Methyl methacrylate: Inhalation developmental toxicity study in rats

Abstract
Methyl methacrylate (99.9% pure) was administered by vapor inhalation exposure to five groups (27 rats/group) of presumed pregnant rats (Crl:CD) at concentrations of 0 (control), 99, 304, 1,178, and 2,028 ppm for 6 hr/day on days 6–15 of gestation (G). Maternal body weight, feed consumption, and clinical signs were recorded throughout gestation. Dams were euthanized on day 20 G. Each uterus was weighed and corpora lutea, implantation sites and resorptions were counted. The number of fetuses per litter were counted and their location within the uterus recorded. All fetuses were weighed, sexed and examined for external and skeletal alterations. One half of the fetuses from each litter were examined for visceral alterations. No treatment‐related deaths were noted at any concentration tested. Treatment‐related effects on maternal body weight and feed consumption were noted at all exposure levels. The decreases in maternal body weight at 99 and 304 ppm were minimal and transient since they returned to control values by the next weighing period. When exposure was discontinued, body weight gain and feed consumption in all exposure groups returned to control values. There were no treatment‐related changes in the number of litters produced or in the mean number per litter of corpora lutea, implantations, resorptions, live or dead fetuses, or sex ratio. Fetal body weights were similar between the control and treated groups. There were no treatmentrelated increases in the type or incidence of external, visceral, or skeletal malformations, developmental variations, or variations indicative of retarded development. Exposure to methyl methacrylate concentrations up to 2,028 ppm resulted in no embryo or fetal toxicity or malformations even at exposure levels that resulted in maternal toxicity.