Abstract: | Female rats were dosed intraperitoneally with 14C-hexaxhlorobenzene. The drug was administered on 2 or 3 occasions. The total doses amounted to 260 and 390 mg/kg 14C-hexachlorobenzene, respectively. Urine and feces from the animals were collected over a period of 4 weeks after the first injection. Both excreta and some tissues of the animals were examined for their content of radioactivity and for hexachlorobenzene and its metabolites. Gas chromatography, isotope dilution analysis, and combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry were used to identify the metabolites of hexachlorobenzene. In urine pentachlorophenol, tetrachlorohydroquinone, and pentachlorothiophenol were present as major metabolites. One of the isomers of tetrachlorothiophenol was present as a minor metabolite. In the feces pentachlorophenol and pentachlorothiophenol only were identified. At the end of the experiment, carbon-14 excreted with urine and feces amounted to 7% and 27%, respectively, of the radioactivity administered. More than 90% of carbon-14 excreted in urine was contained in the major metabolites. In the feces about 30% of the excreted radioactivity was bound to metabolites and about 70% was contained in the unchanged drug, while in the tissues of the animals only pentachlorophenol was detected in measurable amounts, accounting for 10% of label in blood and less than 0.1% of carbon-14 determined in body fat. Total radioactivity contained in the metabolites detected in the animal body and in the excreta at the end of the experiment accounted for about 16% of the administered radioactivity. |