The distribution, excretion, and possible metaboism of 14C-and/or 74As-cacodylic acid, an organoarsenical herbicide, was studied in rats following a single intravenous injection, intratracheal instillation or oral gavage. Male Sherman rats were dosed at levels ranging from 200 mg/kg to 120 ,g/kg. The extent and rate of lung absorption was greater than gastrointestinal absorption. Concentrations in the liver and whole blood were higher after peroral dosing than intravenous administration. Levels observed in plasma and other tissues were similar after all three routes following the absorptive phase. The percent dose found in the whole blood, red blood cells, and plasma was similar for all doses given by these routes. Less than 0.1½ of the administered dose was recovered as "4CO2 by any route at 24 hr after administration. Twenty-four hours after intravenous, intratracheal, and peroral administration, 71, 60, and 25%, respectively, was excreted in the urine. After intravenous administration of 200 mg/kg, sufficient 14C-cacodyllc acid was recovered in bile to account for the small amount excreted in the feces. Cacodylic acid is probably not metabolized to inorganic arsenic since the disposition of 14C and 74As-cacodylic acid were identical.Kinetic analyses of the plasma curve for 14C-cacodylic acid (high dose) yielded three half-times; 0.014, 0.214 and 3.42 hr with an apparent volume of distribution of 15.3 ml. Highest initial concentrations were found in the whole blood, muscle, kidney, liver and lung.Levels in all tissues decreased rapidly, but remained high in whole blood. The red blood cells were found to be the major site of body burden of cacodylic acid.
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