Evaluation of possible modes of action for acute effects of methyl iodide in laboratory animals

2009 
Recent studies have indicated that exposures to methyl iodide (MeI) produce a number of effects in laboratory animals, including fetal toxicity, neurotoxicity, and degeneration of the nasal epithelium. An understanding of the mode of action by which the effects of MeI are produced is useful in guiding critical decisions used in risk assessment. These decisions include the selection of the appropriate internal dose measure(s) calculated using physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling, and evaluating the relevance of the observations in animals to human health. Modified Hill criteria were used to evaluate several possible mode(s) of action through which MeI produces toxicity in animals. For each endpoint, the key studies were summarized and several possible modes of action were compared to the modified Hill criteria. The available data best support the hypothesis that the fetal effects were likely associated with modulation of the thyroid hormones by iodide during development. This mode of actio...
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