Inhalation exposure experiments with the direct-acting alkylating agent epichlorohydrin (ECH) were done on noninbred male Sprague-Dawley rats. Single 6-hour exposure to ECH and follow-up for 14 days showed the median lethal concentration to be about 360 ppm. Further inhalation experiments were done with 6-hour exposure 5 days/week. A short-term 30-exposure regimen with 100 ppm ECH produced malignant squamous cell carcinomas of the nasal cavity in 15 of 140 rats and respiratory tract papillomas in 3 rats. Among 100 rats, lifetime exposure to 30 ppm yielded 1 malignant squamous carcinoma of the nasal cavity plus 1 nasal papilloma. No nasal or respiratory tract tumors were produced by lifetime exposure of 100 rats to 10 ppm. As controls, 100 air-treated and 50 untreated rats were used. A dose-rate effect was observed for ECH inasmuch as 30-day exposure to 100 ppm (3,000 ppm-days) produced 15 cancers in comparison to the 1 cancer from the lifetime exposure to 30 ppm (8,700 ppm-days) and no cancers from lifetime exposure to 10 ppm (2,500 ppm-days).
Throughout most of the 20th century, an eight-period periodic table (also known as an electronconfiguration table) was offered as an improvement over the ubiquitous seven-period format of wall charts and textbooks. The eight-period version has never achieved wide acceptance although it has significant advantages. Many observers have questioned the way helium is displayed in this format. Now, a reinterpretation of the relationship of the first-period elements to successive elements may help make the eight-period table an attractive choice for the 21st century.
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