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Captan Metabolism in Humans Yields two Biomarkers, Tetrahydrophthalimide (THPI) and Thiazolidine-2-Thione-4-Carboxylic Acid (TTCA) in Urine
30
Citations
9
References
1993
Year
Metabolomic ProfilingCaptan FungicideOccupational ExposureToxicological MechanismBioanalysisToxicologyHepatotoxicityToxicological AspectClinical ChemistryHuman MetabolismThiazolidine-2-thione-4-carboxylic AcidHealth SciencesBiochemistryCaptan MetabolismChemical PathologyMetabolomicsExperimental ToxicologyPharmacologyHumans Yields TwoPhysiologyForensic ToxicologyHuman VolunteersEnvironmental ToxicologyMetabolic ProfilingMetabolismMedicineToxicogenomics
Captan fungicide (N-(trichloromethylthio)-4-cyclohexene-1,2-dicarboximide) metabolism in two human volunteers rapidly yields THPI (tetrahydrophthalimide) and TTCA (thiazolidine-2-thione-4-carboxylic acid). The work was done to evaluate usefulness of TTCA and THPI as biomarkers of occupational exposure and to compare human and rat dermal absorption and metabolism. THPI in 12h urine ranged from MDL (5 ppb) to 640 ppb and was stable for at least one year. TTCA was also a stable metabolite, but the MDL was 50 ppb. THPI was detectable in urine for 72 hours following oral dosages of 1 mg/kg, but most was eliminated 0-24 h. No THPI was detectable in urine following application of a chloroform solution to hands, forearms, or inguinal region. Dermal absorption and metabolism of captan are substantially different in humans and rats.
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