![]() |
|
|
1 From the Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford
The excretion of sodium trichloracetate after intravenous injection is slow. Approximately 75 per cent of the amount injected has appeared in the urine by the tenth day after the injection. An expression can be derived theoretically which will fit the time/blood concentration curves.
There are indications that the trichloracetate ion is distributed throughout the body in the extracellular fluid.
Submitted on June 25, 1945
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
W. A. Chiu, S. Micallef, A. C. Monster, and F. Y. Bois Toxicokinetics of Inhaled Trichloroethylene and Tetrachloroethylene in Humans at 1 ppm: Empirical Results and Comparisons with Previous Studies Toxicol. Sci., January 1, 2007; 95(1): 23 - 36. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E L Bader, S E Hrudey, and K L Froese Urinary excretion half life of trichloroacetic acid as a biomarker of exposure to chlorinated drinking water disinfection by-products Occup. Environ. Med., August 1, 2004; 61(8): 715 - 716. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||