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. 1985 Jun 30;79(2):179-92.
doi: 10.1016/0041-008x(85)90339-4.

Pulmonary response of rats exposed to titanium dioxide (TiO2) by inhalation for two years

Pulmonary response of rats exposed to titanium dioxide (TiO2) by inhalation for two years

K P Lee et al. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. .

Abstract

Rats were exposed to TiO2 by inhalation exposure to concentrations of 0, 10, 50, and 250 mg/m3 for 6 hr/day, 5 days/week for 2 years. There were no abnormal clinical signs, body weight changes, or excess mortality in any exposed group. Exposed groups showed slight increases in the incidence of pneumonia, tracheitis, and rhinitis with squamous metaplasia in the anterior nasal cavity. The pulmonary response at 10 mg/m3 satisfied the biological criteria for a "nuisance dust." The lung reaction was characterized by dust-laden macrophage (dust cell) infiltration in the alveolar ducts and adjoining alveoli with hyperplasia of Type II pneumocytes. Rats at 50 and 250 mg/m3 exposure concentrations revealed a dose-dependent dust cell accumulation, a foamy macrophage response, Type II pneumocyte hyperplasia, alveolar proteinosis, alveolar bronchiolarization, cholesterol granulomas, focal pleurisy, and dust deposition in the tracheobronchial lymph nodes. Minute collagenized fibrosis occurred in the alveolar walls enclosing large dust cell aggregates. The pulmonary lesions with massive dust accumulation appeared to be the result of an overwhelmed lung clearance mechanism at 250 mg/m3 exposure. Bronchioloalveolar adenomas and cystic keratinizing squamous cell carcinomas occurred at 250 mg/m3 exposure, while no compound-related lung tumors were found in rats exposed to either 10 or 50 mg/m3. In addition to excessive dust loading in the lungs of rats exposed chronically at 250 mg/m3, the lung tumors were different from common human lung cancers in terms of tumor type, anatomic location, tumorigenesis, and were devoid of tumor metastasis. Therefore, the biological relevance of these lung tumors and other pulmonary lesions for man is negligible.

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