2002
DOI: 10.1080/08958370290084665
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Experience From a Long-Term Carcinogenicity Study With Intraperitoneal Injection of Biosoluble Synthetic Mineral Fibers

Abstract: The carcinogenic potential in the intraperitoneal cavity of three newly developed biosoluble insulation glass wool fibers (M, P, and V) and one newly developed biosoluble insulation stone wool fiber (O) was investigated and compared to that of a previously developed soluble glass fiber (B). The in vitro dissolution coefficient of the three glass wool fibers ranged from 450 to 1037 ng/cm(2) x h and was 523 ng/cm(2) x h for the stone wool fiber. The in vitro dissolution coefficient of the B fiber was 580 ng/cm(2… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This view has been reflected in reviews conducted by various national and international agencies, including ILSI (2005) andthe National Research Council (2000). Although inhalation testing can be expensive, time consuming and lack specificity in dose (Bernstein, 2007;Grimm et al, 2002) ability to inject/implant large fibres and particles that would not normally be inhaled into the deep lung; very high numbers/concentrations of test material at the injection site that may overwhelm defence mechanisms; targeted tissues (e.g. peritoneal mesothelium) are not the same as for inhalation exposure.…”
Section: Methods Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This view has been reflected in reviews conducted by various national and international agencies, including ILSI (2005) andthe National Research Council (2000). Although inhalation testing can be expensive, time consuming and lack specificity in dose (Bernstein, 2007;Grimm et al, 2002) ability to inject/implant large fibres and particles that would not normally be inhaled into the deep lung; very high numbers/concentrations of test material at the injection site that may overwhelm defence mechanisms; targeted tissues (e.g. peritoneal mesothelium) are not the same as for inhalation exposure.…”
Section: Methods Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the following sections, published toxicity data for a number of fibres and dusts obtained from inhalation (and, for some materials, intratracheal instillation) studies are compared with toxicity data for the same test materials delivered by the intraperitoneal and/or intrapleural routes. The chemical compositions of the fibres discussed in this report are detailed in Table 2 below (Bellmann et al, 1987;Bernstein, 2007;Grimm et al, 2002;Guldberg et al, 2002;Hesterberg et al, 1998;Kamstrup et al, 2001;Kamstrup et al, 2002;Kamstrup et al, 2004;Lambré et al, 1998;Roller et al, 1996;Searl et al, 1999). While full characterisation of the delivered aerosol -especially fibre/particle size distribution -is extremely important, this information is not consistently available; this is acknowledged as a possible limitation when comparing test results.…”
Section: Comparison Of Toxicity Study Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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