Comparative Dermal Carcinogenesis of Shale and Petroleum-Derived Distillates
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Toxicology and Industrial Health
- Vol. 4 (1), 11-22
- https://doi.org/10.1177/074823378800400102
Abstract
Ten test materials derived from petroleum or hydrotreated shale oils were applied 3 times/week for up to 105 weeks to the shaved skin of 25 male and 25 female C3H/HeN mice per group. Mineral oil and benzo(a) pyrene (0.15%) were control materials. Clinical observations were recorded during the study. At death, histopathologic examination was conducted on skin, internal organs and any gross lesions. Exposures to some materials were ended midway in the study due to severe irritation. Chronic toxicity of all materials was limited to inflammatory and degenerative skin changes. Significant increases over control incidence of skin tumors (squamous cell carcinoma and fibrosarcoma) occurred with both petroleum and shale-derived naphtha (21%, 50%), Jet A (26%, 28%), JP-4 (26%, 50%), and crude oils (84%, 54%). Severely hydrotreated shale oil and petroleum and shale-derived diesel distillates were not considered tumorigenic. Results indicate that toxicity of comparable petroleum and shale-derived fractions was qualitatively similar and confirm earlier findings that hydrotreating reduces or eliminates carcinogenicity of raw shale oil.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regeneration and the mechanism of epidermal tumor promotionCRC Critical Reviews in Toxicology, 1985
- Carcinogenicity of petroleum lubricating oil distillates: Effects of solvent refining, hydroprocessing, and blendingAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1984
- The effect of application frequency on epidermal carcinogenesis assaysToxicology, 1982
- The Carcinogenic Potency of Certain OilsArchives of environmental health, 1965