HISTORICAL CONTROL DATA OF NON-NEOPLASTIC AND NEOPLASTIC LESIONS IN F344/DuCnj RATS

A variety of neoplastic and non-neoplastic lesions in F344/DuCrj rats, which were used as control animals in chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity studies conducted at the Biosafety Research Center. Foods, Drugs and Pesticides over a 9 year period, are described. The causes of death of animals which...

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Published inJournal of Toxicologic Pathology Vol. 4; no. 1; pp. 1 - 24
Main Authors Hijiri Iwata, Yasuhiko Hirouchi, Yoshihide Koike, Seiki Yamakawa, Kazuo Kobayashi, Toshio Yamamoto, Katsumi Kobayashi, Hiroyuki Inoue, Makoto Enomoto
Format Journal Article
LanguageJapanese
Published The Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology 1991
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Summary:A variety of neoplastic and non-neoplastic lesions in F344/DuCrj rats, which were used as control animals in chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity studies conducted at the Biosafety Research Center. Foods, Drugs and Pesticides over a 9 year period, are described. The causes of death of animals which were found dead or that were killed in a moribund condition, as well as age-associated differences in the incidence rate of various lesions at 31, 57, 83, and 109 weeks, were also analyzed. The average number of naturally-occurring tumors per rat was 1.68 in male and 0.92 in female rats. The incidence rate of malignant tumors in all animals was 12.5% in male and 11.4% in female rats. The most common tumors were leukemia and benign tumors of the endocrine and reproductive organs. As for the non-neoplastic lesions, chronic nephropathy occurred more frequently in male than in female rats. Other lesions commonly observed were atrophic changes in the thymus and reproductive organs, deposits of hemosiderin or ceroid-like materials in a variety of organs, proliferative or hyperplastic changes of the bile ducts, endocrine and reproductive organs, microgranuloma, angiectasis and dilated or cystic changes in a variety of organs, fatty change in the liver and adrenals, and hepatodiaphragmatic nodules of the liver. Nearly all of the above findings increased in both incidence and severity with age.
ISSN:0914-9198
1881-915X