Quantitative analysis of potential transfer of continuous glass filament from eclipse prototype 9-014 cigarettes.
- Author
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Higuchi MA, Ayres PH, Swauger JE, Morgan WT, and Mosberg AT
- Subjects
- Humans, Regression Analysis, Plants, Toxic, Smoke analysis, Smoking, Nicotiana
- Abstract
This study was designed to determine if the Eclipse prototype 9-014 cigarettes, which use a special form of continuous glass filament (CGF) as an insulator around the carbon heat source, yield CGFs via mainstream smoke. A previously developed method (Higuchi et al., 2000) that employed electrostatic precipitation-with a greater than 99% collection efficiency of mass-was used to capture CGFs transferred to mainstream smoke. The cigarettes were smoked using an exaggerated puffing condition more than twice the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) standard. Prior to smoking, cigarettes were subjected to handling procedures that simulated commercial shipping conditions. Using a modified standard addition method, and utilizing a mixture of water and glycerol as a mock condensate, CGFs were intentionally added to a series of (mock condensate) samples to develop knowledge of CGF recovery efficiency. The linear regression model of the recovered CGFs demonstrated a recovery efficiency of 86%. This efficiency rate was applied to the number of CGFs recovered from samples of smoke condensate and associated background samples. The number of CGFs in smoke condensate collected from the Eclipse 9-014 prototype was approximately 0.32 +/- 0.17 CGFs per cigarette (+/- standard deviation), including the background counts of CGFs, and 0.16 CGFs per cigarette when corrected for background contributions. The number of CGFs found in the smoke condensates for this prototype was statistically (p =.00031) distinguishable from zero and background in these experiments. The low number of CGFs seen in the transfer data from this prototype studied, the unique physical characteristics of the filaments (e.g., controlled physical dimensions), and the absence of biological activity of similar glass filaments/fibers indicate that biologically significant exposure to the Eclipse smoker does not occur.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Analysis of potential transfer of continuous glass filament from Eclipse cigarettes.
- Author
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Higuchi MA, Ayres PH, Swauger JE, Morgan WT, and Mosberg AT
- Subjects
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Regression Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Videotape Recording, Glass analysis, Smoke analysis, Smoking
- Abstract
This study was designed to determine if a prototype of the Eclipse cigarettes, which uses a special form of continuous glass filament (CGF) as an insulator around the carbon heat source, yielded CGFs via mainstream smoke. A method was developed that used electrostatic precipitation with a greater than 99% collection efficiency of mass to capture CGFs transferred to mainstream smoke. The cigarettes were smoked using an exaggerated puffing condition that was more than twice the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) standard. The cigarettes were subjected to handling procedures that simulated commercial shipping conditions prior to smoking. CGFs were intentionally added to a series of smoke condensate samples to determine CGF recovery efficiency. The recovery efficiency was determined for a series of four internal standards added to smoke condensate. The recovery efficiency was 86% for the Eclipse 5-014 prototype. The number of CGFs in smoke condensate collected from the Eclipse 5-014 prototype was approximately 0.06 +/- 0.02 CGFs per cigarette (+/- standard deviation), including the background counts of CGFs and 0.03 CGFs per cigarette, when corrected for background contributions. The number of CGFs found in smoke condensates for this prototype was not statistically distinguishable from zero or background in these experiments, which were capable of detecting transfer rates of greater than 0.2 CGFs per cigarette.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The effect of cotinine or cigarette smoke co-administration on the formation of O6-methylguanine adducts in the lung and liver of A/J mice treated with 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK)
- Author
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Brown BG, Chang CJ, Ayres PH, Lee CK, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Interactions, Female, Guanine metabolism, Mice, Cotinine toxicity, DNA Adducts, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Liver metabolism, Lung metabolism, Mutagens metabolism, Nitrosamines metabolism, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a tobacco-specific nitrosamine, induces lung adenomas in A/J mice, following a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. However, inhalation of tobacco smoke has not induced or promoted tumors in these mice. NNK-induced lung tumorigenesis is thought to involve O6-methylguanine (O6MeG) formation, leading to GC-->AT transitional mispairing and an activation of the K-ras proto-oncogene in the A/J mouse. NNK can be metabolized by several different cytochromes P450, resulting in a number of metabolites. Formation of the promutagenic DNA adduct O6MeG is believed to require metabolic activation of NNK by cytochrome P450-mediated alpha-hydroxylation of the methylene group adjacent to the N-nitroso nitrogen to yield the unstable intermediate, methanediazohydroxide. Nicotine, cotinine (the major metabolite of nicotine), and aqueous cigarette tar extract (ACTE) have all been shown to effectively inhibit metabolic activation of NNK to its mutagenic form, most likely due to competitive inhibition of the cytochrome P450 enzymes involved in alpha-hydroxylation of NNK. The objective of the current study was to monitor the effects of cotinine and cigarette smoke (CS) on the formation of O6MeG in target tissues of mice during the acute phase of NNK treatment. To test the effect of cotinine, mature female A/J mice received a single intraperitoneal injection of NNK (0, 2.5, 5, 7.5, or 10 mumole/mouse) with cotinine administered at a total dose of 50 mumole/mouse in 3 separate i.p. injections, administered 30 min before, immediately after, and 30 min after NNK treatment. To test the effect of whole smoke exposure on NNK-related O6MeG formation, mice were exposed to smoke generated from Kentucky 1R4F reference cigarettes at 0, 0.4, 0.6, or 0.8 mg wet total particulate matter/liter (WTPM/L) for 2 h, with a single i.p. injection of NNK (0, 3.75, or 7.5 mumole/mouse) midway through the exposure. Cigarette smoke alone failed to yield detectable levels of O6MeG. The number of O6MeG adducts following i.p. injection of NNK was significantly (p < 0.05) reduced in both lung and liver by cotinine and by cigarette smoke exposure. Our results demonstrate that NNK-induced O6MeG DNA adducts in A/J mice are significantly reduced when NNK is administered together with either cotinine, the major metabolite of nicotine, or the parental complex mixture, cigarette smoke.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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27. Chemical and biological studies of a new cigarette that primarily heats tobacco. Part 3. In vitro toxicity of whole smoke.
- Author
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Bombick DW, Ayres PH, Putnam K, Bombick BR, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, CHO Cells, Cells, Cultured, Cricetinae, Guidelines as Topic, Mutagenicity Tests, Neutral Red, Product Surveillance, Postmarketing, Reference Standards, Sister Chromatid Exchange, United States, United States Federal Trade Commission standards, Plants, Toxic, Smoking trends, Nicotiana chemistry, Tobacco Industry trends, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
Mainstream smoke from Kentucky reference low "tar" (1R4F) and ultra-low "tar" (1R5F) cigarettes and a test cigarette (TOB-HT), that primarily heats tobacco, was compared for cytotoxic and genotoxic potential using cellular smoke exposure technology (CSET). CSET includes a computer controlled 30-port AMESA/Battelle-Geneva smoke generator which exposes cultured mammalian Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) to whole smoke. Cytotoxicity was assessed using the neutral red assay and genotoxicity was assessed using the sister chromatid exchange (SCE) assay. Compared on a per cigarette basis, mainstream smoke from 1R5F and the TOB-HT cigarette was significantly less cytotoxic and genotoxic than the smoke from the 1R4F cigarette. The cytotoxic and genotoxic activity of smoke from the TOB-HT cigarettes was slightly greater than the smoke from the ultra-low "tar" Kentucky 1R5F reference cigarettes. In conclusion, in these assays mainstream whole smoke of the TOB-HT cigarette had slightly greater cytotoxic and genotoxic potential compared with an ultra-low "tar" 1R5F Kentucky reference cigarette and significantly less activity compared with the whole mainstream smoke from a low "tar" 1R4F Kentucky reference cigarette, representative of the US market average cigarette for FTC yields of "tar", CO and nicotine.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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28. Evaluation of the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of mainstream whole smoke and smoke condensate from a cigarette containing a novel carbon filter.
- Author
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Bombick DW, Bombick BR, Ayres PH, Putnam K, Avalos J, Borgerding MF, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, CHO Cells cytology, CHO Cells drug effects, CHO Cells ultrastructure, Carbon, Cell Survival, Cricetinae, Neutral Red, Product Surveillance, Postmarketing, Sister Chromatid Exchange, Nicotiana chemistry, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis, Volatilization, Filtration methods, Mutagenicity Tests, Plants, Toxic, Nicotiana toxicity, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
A novel carbon filter has been developed which primarily reduces the amount of certain vapor phase constituents of tobacco smoke with greater efficiency than the charcoal filters of cigarettes currently in the market. In vitro indicators of genotoxic and cytotoxic potential were used to compare the cigarette smoke condensate (particulate phase) or whole cigarette smoke (vapor phase and particulate phase) from cigarettes containing the novel carbon filter with smoke condensate or whole smoke from commercial or prototype cigarettes not containing the novel carbon filter. Ames bacterial mutagenicity, sister chromatid exchange (SCE) in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and neutral red cytotoxicity assays in CHO cells were utilized to assess the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of the cigarette smoke condensates. SCE and neutral red cytotoxicity assays were utilized to assess the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of the whole smoke. As expected, the novel carbon filter did not significantly affect the genotoxic or cytotoxic activity of the smoke condensate, although we did observe that the use of low-nitrogen tobacco reduced the mutagenicity of the condensate in Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98. However, the whole smoke from cigarettes containing the novel carbon filter demonstrated significant reductions in genotoxic and cytotoxic potential compared to cigarettes without the novel carbon filter. The toxicity of the smoke was correlated (r = 0.7662 for cytotoxicity and r = 0.7562 for SCE induction) to the aggregate mass of several vapor phase components (acetone, acetaldehyde, acrolein, acrylonitrile, 1,3-butadiene, ammonia, NOx, HCN, benzene, isoprene, and formaldehyde) in the smoke of the cigarettes utilized in this study. In conclusion, this novel carbon filter, which significantly reduced the amount of carbonyls and other volatiles in mainstream cigarette smoke, resulted in significant reductions in the genotoxic and cytotoxic activity of the smoke as measured by these assays., (Copyright 1997 Society of Toxicology.)
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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29. Relevant exposure to environmental tobacco smoke surrogate does not produce or modify secretory otitis media in the rat.
- Author
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Coggins CR, Lovejoy HM, McGuirt WF, Sagartz JW, Hayes AW, and Ayres PH
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Ear, Middle pathology, Eustachian Tube pathology, Humidity, Male, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Otitis Media with Effusion etiology, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
Parental smoking is a possible risk factor in the development of secretory otitis media (SOM) in children. This experiment was designed to determine, using rats as an experimental model, whether exposures to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) produce SOM and whether ETS exposure affects the rate of clearance of an experimentally induced effusion. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 3 different concentrations of aged and diluted sidestream smoke, a surrogate for ETS, from IR4F research cigarettes for 6 hr per day for 5 days. Experimental SOM was induced bilaterally in subgroups of animals from each group, by cold air exposure to the external auditory canals. Ears of rats were examined during the in-life portion of the study. Histopathologic examination of the middle ear was conducted at the termination of the 5-day period. The production of SOM was not induced by ETS exposure, nor were there differences noted between the groups in the rates of clearance of the experimentally induced SOM. Short-term exposure to ETS did not affect the acquisition or clearance of SOM in the rat.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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30. Comparative study of DNA adduct formation in mice following inhalation of smoke from cigarettes that burn or primarily heat tobacco.
- Author
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Brown BG, Lee CK, Bombick BR, Ayres PH, Mosberg AT, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Heart drug effects, Lung drug effects, Lung metabolism, Male, Mice, Micronucleus Tests, Myocardium metabolism, DNA Adducts, Mutagens toxicity, Plants, Toxic, Smoke adverse effects, Nicotiana
- Abstract
The genotoxic potential of mainstream smoke from a test cigarette (TOB-HT) that primarily heats tobacco and a representative tobacco-burning cigarette (Kentucky reference 1R4F) was compared in male B6C3/F1 mice after nose-only inhalation exposure. Mice were exposed 1 hr per day, 5 days/ week for a 4 week period to mainstream smoke at concentrations of 0, 0.16, 0.32, and 0.64 mg total particulate matter/liter of air. Micronuclei formation in bone marrow and peripheral blood polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) of animals exposed to either the TOB-HT or 1R4F cigarette was not significantly different compared with control animals exposed nose-only to filtered and humidified air (sham controls). DNA adduct measurement by the 32P-post-labeling method indicated an exposure-dependent increase in lung adducts of animals exposed to 1R4F cigarette smoke at all three concentrations with the mid and high exposure groups exhibiting statistically significant increases (P < 0.05) in adduct formation compared to sham-exposed animals. The concentration of DNA adducts in the lungs of animals exposed to the TOB-HT cigarette was not significantly increased (P < 0.05) at any concentration compared to sham-exposed controls. A statistically significant (P < 0.05) concentration-dependent formation of DNA adducts was also observed in the heart tissues of animals exposed to smoke from the 1R4F cigarette at all three concentrations, but no significant increase in adduct formation was observed in heart DNA of the animals exposed to the TOB-HT cigarette (P < 0.05). Under the conditions of this experiment, the mainstream smoke from the TOB-HT cigarette was demonstrated to be less genotoxic in mice than mainstream smoke from the 1R4F cigarette, which is representative of cigarettes in the current U.S. market.
- Published
- 1997
31. Molecular toxicology endpoints in rodent inhalation studies.
- Author
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Brown BG, Bombick BR, McKarns SC, Lee CK, Ayres PH, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Division drug effects, Chromosome Aberrations, Rats, Administration, Inhalation, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
Although histopathology will continue to be essential for assessing the results of rodent inhalation studies, molecular toxicology endpoints are of increasing importance, as these techniques often complement and extend histopathological examinations. One of the primary uses of molecular toxicology is determining the delivered dose of the inhaled material to macromolecules in target tissues. During inhalation studies this is most often done by measuring DNA adducts in the respiratory tract. DNA adducts may be measured specifically (e.g. using monoclonal antibodies or mass spectrometry) or non-specifically (e.g. by using the 32P-post-labeling assay). Another major use of molecular toxicology techniques is the assessment of cellular and molecular changes in target tissues which may precede or be more sensitive than histopathologic alterations. For example, rates of cellular DNA synthesis occurring in target tissues may be quantified at any time during the study by administering the animals either radiolabelled thymidine or the non-radiolabelled thymidine analog bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Pulmonary changes may be assessed in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid using either cellular (e.g. macrophage number, granulocyte number) or biochemical (e.g. alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase) techniques. The potential of the inhaled material to produce genetic alterations may be evaluated by examining the chromosomes of pulmonary alveolar macrophages for cytogenetic changes. To illustrate the use of these endpoints, an experiment was conducted to determine the molecular toxicology of aged and diluted sidestream smoke (a surrogate for environmental tobacco smoke) in rodent inhalation studies. The endpoints measured were DNA adducts in target and non-target tissue, chromosome aberrations in pulmonary alveolar macrophages, and DNA synthesis in the epithelial lining of the nasal turbinates.
- Published
- 1995
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32. Design, construction, and evaluation of an inhalation system for exposing experimental animals to environmental tobacco smoke.
- Author
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Ayres PH, Mosberg AT, and Coggins CR
- Subjects
- Animals, Equipment Design, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Animals, Laboratory, Atmosphere Exposure Chambers, Tobacco Smoke Pollution
- Abstract
An inhalation system was designed to expose experimental animals to aged and diluted sidestream smoke (ADSS), used as a surrogate for environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). The construction of the smoke generator and of the smoke dilution systems is described. Target ADSS concentrations in a 90-day inhalation study were 0.1, 1, and 10 mg/m3 of respirable suspended particulates (RSP). Data is presented on the physical and chemical composition of the smoke presented to animals at or near these target RSP concentrations. The design of the inhalation laboratory was shown to result in highly reproducible respirable aerosols that were effective surrogates of ETS.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Effects of low humidity on the rat middle ear.
- Author
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Lovejoy HM, McGuirt WF, Ayres PH, Hayes AW, Coggins CR, and Sagartz J
- Subjects
- Animals, Ear, Middle anatomy & histology, Epithelium pathology, Eustachian Tube pathology, Exudates and Transudates, Hyperemia pathology, Male, Malleus pathology, Mucous Membrane pathology, Otitis Media with Effusion pathology, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Tympanic Membrane blood supply, Tympanic Membrane pathology, Ear, Middle physiology, Humidity, Otitis Media with Effusion etiology
- Abstract
Secretory otitis media is common in the winter, and the possible risk factors are numerous. This study examines the effect of low humidity on the middle ear using a Sprague-Dawley rat model: 23 test rats housed for 5 days in a low-humidity environment (10% to 12% relative humidity) and 23 control rats housed at 50% to 55% relative humidity. Microscopic ear examinations were graded for otitis media with effusion (OME) before testing and on test days 3 and 5. The mucosa of the middle ears and eustachian tubes was examined histopathologically. Significantly more effusions were observed in the low-humidity group on test days 3 (P = .003) and 5 (P = .01), but no intergroup histopathologic differences were noted. We conclude that a low-humidity environment contributed to the development of OME in the test animals, and that low-humidity warrants further investigation as a contributing factor in childhood middle ear disease.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
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34. Fourteen-day inhalation study in rats, using aged and diluted sidestream smoke from a reference cigarette. I. Inhalation toxicology and histopathology.
- Author
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Coggins CR, Ayres PH, Mosberg AT, Ogden MW, Sagartz JW, and Hayes AW
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Animals, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Hemoglobins metabolism, Male, Nasal Cavity drug effects, Nasal Cavity pathology, Necrosis, Nicotine administration & dosage, Nicotine toxicity, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Time Factors, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed 6 hr per day for 14 consecutive days to aged and diluted sidestream smoke (ADSS), used as a surrogate for Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS), at concentrations of 0.1 (typical), 1 (extreme), or 10 (exaggerated) mg of particulates per cubic meter. Animals were exposed nose-only, inside whole-body chambers, to ADSS from the 1R4F reference cigarette. End-points included histopathology, CO-oximetry, plasma nicotine and cotinine, clinical pathology, and organ and body weights. The only pathological response observed was slight to mild epithelial hyperplasia and inflammation in the most rostral part of the nasal cavity, in the high-exposure group only. No effects were noted at medium or low exposures. The minimal changes noted were reversible, using a subgroup of animals kept without further treatment for an additional 14 days. Overall, the end-points used in the study demonstrated that there was no detectable biological activity of ADSS at typical or even 10-fold ETS concentrations and that the activity was only minimal at very exaggerated concentrations (particle concentrations 100 times higher than typical real-world concentrations).
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Histological sectioning of the rodent larynx for inhalation toxicity testing.
- Author
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Sagartz JW, Madarasz AJ, Forsell MA, Burger GT, Ayres PH, and Coggins CR
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Animals, Epiglottis pathology, Laryngeal Diseases pathology, Mucous Membrane pathology, Rats, Laryngeal Diseases chemically induced, Larynx pathology
- Abstract
In rodents, the larynx is a major site of histopathologic alteration following inhalation exposure to particulates, vapors, and aerosols. Specifically, the epithelial lining of a narrowly delineated region on the ventral floor of the larynges of rats and mice appears to be especially vulnerable to inhaled materials, and is recognized as a preferred site for histopathological evaluation in inhalation studies. This site is located at the base of the epiglottis, cranial to the ventral laryngeal diverticulum (ventral pouch). The presence of underlying seromucinous glands is critical for histologic identification of this site. We report a histologic sectioning technique, using the ventral laryngeal diverticulum as the anatomical landmark, to obtain tissue sections from this area of predilection in rats and in mice.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Analysis of cytogenetic effects in bone-marrow cells of rats subchronically exposed to smoke from cigarettes which burn or only heat tobacco.
- Author
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Lee CK, Brown BG, Reed EA, Lowe GD, McKarns SC, Fulp CW, Coggins CR, Ayres PH, and Doolittle DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone Marrow ultrastructure, Carbon Monoxide analysis, Female, Hot Temperature, Male, Micronucleus Tests, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Chromosome Aberrations, Micronuclei, Chromosome-Defective, Plants, Toxic, Sister Chromatid Exchange, Smoke adverse effects, Nicotiana
- Abstract
The genotoxic effects of 90-day nose-only exposures to smoke from new cigarettes, which heat but do not burn tobacco (New), or from reference cigarettes, which burn tobacco, were evaluated in Sprague-Dawley rats by examining the cytogenetic endpoints of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCE), chromosome aberrations, and micronuclei in bone-marrow cells. The concentrations of wet total particulate matter (WTPM) and carbon monoxide in the smoke from both cigarette types were similar. The mainstream smoke from both New and reference cigarettes was adjusted to WTPM concentrations of approx. 200 and 400 micrograms/l for low and high smoke exposure. Rats were exposed to smoke 1 h per day, 5 days per week for 13 consecutive weeks. Inhalation of smoke by the exposed animals was confirmed by analysis of blood carboxyhemoglobin and plasma nicotine. Examination of bone-marrow cells following the final day of exposure showed that smoke from neither the New nor reference cigarette induced a positive response in the SCE, chromosome aberration, or micronucleus assays in rats.
- Published
- 1990
37. Disposition and metabolism of [14C]dibenzo[c,g]carbazole aerosols in rats after inhalation.
- Author
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Bond JA, Ayres PH, Medinsky MA, Cheng YS, Hirshfield D, and McClellan RO
- Subjects
- Aerosols, Animals, Carbazoles administration & dosage, Carbazoles toxicity, Carbazoles urine, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Feces analysis, Half-Life, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Respiration drug effects, Respiratory System metabolism, Time Factors, Tissue Distribution, Carbazoles metabolism
- Abstract
Dibenzo[c,g]carbazole (DBC) is a nitrogen-containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon that has been detected in tobacco tars, industrial oils, and diesel engine exhaust fumes. DBC is carcinogenic in respiratory tract tissue of hamsters and in lungs, kidneys, and livers of mice. The purpose of this research was to determine the respiratory tract deposition, distribution in tissues, metabolism, and excretion of DBC in rats after inhalation. Rats were exposed nose-only to 1.1 or 13 micrograms [14C]DBC/liter air for 60 min. Activity median aerodynamic diameters for the two concentrations of DBC ranged from 0.7 to 0.8 micron. Urine, feces, and selected tissues were collected for various times after exposure. The fractional deposition for the 1.1 and 13 micrograms/liter exposure concentrations was similar, 13 and 16%, respectively. The dominant route of excretion of 14C following exposure to either concentration of DBC was the feces, accounting for approximately 95% of the total 14C eliminated. Half-time for fecal excretion was 20 +/- 6 hr (means +/- SE). Gastrointestinal absorption of [14C]DBC was 43%. Radioactivity was widely distributed to all tissues examined, with the respiratory tract (lung, trachea, larynx, and nasal turbinates), upper gastrointestinal tract (stomach and small intestine), the liver, and the adrenals containing the highest concentrations of [14C]DBC equivalents within 1 hr after exposure. At both concentrations of DBC tested, clearance of 14C from tissues was rapid, with approximately 60 to 98% of the initial tissue burden being cleared with half-times ranging from 1 to 16 hr. The remaining 2 to 40% in the tissues was cleared with half-times that ranged from 1.5 to 14 days. Several metabolites were detected in the urine and feces, none of which appeared to be either glucuronide or sulfate conjugates. Small quantities of [14C]DBC were detected in the urine, although quantities were less than 1% of the initial respiratory tract burden of [14C]DBC. The results from this research indicate that DBC was rapidly absorbed from the lungs and translocated to many tissues. Prior to elimination, primarily in the feces, DBC was extensively metabolized. There appeared to be no effect of exposure concentration on the toxicokinetics of inhaled DBC.
- Published
- 1986
38. Histologic changes in the respiratory tract induced by inhalation of xenobiotics: physiologic adaptation or toxicity?
- Author
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Burger GT, Renne RA, Sagartz JW, Ayres PH, Coggins CR, Mosberg AT, and Hayes AW
- Subjects
- Animals, Histocytochemistry, Respiratory System pathology, Xenobiotics toxicity, Adaptation, Physiological, Respiratory System drug effects, Xenobiotics administration & dosage
- Abstract
Toxicologists and pathologists are often faced with the dilemma of categorizing changes observed in the respiratory tract of laboratory animals as either "adaptive" or "toxic." However, it is often difficult to interpret the nature of a given change as either "adaptive" or "toxic." Certain lesions or changes in the respiratory tract are to be expected from the concentration of materials given or the experimental design of a study. Careful analysis suggests that some of these changes may be more properly described as adaptive rather than toxic within the context of a given study or situation. Tissue changes discussed in this paper include squamous metaplasia of laryngeal epithelium, goblet cell change in respiratory epithelium, macrophage accumulation within alveoli, and bronchiolization of alveolar epithelium. Examples provided show that some of these changes observed in inhalation studies are similar in severity but slightly increased in frequency over sham control animals. The introduction of exogenous material into the respiratory tract of laboratory animals in an experimental setting should be expected to result in certain changes. The challenge scientists must accept is to interpret these changes so that toxic events may be separated from adaptive changes. In order to meet this challenge, studies incorporating several species and novel technologies may have to be utilized.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A rapid method for preparation of urinary bladder epithelium for flow cytometric analysis.
- Author
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Ayres PH, Schol HM, and Hudson JL
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelial Cells, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Propidium, Staining and Labeling, Flow Cytometry methods, Urinary Bladder cytology
- Abstract
A rapid and reliable method is described for preparation of urinary bladder epithelium for flow cytometric analysis. This method has proven useful for measurement of cell cycle kinetics in bladder epithelium from normal fetal, neonatal and adult mice as well as animals that have been exposed to urinary bladder toxicants. A modified Vindelov 's propidium iodide stain was instilled directly into the urinary bladder through the urethra, allowing the propidium iodide to lyse the epithelial cells and stain the DNA in the liberated nuclei. The stained epithelial cell nuclei were then removed from the lumen and analyzed by flow cytometry without centrifugation or filtration techniques. This method allows examination of epithelial cell nuclei without contamination from other tissue elements due to the fact that the propidium iodide did not act beyond the epithelial basement membrane under our experimental conditions.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Scanning and transmission electron microscopic observations of the acute morphological response of the mouse urinary bladder to 4-ethylsulfonylnaphthalene-1-sulfonamide.
- Author
-
Frith CH, Ayres PH, Shinohara Y, and West R
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelium drug effects, Epithelium ultrastructure, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Microscopy, Electron, Microvilli drug effects, Microvilli ultrastructure, Mutagenicity Tests, Precancerous Conditions chemically induced, Precancerous Conditions ultrastructure, Urinary Bladder ultrastructure, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms chemically induced, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ultrastructure, Naphthalenes toxicity, Urinary Bladder drug effects
- Abstract
A total of 75 BALB/cStCrlfC3H/Nctr male weanling mice were administered either 0 or 250 ppm of 4 ethylsulfonylnaphthalene-1-sulfonamide (ENS) in the diet for periods up to 14 days to evaluate the early morphological changes of the transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder with scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopy. Primary TEM changes included hyperplasia of the epithelium, loosening of the intercellular junctions, autophagic vacuoles and electron dense granules in the mitochondria. Primary SEM changes included sloughing of epithelial cells, irregularity in the size and shape of the transitional epithelial cells and the presence of microvilli. Although pleomorphic microvilli were present after only three days of treatment with ENS, it appears that they are a transient observation in a series of morphological changes. The reversibility or transient nature of the pleomorphic microvilli may indicate that they are an acute toxic response and may not necessarily indicate a preneoplastic change.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Morphological observations on the epithelium of the developing urinary bladder of the mouse and rat.
- Author
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Ayres PH, Shinohara Y, and Frith CH
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Epithelium embryology, Epithelium ultrastructure, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Inbred Strains, Microscopy, Electron, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Urinary Bladder growth & development, Urinary Bladder ultrastructure, Urinary Bladder embryology
- Abstract
Bladders from fetal and neonatal BALB/cStCrlfC3H/Nctr mice and Sprague-Dawley rats were studied to establish the sequence of events in their morphological development by using scanning electron, transmission electron and light microscopy. On fetal day 18 or 19 the epithelium from the mouse and the rat displayed 2 or 3 distinct cell layers. With transmission electron microscopy a star-like contraction of the cell surface of the mouse bladder occurred which was not seen in the developing rat bladder. In both the mouse and the rat, some of the superficial cells sloughed between fetal day 18 or 19 and the day of birth. On the day of birth, the epithelium was composed of only 2 layers. The nuclei of both the superficial and basal layers contained prominent euchromatin, and mitotic figures were often present in the basal layer. By the 5th postnatal day, some of the superficial cells contained autophagic vacuoles, and the epithelium was still 2 cell layers thick. One week after birth the epithelium consisted of 2 to 3 cell layers. Three weeks after birth the epithelium was 3 cell layers thick and appeared as the adult pattern with both transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The study demonstrated that the fetal and neonatal mouse and rat urinary bladders undergo a series of rapid developmental changes and suggest that the fetal and neonatal urinary bladder may be a target organ susceptible to toxic insult.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The fate of inhaled azodicarbonamide in rats.
- Author
-
Mewhinney JA, Ayres PH, Bechtold WE, Dutcher JS, Cheng YS, Bond JA, Medinsky MA, Henderson RF, and Birnbaum LS
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Aerosols metabolism, Aerosols toxicity, Animals, Azo Compounds administration & dosage, Azo Compounds metabolism, Body Burden, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Stomach, Tissue Distribution, Trachea, Azo Compounds toxicity
- Abstract
Azodicarbonamide (ADA) is widely used as a blowing agent in the manufacture of expanded foam plastics, as an aging and bleaching agent in flour, and as a bread dough conditioner. Human exposures have been reported during manufacture as well as during use. Groups of male F344/N rats were administered ADA by gavage, by intratracheal instillation, and by inhalation exposure to determine the disposition and modes of excretion of ADA and its metabolites. At 72 hr following gavage, 30% of the administered ADA was absorbed whereas following intratracheal instillation, absorption was 90%. Comparison between groups of rats exposed by inhalation to ADA to achieve body burdens of 24 or 1230 micrograms showed no significant differences in modes or rates of excretion of [14C]ADA equivalents. ADA was readily converted to biurea under physiological conditions and biurea was the only 14C-labeled compound present in excreta. [14C]ADA equivalents were present in all examined tissues immediately after inhalation exposure, and clearance half-times on the order of 1 day were evident for all tissues investigated. Storage depots for [14C]ADA equivalents were not observed. The rate of buildup of [14C]ADA equivalents in blood was linearly related to the lung content as measured from rats withdrawn at selected times during a 6-hr inhalation exposure at an aerosol concentration of 25 micrograms ADA/liter. In a study extending 102 days after exposure, retention of [14C]ADA equivalents in tissues was described by a two-component negative exponential function. The results from this study indicate that upon inhalation, ADA is rapidly converted to biurea and that biurea is then eliminated rapidly from all tissues with the majority of the elimination via the urine.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A scanning and transmission electron microscopic study of urinary bladders of mice treated with 2-acetylaminofluorene.
- Author
-
Frith CH, Ayres PH, and Shinohara Y
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Microscopy, Electron, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Precancerous Conditions chemically induced, Urinary Bladder pathology, Urinary Bladder ultrastructure, 2-Acetylaminofluorene toxicity, Urinary Bladder drug effects
- Abstract
Urinary bladders of BALB/c male mice treated with 250 ppm of 2-acetylaminofluorene for 1, 3, 5, 7, and 14 days were examined for early scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopic (TEM) changes. SEM observations at days 1, 3, and 5, and TEM observations at days 1 and 3 revealed no significant changes. The bladders of the mice treated for 7 days contained an occasional focus showing irregularity in the shape and size of the superficial cells and SEM revealed ropey microridges in an occasional cell. The bladders of mice treated for 14 days had a greater irregularity of cell size on SEM. TEM changes were evident as early as 5 days with an increase in severity at 7 and 14 days. A numerical reduction of fusiform vesicles, asymmetric membrane plaques and Golgi apparatus along with an increase in membranous whorls, endoplasmic reticulum, cytolysosomes, and small rounded vesicles was evident. The study may aid in a better understanding of early morphologic changes of urothelium in response to a carcinogen.
- Published
- 1981
44. Contribution of intestinal microfloral metabolism to the total macromolecular covalent binding of 1-nitro-pyrene in the lung and liver of the rat.
- Author
-
Ayres PH, Sun JD, and Bond JA
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Carbon Radioisotopes, Macromolecular Substances, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Bacteria metabolism, Intestines microbiology, Liver metabolism, Lung metabolism, Pyrenes metabolism
- Abstract
1-Nitropyrene (NP) is a direct acting mutagen found in diesel exhaust and coal-combustion fly ash. The purpose of this study was to investigate the contribution of gut microfloral metabolism to the macromolecular covalent binding (MCB) of NP and/or its metabolites in lungs and liver of the rat. Normal and antibiotic treated rats were administered [14C]NP and MCB was quantitated at various times in lungs and livers. Abolition of gut microfloral metabolism by antibiotic treatment significantly altered total MCB in lungs. MCB in lungs of antibiotic-treated animals 4 h after oral administration of NP was 0.15 nmol NP equivalents/g and was significantly (P less than 0.05) decreased to less than one-half of control values (0.42 nmol NP equivalents/g). MCB in lungs of antibiotic-treated rats was no different from the controls 1 week after NP administration (0.1 nmol NP equivalents/g). Comparison of livers from control and antibiotic-treated rats demonstrated the same pattern of MCB as lungs but differences were not significant. These results reveal that metabolism by gut microflora may play a role in the activation and covalent binding of NP to macromolecules. However, the alteration of covalent binding observed after antibiotic treatment was a change in the time course of formation and breakdown of covalently bound forms and not an effect on the quantity of bound material remaining at 1 week indicating that gut microfloral metabolism is not an exclusive pathway for bioactivation of NP in the rat.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Interaction of formaldehyde with glutathione in the isolated/ventilated perfused lung and the isolated perfused liver.
- Author
-
Ayres PH, Marshall TC, Sun JD, Bond JA, and Hobbs CH
- Subjects
- Animals, In Vitro Techniques, Liver drug effects, Lung drug effects, Male, Perfusion, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Respiration, Formaldehyde pharmacology, Glutathione metabolism, Liver metabolism, Lung metabolism
- Abstract
The interaction of formaldehyde (CH2O) with reduced glutathione (GSH) was evaluated in aqueous solution and in isolated perfused lungs and livers. Addition of CH2O (0-4.9 mM) to a solution of 0.17 mM GSH in 2 mM EDTA, pH 7.4, resulted in a time- and concentration-dependent depletion of GSH. Perfusion of livers with fortified Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer containing 0.3-4.9 mM CH2O resulted in a dose-dependent depletion of GSH. Perfusion of isolated ventilated lungs with perfusate containing 4.9 mM CH2O resulted in a depletion of GSH to 75% of controls. However, lower concentrations of CH2O in the lung perfusate did not result in depletion of GSH. These results demonstrate that exposure to CH2O in aqueous solution or in the perfused lung and liver is capable of depleting endogenous GSH. However, the concentrations of CH2O required to yield a significant depletion of endogenous GSH exceed those encountered in vivo. Thus, it is unlikely that depletion of GSH by CH2O is a causal factor in formaldehyde-induced toxicity.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Ninety-day inhalation study in rats, comparing smoke from cigarettes that heat tobacco with those that burn tobacco.
- Author
-
Coggins CR, Ayres PH, Mosberg AT, Sagartz JW, Burger GT, and Hayes AW
- Subjects
- Animals, Atmosphere Exposure Chambers, Body Weight drug effects, Carbon Monoxide analysis, Carboxyhemoglobin metabolism, Female, Glycerol analysis, Male, Nicotine analysis, Nicotine blood, Organ Size drug effects, Particle Size, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Respiratory Function Tests, Temperature, Plants, Toxic, Smoke adverse effects, Nicotiana
- Abstract
Eight groups of 30 male and 30 female rats were exposed 1 hr per day, 5 days per week for 13 weeks, to smoke from reference (tobacco burned) or test (tobacco only heated) cigarettes, at nicotine concentrations of 5, 15, or 30 micrograms/liter of air. Similar smoke concentrations of wet total particulate matter and carbon monoxide were produced in each of the test/reference comparisons. There was a pronounced depression of minute ventilation of animals in the reference groups, but not in the test animals. Blood carboxyhemoglobin concentrations were similar in animals exposed to smoke from test and reference cigarettes. Plasma concentrations of nicotine and cotinine in the test groups were higher than in the reference groups. There were no differences between the smoke-exposed groups in terms of body weight or feed consumption. At necropsy, an increase in heart weight was noted in both high exposure groups. There were notable differences in histopathology, with fewer and less-pronounced changes in the test groups than in the reference groups. Many of the histopathological responses induced in the reference groups were absent in the test groups. Overall, the study demonstrated a substantial reduction in the biological activity of smoke from the test cigarette when compared with the reference.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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