2017
DOI: 10.1080/01480545.2017.1289220
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Metabolism of inhaled methylethylketone in rats

Abstract: Methylethylketone (MEK) is widely used in industry, often in combination with other compounds. Although nontoxic, it can make other chemicals harmful. This study investigates the fate of MEK in rat blood, brain and urine as well as its hepatic metabolism following inhalation over 1 month (at 20, 200 or 1400 ppm). MEK did not significantly accumulate in the organism: blood concentrations were similar after six-hour or 1-month inhalation periods, and brain concentrations only increased slightly after 1 month's e… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…At the cytosolic level, except for a slight decrease in activity in animals exposed to MEK200 and MEK1400 (Cosnier et al, 2017), GST activity was not altered by the other exposure conditions (1629 ± 334 U/g protein on average).…”
Section: Liver Assays (Data Shown In Supplementary Table)mentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…At the cytosolic level, except for a slight decrease in activity in animals exposed to MEK200 and MEK1400 (Cosnier et al, 2017), GST activity was not altered by the other exposure conditions (1629 ± 334 U/g protein on average).…”
Section: Liver Assays (Data Shown In Supplementary Table)mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The increase in the blood burden of both solvents could be due to inhibitory action of the co-solvent on the activity of the CYP enzyme family since the total CYP concentration was unaltered in these exposure conditions. However, the activities of CYP1A2 and CYP2E1, the isoforms specifically involved in TOL (and MEK) metabolization (ATSDR, 2015, Cosnier et al, 2017, were systematically higher in exposed animals than in controls. No additive or synergistic induction was detected (even after 1-month exposure) in the presence of MEK.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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