7 research outputs found
Natural Occurrence of Neoplastic Lesions in Young Sprague-Dawley Rats
It is important for the assessment of toxicological effects of chemicals to know what
kinds of neoplasms naturally occur in the early life of experimental animals. In the
present study, we demonstrated spontaneous neoplasms in Sprague-Dawley rats used in 4-,
13- and 26-week toxicity studies conducted at Bozo Research Center in the last decade. The
tumors, which were first observed in 19-week-old animals, included anterior adenoma of the
pituitary, follicular cell adenocarcinoma and C cell adenoma of the thyroids,
nephroblastoma of the kidneys, basal cell tumor of the skin and malignant lymphoma.
Thereafter, hemangiosarcoma of the tongue, adenocarcinoma of the submandibular glands,
histiocytic sarcoma of the spleen, oligodendroglioma of the brain and adenocarcinoma and
fibroadenoma of the mammary glands were detected in 32-week-old animals. The incidences of
mammary adenocarcinoma and pituitary anterior adenoma were higher than those of other
tumors. The present results showed that the same tumors as reported in aged rats could
also develop in younger rats