The Acute Inhalation Toxicity of Monomethylhydrazine Vapor

Item

Title
The Acute Inhalation Toxicity of Monomethylhydrazine Vapor
Date
1969
Index Abstract
Not Available
Photo Quality
Not Needed
Report Number
AMRL TR 68-169
Creator
Haun, C. C.
Vernot, E. H.
Egan, G. F.
MacEwen, J. D.
Corporate Author
SysteMed Corporation
Laboratory
Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory
Extent
52
Identifier
AD0691240
Access Rights
This document has been approved for public release and sale; its distribution is unlimited
Distribution Classification
1
Contract
F33615-67-C-1025
DoD Project
6302
DoD Task
630201
DTIC Record Exists
Yes
Distribution Change Authority Correspondence
None
Distribution Conflict
No
Abstract
The lack of adequate data and the increased used of monomethylhydrazine (MMH), a rocket propellant, prompted additional studies of the acute inhalation toxicity of this compound. The reactive nature of MMH necessitated the use of modified test systems designed to minimize the degradation of MMH during animal exposures. Rats, mice, beagle dogs, squirrel monkeys, and rhesus monkeys were exposed to various measured concentrations of MMH vapor for specified time periods. Rodents were exposed for 30-, 60-, 120-, and 240-minute periods; dogs and squirrel monkeys, for 15, 30, and 60 minutes; and rhesus monkeys for 60 minutes only. The toxicity of MMH for the five animal species was defined by determinations of LC50 values, pathology examination of organs, observations of symptoms, measurements of body weight in rats and mice, and blood chemistry and hematology tests on dogs and rhesus monkeys. Squirrel monkeys proved to be the most sensitive and rats the least sensitive to the lethal effects of MMH. MMH exposure produced definite hemolytic changes in dogs and, to a lesser extent, in rhesus monkeys. These experiments show MMH to be a highly toxic compound. Studies are currently in progress to determine the level at which MMH produces no irreversible injury.
Report Availability
Full text available
Date Issued
1969-04
Provenance
RAF Centre of Aviation Medicine
Type
report
Format
1 online resource