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Sensitizing potential of chlorothalonil in the guinea pig and the mouse
Author(s) -
Boman Anders,
Montelius Johan,
Rissanen RiittaLiisa,
Lidén Carola
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
contact dermatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1600-0536
pISSN - 0105-1873
DOI - 10.1034/j.1600-0536.2000.043005273.x
Subject(s) - chlorothalonil , sensitization , local lymph node assay , allergic contact dermatitis , medicine , contact dermatitis , allergen , fungicide , toxicology , dermatology , pharmacology , allergy , skin sensitization , immunology , botany , biology
The fungicide chlorothalonil is used extensively under several tradenames for the protection of various horticultural and fruit crops and bananas against fungal infections. It is also used as fungicide in wood preservation and as a preservative in paints. Clinical experience has shown chlorothalonil to be a contact allergen and several cases of allergic contact dermatitis attributed to chlorothalonil have been described. 2 previous guinea pig maximization test studies have shown the sensitizing potential of chlorothalonil to be high. The sensitizing property of chlorothalonil was studied by us with the predictive test methods the local lymph node assay and the cumulative contact enhancement test. In the local lymph node assay, chlorothalonil induced a dose‐dependent increase in proliferation with a maximal stimulation index of 19.2 and 27.2. In the cumulative contact enhancement test, a statistically significant dose‐dependent high sensitization rate was seen with a maximal sensitization rate of 100%. In conclusion, it is evident that chlorothalonil is an extremely potent contact allergen, inducing sensitization using only topical exposure on intact skin.

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