NICKEL
Ambient Water Quality Criteria
              Criteria and Standards Division
              Office of Water Planning and Standards
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
              Washington,  B.C.

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                        CRITERION DOCUMENT

                              NICKEL

CRITERIA

                           Aquatic Life

     For nickel the criterion to protect  freshwater  aquatic  life

as derived using the Guidelines is "ed-01 'ln(hardness)  -  1.02)

as a 24-hour average and the concentration should  not  exceed

«e(0.47-ln(hardness) + 4.19).. at any time.

     The data base for saltwater aquatic  life  is  insufficient  to

allow use of the Guidelines.  The following  recommendation is  in-

ferred from toxicity data for freshwater  organisms.

     For nickel the criterion to protect  saltwater aquatic life as
  *
derived using procedures other than the Guidelines is  220  ug/1  as

a 24-hour average and the concentration should  not exceed  510  ug/1

at any time.

                           Human Health

     For the protection of human health based on  the toxic proper-

ties of nickel ingested through water and through  contaminated

aquatic organisms, the ambient water criterion  is  determined to be

133 ug/I/day.

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Introduction
     Nickel is a bright, silver metal of the iron-cobalt-
nickel triad.   It is a hard and malleable metal with a high
tensile strength and is used in electroplating and virtually
all areas of metallurgy.  It is a divalent metal, with char-
acteristic divalent metal chemistry, although it does not
readily form chloro-complexes and under environmental condi-
tions would not be expected to form significant amounts
of sulfate complexes.  Nickel levels in U.S. drinking waters
are typically less than 10 /ig/1 (Durfor and Becker, 1962) .
     In the aquatic environment nickel is acutely toxic
to fishes at concentrations as low as 2,480 jug/1 (Lind,
et al. manuscript).  Chronic toxicity to fishes has been
reported at 433 jug/1 (Lind, et al. manuscript).  Water quality
also affects nickel toxicity.  For instance, Lind,  et al.
(manuscript) found the lowest effect level for fathead minnows
to lie between 109 and 433 jug/1 in embryo-larval tests in
water with a hardness of 44 mg/1 as calcium carbonate, while
Pickering (1974) reported a range 380 to 730 jug/1 in a life
cycle test with the same species at a water hardness of
210 mg/1 as calcium carbonate.
     The human health criterion is calculated on the basis
of adverse effects seen in rats provided with drinking water
containing 5 ppm nickel.  These effects included reduction
of litter size, increased numbers of runts, and increased
neonatal mortality (Schroeder and Mitchener, 1971).
                              A-l

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AQUATIC LIFE TOXICOLOGY*



                       FRESHWATER ORGANISMS



Introduction



     Nickel is a common component of  natural freshwaters and can



occur at concentrations less  than 1 y.g/1  in  areas  impacted to a



minimal degree by man.  As with other divalent  heavy metals, free



nickel  (Ni2"1") may participate  in various  types  of  aqueous



.chemical reactions such as adsorption, precipitation,  complexa-



tion, and bioaccumulation.  Since the chemical  environment of



nickel  is changed in these processes,  its  toxicity may also be



changed.



     Equilibrium calculations  using various  chemical components



common  to natural freshwaters  reveal  that  very  few known reactions



with nickel would be expected  to occur, to any  great extent, with



anions  such as sulfate, chloride, and  carbonate.   For  example,



chloride is not an important  complexing agent,  since its concen-



tration would have to be greater than  that of typical  salt water



to form the nickel chloride complex.   Sulfate concentrations
*The reader is referred to the Guidelines  for  Deriving  Water



Quality Criteria for the Protection of Aquatic Life  [43 FR 21506



(May 18, 1978) and 43 FR 29028 (July 5, 1978)]  in  order to better



understand the following discussion and recommendation.   The



following tables contain the appropriate data  that were found  in



the literature, and at the bottom of each  table  are  the calcula-



tions for deriving various measures of toxicity  as described in



the Guidelines.
                              B-l

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would have to approach  about 10 2M concentrations  (an  unlikely



natural condition) before approximately one-half of  the  nickel



would be complexed.  Although precipitation by  carbonate  is  pos-



sible, this reaction is also relatively unimportant  since  condi-



tions conducive to its  occurrence appear unlikely.



     With respect to more reactive substances,  complexation  by



organic conplexing agents such as aminopolycarboxylic  acids  is



possible.  At present,  equilibria with natural  substances  such as



suspended clays, humic  acids, and microorganisms is  generally



poorly understood.  Therefore, as a first approximation,  the most



prevalent form of nickel in toxicity test systems  with low concen-



trations of suspended solids and dissolved organic matter  is esti-



mated to be the free form, Ni2+.



Acute Toxicity



     Adjusted LC50 values for fish (Table 1) ranged  from  2,433



ug/1 for the guppy (hardness = 20 mg/1) to 48,881  u.g/1 for the



bluegill (hardness = 42 mg/1).  At comparable hardness values



(20-29 mg/1), several of the lowest adjusted LC50  values  (5,368,



2,832, 2,504, 2,916, 2,923, 2,433, 2,480, 2,832, and 2,930 ug/D



generally appear to be  relatively similar for five different



species of fish:  goldfish, fathead minnow, guppy, rock  bass, and



bluegill (Pickering and Henderson, 1966, and Lind  et al.r  manu-



script).  At the high end of the hardness scale (360 mg/1),  there



are three adjusted LC50 values (23,180, 24,328, 21,649 mg/1) which



also appear relatively  close for two species of fish,  fathead min-



now and bluegill (Pickering and Henderson, 1966).  However,  in



some cases, greater variability (15,800, 26,663, 23,898, 7,406



ug/1) was observed at comparable hardness levels (42 mg/1) for



four different species  of trout (Willford, 1966).



                              B-2

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     The toxicity data  in Table  1  indicate  that water hardness



significantly influences the  acute  toxicity of  nickel to fish.



     Following the Guidelines, an  exponential  equation describing



the relationship of toxicity  to  hardness  for each  species was fit



by least squares regression of the  natural  logarithms of the



toxicity values and hardness.  For  nickel,  sufficient acute



toxicity data and hardness ranges  were  available for two fish



species to fit regression equations.  The slope of these equations



ranged from 0.86 for the fathead minnow to  0.63 for the bluegill,



with a geometric mean of 0.74.



     As a measure of relative species sensitivity  to nickel,



logarithmic intercepts were calculated  for  each species by fitting



the mean slope (0.74) through the  geometric mean toxicity value



and hardness for each species.   These intercepts varied from 5.41



for rock bass to 7.45 for banded killifish,  with an arithmetic



average of 6.28 for all 16 fish  species.  This  variation in



logarithmic intercepts  indicates a  range of species sensitivity to



nickel of only seven fold.  The  Final Fish  Acute Value is derived



using the geometric mean slope (0.74),  the  adjusted average



intercept (4.92), and the species  sensitivity  factor (3.9).



     In comparison to the results  for fish,  acute  tests with



invertebrate species (Table 2) generally have a greater range of



adjusted LC50 values at a fixed  hardness.   The  caddisfly exhibited



the highest adjusted value (33,220  ug/1/ Rehwoldt  et al., 1973)



and Daphnia magna (Biesinger and Christensen, 1972)  gave the



lowest value (432 ug/1).  Lind et al. (manuscript)  provided  the



only data obtained under relatively high hardness  conditions (244



mg/1).
                              B-3

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     Sufficient  data  were  available  for  only one invertebrate



species, Daphnia pulicaria,  to  demonstrate  the  relationship of



toxicity to hardness,  and  the resulting  slope is 0.47.   As a



measure of relative species  sensitivity  to  nickel,  logarithmic



intercepts were  calculated for  each  species by  fitting  the slope



through the geometric  mean toxicity  value and hardness  for each



species.  These  intercepts ranged  from 4.67 for Daphnia magna to



8.57 for the caddisfly with  an  arithmetic average of  7.23  for all



11 species.



     The Final Invertebrate  Acute  Value  is  derived  using the



geometric mean slope  (0.47), the adjusted average intercept



(4.19) and the species sensitivity factor  (21).  Since  this value



is lower than the  one  for  fish, this one becomes the  Final Acute



Value.



Chronic Toxicity



     A life cycle  test (Pickering, 1974) and an embryo-larval test



(Lind et al., manuscript)  have  been  conducted with  the  fathead



minnow (Table 3) and  the chronic values  are 527 ug/1, at a



hardness of 210  mg/1,  and  109 ug/1/  at a hardness of  44 mg/1,



respectively.  These  two chronic values  for the fathead minnow



give a slope of  1.01  and an  intercept  of 0.88.   Use of  the species



sensitivity factor of  6.7  results  in a Final Fish Chronic  Value



based on a slope of 1.01 and an intercept of -1.02.



     Biesinger and Christensen  (1972)  conducted a life  cycle test



with Daphnia magna, which  resulted in  a chronic value of 53  ug/1



(Table 4) at a hardness of 45 mg/1.   Due to the lack  of data for



chronic toxicity to invertebrate species, the slope of  1.01  from



the fish chronic data  must be assumed.  Since daphnids  were  the
                              B-4

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most sensitive invertebrate species  to  nickel  in  acute tests,  it



would appear to be inappropriate  to  use  the  species  sensitivity



factor of 5.1 with the chronic data.  Thus  the Final Invertebrate



Chronic Value is derived using the slope  of  1.01  and an intercept



of 0.13.  Since the Final Fish Chronic  Value is lower, it becomes



the Final Chronic Value.



Plant Effects



     Hutchinson (1973) and Hutchinson and 'Stokes  (1975) observed



reduced growth of several algal species  at  concentrations ranging



from 100 to 700 ug/1  (Table 5).   The relationship between these



results and the 24-hour average concentrations derived as the



criterion is not known, since the hardness  of  the test waters  used



was not stated.  Although a decrease in diatom diversity was



observed by Patrick et al. (1975) to occur  at  concentrations as



low as 2 ug/1 (Table  7), the possible effects  this may have are



uncertain.  The occurrence of slight changes in diversity due  to



nickel may or may not be significantly deleterous to ecological



functions and biomass production.  It should initiate further



consideration and study since these changes  occurred at concen-



trations below the criterion.  Since the  values in Table 5 are



higher than the chronic data on fish and  invertebrate species.,



plant effects are presently not used in determining  the criterion.



Residues



     The only available 'bioconcentration  factors  (BCF)  are for the



fathead minnow (Lind et al., manuscript)  and an alga (Hutchinson



and Stokes, 1975).  The BCF for the whole body of the fathead
                              B-5

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minnow was 61 and  for  the  alga  the  BCF  was  9.8  (Table  6).   The  geo-



metric mean BCF  is  24.



     Since no maximum  permissible tissue  concentration is  avail-



able, no Residue Limited Toxicant Concentration  can  be calculated.
                              B-6

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CRITERION FORMULATION
                     Freshwater-Aquatic  Life
Summary of Available Data
     All concentrations herein are expressed  in  terms  of  nickel.
The concentrations below have been rounded  to  two  significant
figures.
     Final Fish Acute Value = e(0.74'ln(hardness)  + 4.92)
     Final Invertebrate Acute Value = eCO.47-ln(hardness)  +  4.19)
          Final Acute Value = e(°•47'ln(hardness)  + 4.19)
     Final Fish Chronic Value = ed•01*ln(hardness)  -  1.02)
     Final Invertebrate Chronic Value =  e(*•01>ln(hardness}+ 0.13)
     Final Plant Value = 100 ug/1
     Residue Limited Toxicant Concentration =  not  available
          Final Chronic Value = e(!•01'ln(hardness)  -  1.02)
     The maximum concentration of nickel  is equal  to the Final
Acute Value as given by e(°-47*ln(hardness + 4.19)  and the
24-hour average concentration is the Final Chronic Value as  given
by e(1-01'ln(hardness)  - 1.02).  NO important  adverse  effec
on freshwater organisms have been reported to  be caused by concen-
trations lower than the 24-hour average  concentration  other  than
the possible changes in diatom diversity discussed  earlier.
     The final values can also be expressed as follows:
     Final  Fish Acute Value = 14,000 ug/1
     Final  Invertebrate Acute Value = 510 ug/1
          Final Acute Value = 510 ug/1
                              B-7

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     CRITERION:  For nickel, the.criterion  to protect  freshwater
aquatic life as derived using the Guidelines  is  "e(l'°l*ln
(hardness) - 1.02)" as a 24-hour average and  the  concentration
should not exceed "e(° .47-ln(hardness) + 4.19),,  at any
time.
                              B-8

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                       TOTAL HARDNESS (mg/l)

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200
400
                             B-9

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       TOTAL HARDNESS (mg/l)

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                                  B-10"

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              Table 1-  Freshwater fish acute values for nickel

Organism
Ar.erican eel,
Anguilla rostrata
American eel.
Anguilla rostrata
Rainbow trout,
Salmo gairdneri
Rainbow trout ,
Salmo gairdneri
Rainbow trout,
Salmo gairdneri
Uj Brown trout,
1 Salmo trutta
1-1 Brook trout.
Salvelinus fontinalis
Lake trout ,
Salvelinus namaycush
Goldfish,
Carassius auratus
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow.
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
bioassay
MeUiou"
c*

S

FT

R

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

FT

FT

S

S
Test
Cone.**
1 >

M

M

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

M

M

M

U

U
Iiaraness
(mq/i as
CaCO,)
53

55

f ».

240

42

42

42

42

20

210

210

210

210

20

20
Time
LC'jO
Adjusted
LC'jU
jtUB ) (uq/l 1 (uy/ij 	
96

96

96

48

48

48

48

48

96

96

96

96

96

96

96
13,000

13,000

35,500

32.000

35,680

60,210

53.966

16,725

9,820

27,000

32,200

28,000

25,000

5,180

4,580
9,230

9,230

35.500

14,170

15.800

26.663

23.898

7.406

5,368

14,761

22,862

28,000

25,000

2.832

2.504

Kbttrence
Rehwoldt, et al.
1971
Rehwoldt, et al.
1972
Hale. 1977

Brown &
Dalton, 1970
Willford. 1966

Willford. 1966

Willford, 1966

Willford. 1966

Pickering &
Henderson, 1966
Pickering, 1974

Pickering, 1974

Pickering, 1974

Pickering, 1974

Pickering &
Henderson, 1966
Pickering &
Pimephales promelas
Henderson, 1966

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                       Table  1.   (Continued)
GO
Organism
Fathead minnow,
Pimeph;i1 es promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Carp,
Cyprinus carpio
Carp,
Cyprinus carpio
Channel catfish,
Ictalurus punctatus
Banded killifish,
Fundulus diaphanus
Banded killifish,
Fundulus diaphanus
Guppy ,
bioassay
Meuiod*
i i i « • •• •• ^^^»
S
S
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
S
S
S
S
S
S
Test
U
U
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
U
M
M
U
Hardness
(IIUJ/I ob
CaCO,)
	 3 - —
360
360
45
44
29
28
77
89
91
86
53
55
42
53
55
20
Time
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
96
48
96
96
96
LC!>U
42,400
44.500
5,209
5.163
2,916
2,923
12.356
17,678
8,617
5,383
10,600
10,400
36.795
46,200
46,100
4,450
Adjusted
LC-jO
23,180
24,328
5,209
5,163
2,916
2,923
12,356
17.678
8.617
5,383
7,526
7.384
16.294
32,802
32,731
2,433
Heterence
Pickering &
Henderson, 1966
Pickering &
Henderson, 1966
Lind, et al. ,
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al. ,
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Rehwoldt, et al
1971
Rehwoldt, et al
1971
Willford, 1966
Rehwoldt, et al
1971
Rehwoldt, et al
1972
Pickering &
         Lebistes reticulatus
Henderson, 1966

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              Table  1.   (Continued)
                                            Hardness
Adjusted
Organism
Rock bass,
Ambloplites rupescris
Striped bass,
Roecus saxatilus
Striped bass,
Roecus saxatilus
Pumpkinseed,
Lepomis gibbosus
Pumpkinseed,
Lepomis gibbosus
Bluegill.
03 Lepomis macrochirus
1
£ Bluegill,
Lepomis macrochirus
Bluegill,
Lepomis macrochirus
Bluegill,
Lepomis macrochirus
White perch,
Roecus americanus
White perch,
Roecus americanus

BicusGay
Method *
FT
Test
Cone. **
M
(mq/i c
CaC03)
26
> s Time
itusj
96
LC
iil
2
bO
q/lj
,480
in
2
.480
iMiterenue


Lind, et al .
Manuscript
S

S

S.

S

S


S

S

S

S

S

M

M

M

M

U


U

U

U

M

M

53

55

53

55

20


20

360

42

53

55

96

96
,
96

96

96


96

96

48

96

96

6

6

8

8

5


5

39

110

13

13

.200

.300

,100

.000

.180


,360

,600

,385

,600

,700

4

4

5

5

2


2

21

48

9

9

,402

,473

.751

,680

.832


,930

.649

,881

,656

.727

Rehwoldt ,
1971
Rehwoldt,
1972
Rehwoldt ,
1971
Rehwoldt,
1972
Pickering
. Henderson

Pickering
Henderson
Pickering
Henderson
Willford,

Rehwoldt ,
1971
Rehwoldt ,
1972
et

et

et

et

&
al.

al.

al.

al.


. 1966

&


. 1966
&

. 1966
1966

et

et


al.

al.

*  S = static, FT = flow-through
** U = unmeasured, M = measured
   Adjusted LC50 vs. hardness:
   Fathead minnow: slope = 0.86, intercept = 5.30, r = 0.94, p = 0.01, N = 16
   Bluegill: slope = 0.63, intercept = 6.72, r = 0.60, Not significant, N = 4
   Geometric mean slope =0.74
   Average intercept for 16 fish species = 6.28
   Adjusted average intercept = 6.28-ln(3.9) = 4.92
   Final Fish Acute Value = e(0-74•In(hardness) + 4.92)

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Table  2.   Freshwater invertebrate acute values for nickel


Organism
3 i
Rotifer,
Philoiiina acuticornus
Rotifer,
Philodina acuticornus
Bristleworm,
Nais sp.
Snail (egg).
Amnicola sp.
Snail (adult),
Amnicola sp.
Cladoceran,
Daphnia hyalina
Cladoceran,
Daphnia magna
Cladoceran,
Daphnia magna
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria

Bioassay
MetJioa*
R

R

S

S

S

S

S

S

R

R

R

R

R

R

R


Test
Cor.c.**
U

U

M

U

U

U

U

U

M

M

M

M

M

M

M

Hardness
(mq/1 as
CaCO,)
J
25

25

50

50

50

„

45

45

48

48

44

29

28

28

86


Time
(hr s)
96

96

96

96

96

48

48

48

48

48

48

48

48

48

48


LC b 0
(uq/11
2,900

7,400

14,100

11.400

14,300

1,900

1.120

510

2.182

1.813

1.836

697

1.140

1,034

3,316

Adjusted
LC'.)0
(ucj/il 	
2,456

6,268
.
15,510

12.540

15,730

1,609

949

432

2,400

1,994

2.020

767

1,254

1,137

3,648



Kuifcrence
Buikema, et al.
1974
Buikema, et al.
1974
Rehwoldt, et al .
1973
Rehwoldt, et al.
1973
Rehwoldt, et al.
1973
Baudouin &
Scoppa, 1974
Biesinger &
Christensen, 1972
Biesinger &
Christensen, 1972
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript

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Table  2.   (Continued)
Organism
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
03 Daphnia pulicaria
*"• Cladoceran,
1/1 Daphnia pulicaria
Clacoderan,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Cladoceran,
Daphnia pulicaria
Copepod,
Cyclops abyssorum
Copepod,
Eudiaptomus padanus
Scud,
Gammarus sp.
Method*
•• in • ^fc— ^»^^^»^^
R
.R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
S
S
S
Test
Cone,**
M
M
M
M
M
. M
M
M
M
M
M
M
U
U
M
Hardness
(imj/i as
CaCO,,)
	 3 —
44
94
144
244
94
144
244
84
74
73
100
25
--
--
50
Time
48
48
48
48
i 48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
96
LCbO
jug/11
1,901
3,162
3,826
3,304
2,470
2,470
2,409
3,014
2,325
3,414
3.757
2.171
15.000
3.600
13,000
Adjusted
LCliO
4UH/1) 	
2.091
3.478
4,209
3,634
2,717
2.717
2,650
3,315
2,558
3,755
4.133
2,388
12,705
3,049
14,300
heterence
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Lind, et al .
Manuscript
Lind, et al.
Manuscript
Baudouin &
Scoppa, 1976
Baudouin &
Scoppa, 1976
Rehwoldt, et
1973

-------
           Table  2.  (Continued)













03
1
M


Organism
Mayfly,
Epliki.it: rel la subvaria
Stonefly,
Acroneuria lycorias
Damselfly,
(unidentified)
Midge.
Chironomus sp.
Caddisfly,
(unidentified)

Bioassay
Method*
•»^^i^^— ^*i^» ^Bw
S

S

S

S

S

Haraness
Test (m.)/i as
Cone.** CaCO,)
J
U 42

U 40

M 50

M 50

M 50


Time
(lirs)
96

96

96

96

96


LCSO
iaa/ii
4.000

33.500

21.200

8,600

30,200

Adjusted
LCbO
Jiia—1 	
3,388

28,374

23.320

9,460

33.220



heterence
Warnick & Bell,
1969
Warnick & Bell,
1969
Rehwoldt, et al .
1973
Rehwoldt, et al .
1973
Rehwoldt, et al .
1973
* S = static, R = renewal

** U = unmeasured, M =

measured










Adjusted LC50 vs. hardness:

Daphnia pulicaria
: slope = 0
.47, intercept = 5.80
. r =
0.72, p = 0
.01. N = 19

Geometric mean slope = 0.47 (only value available)
Average intercept for 11 invertebrate species = 7.23
Adjusted average intercept = 7.23-ln(21) = 4.19
 .   ,         .              ,      rn 47'ln(hardness) + 4.19)
Final Invertebrate Acute Value = ev

-------
                      Table  3.   Freshwater  fish  chronic  values  for  nickel
CO
I
Organism
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Fathead minnow,
Pimephales promelas
Chronic Hardness
Limits Value (mq/1 as
Test* (uq/l> (uq/i) CaCO,)
J
LC 380-730 527 210

E-L 109-433 109 44

Reference
Pickering,

Lind, et al
•

1974

. Manuscript

*  LC = life cycle or partial life cycle, E-L = embryo-larval


   Adjusted chronic values vs. hardness:


     Fathead minnow: slope = 0.01, intercept = 0.88, Not significant, N


   Geometric mean slope = 1.01 (only value available)


   Average intercept = 0.88 (only value available)


   Adjusted average intercept = 0.88-ln(6.7) = -1.02

   Final Fish Chronic Value - eU. 01'In(hardness)-1. 02)
        Species


        Fathead minnow,
        Pimephales promelas
                                         Application Factor Values


                                         96-hr LC50      MATC
527
                                   26,458
  AF


0.020
Reference


Pickering, 1974

-------
03
I
M
00
                        Tafcle  l\.  Freshwater invertebrate chronic values for nickel  (Biesinger  & Christenscn.  1972)

. •
Organism
Cladoceran,
Daphnia magna


Test *
LC


Limits
(uq/il
30-95

Chronic
Value
(uq/11
53

Haioness
( mi) / i as
CaC00)
J
45

          *  LC.= life cycle or partial life cycle

             Adjusted chronic values vs.  hardness:

             No hardness relationship could be derived for any invertebrate species.

             Using the slope (1.01) from the fish chronic values, the intercept for D. magna = 0.13  (only species
               tested).
             Final Invertebrate Chronic Value = e(1'01'^(hardness) + 0.13)

-------
                        Table   5.  Freshwater plant effects  for nickel
"I
MD
Organism
Alga,
liiuamyaoroonas
eugamotos
Alga,
Chlorella vulgaris
Alga .
Haematococcus
capensis
Alga,
Scenedesmus
acuminata
Alga.
Scenedesmus
acuminata
'
Concentration
Eftect (uq/1) Reference
Reduced growth 700 Hutchinson, 1973
Reduced growth 500 Hutchinson, 1973
Reduced growth 300 Hutchinson, 1973
Reduced growth 500 Hutchinson & Stokes, 1975
Reduced growth 100 Hutchinson, 1973
          Lowest plant  value  =  100  ng/1

-------
DO
I
K)
O
                         Table   6.  Freshwater residues for nickel
           Organiam
          Alga.
          Scenedestnus  acuminata

          Fathead minnow,
          Pimephales promelas
Bioconcentration Factor


           9.8


          61
                                                                          Time
                                                                          (days)
 6


30
                                        weference
Hutchlnson & Stokes, 1975
Lind, et al.  Manuscript
          Geometric mean  bioconcentracion factor for all species = 24

-------
00

ro
                               Table   7.   Other  freshwater  data  for  nickel
            Organism

            Algae.
            (mixed population)
Test
Duration  gttect
Hardness
(mg/1 as
CaC03)	
^53 days  Decrease in   87 to 99
          diatom diver-
          sity; popula-
          tion shift to
          blue and blue-
          green algae
                                                                        Result
          2 to 8.6   Patrick, et al. 1975
Cladoceran,
Daphnia magna

64 hrs Immobilization
<317
Anderson, 1948

-------
                        SALTWATER ORGANISMS



Introduction



     The scientific  literature  on  nickel  toxicity to  saltwater



organisms  is limited.   There  are no  chronic  or  residue  data  with



fish or invertebrate  species.   The fish acute and plant data



represent  two  species.   This  limited data base  indicates that



nickel is  less  toxic  than  such  metals  as mercury,  copper,  silver,



and cadmium, and more  toxic than chromium, manganese  and aluminum.



Acute Toxicity



     Data  on the acute  toxicity of nickel to saltwater  fishes is



limited (Table  8).   The adjusted values range from 14,586  ug/1 for



the Atlantic silverside to 191,345 ug/1 for  the  mummichog.   A



third fish species, winter flounder  (Table 11),  has a 96-hour LC50



greater than 33,000  ug/1.  The  geometric mean of the  fish  acute



data is 52,830  ug/1 which  when  divided by the species sensitivity



factor of  3.7 results  in a Final Fish  Acute  Value of  14,000  ug/1.



     The invertebrate  acute toxicity data base  consists of 14



data with  a range of  adjusted values from 262 ug/1 for  larvae of



the hard clam  (Calabrese and Nelson, 1974) to 271,040 ug/1 for



adults of  the soft-shell clam (Eisler  and Hennekey, 1977).   The



geometric mean  of the  invertebrate data is 24,970  ug/1  which  when



adjusted for species  sensitivity gives a Final  Invertebrate  Acute



Value of 510 ug/1.  This value  appears to be protective of 95



percent of the  species  since only  one  data point is less than 510



ug/1.  Most, of  the data on adults  of macroinvertebrate  species,



the larval molluscan  data  and the  planktonic copepod  data  indicate



a need to  Lest  more sensitive species  and life  history  stages.
                              B-22

-------
     Since the Final Invertebrate Acute Value  of  5*10  ug/1 is  less



than the Final Fish Acute Value, 14,000 ug/1,  the  Final Acute



Value is 510 ug/1.



Plant Effects



     There was a 50 percent  inactivation of  photosynthesis  of the



giant kelp (Clendenning and North, 1959) at  a  nickel  concentration



of 2,000 ug/1 (Table 10).  Skaar et al. (1974)  observed reduced



growth of the alga, Phaeodactylum tricornutum,  at  a concentration



of 1,000 ug/1 (Table 10).



Miscellaneous



     These data indicate that embryos of the sea  urchin are



sensitive co nickel (Timourian and Watchmaker,  1972).   Delayed



development occurred at 58 ug/1 but abnormal effects  were noted  at



580 ug/1 after only twenty hours exposure.  At  this time, the



delayed development observed at 58 ug/1 does not  appear to  be



important enough to be the basis for the 24-hour average



concentration criterion.
                              B-23

-------
CRITERION FORMULATION
                       Saltwater-Aquatic  Life
Summary of Available Data
     The concentrations below have been  rounded  to  two  significant
figures.  All concentrations herein are  expressed in  terms of
nickel.
     Final Fish Acute  Value = 14,000 ug/1
     Final Invertebrate Acute Value =  510 ug/1
          Final Acute  Value = 510 ug/1
     Final Fish Chronic Value = not available
     Final Invertebrate Chronic Value =  not available
     Final Plant Value = 1,000 ug/1
     Residue Limited Toxicant Concentration = not available
          Final Chronic Value = 1,000 ug/1
          0.44 x Final Acute Value = 220 ug/1
     No saltwater criterion can be derived for nickel using  the
Guidelines because no  Final Chronic Value for either  fish or
invertebrate species or a good substitute for either value is
available, and there are insufficient data to estimate  a criterion
using other procedures.  Results obtained with nickel and
freshwater fish indicate how a criterion may be  derived.
     An application factor of 0.020 was  obtained for nickel  with
fathead minnows.  Multiplying this value times the  Final Acute
Value for saltwater fish results in an estimated Final  Chronic
Value for saltwater fish of 0.020 x 14,000 ug/1  = 280 ug/lr  which
is higher than 0.44 times the Final Acute Value  for saltwater
organisms.
                              B-24

-------
     The maximum concentration  is the  Final Acute  Value of 510



ug/1 and the 24-hour average concentration  if  0.44 times the  Final



Acute Value.  No important adverse effects  on  saltwater aquatic



organisms have been reported to be caused by concentrations lower



than the 24-hour average concentration.



     CRITERION:  For nickel the criterion to protect  saltwater



aquatic life as derived using procedures other  than the Guidelines



is 220 ug/1 as a 24-hour average and the concentration  should  not



exceed 510 ug/1 at any time.
                              B-25

-------
                         Table   8.  Marino  Eish acute values  for nickel
CD
 I
i-o
CTl
                                                                            Adjusted

                                    Bioassay  Test      Time      LC50      LC5U
Mununichog, S U
Fundulus heteroclitus
Atlantic silverside, S U
Menidia menidia

96 350,000 191.345 Eisler & llennekey, 1977
72 29,000 14,586 U.S. EPA. 1973
 * S = Static
** U = unmeasured
   Geometric mean of adjusted  values = 52,830 ug/1
                                                                    ,.„
                                                                                    wg/1

-------
             Tjbit   9.   Marine  invertebrate acute values  for nickel
bicossay
ri r 1 1 A n i c rn M ^ F 1 •fjtl *»









03
1
N)
--J














Sandworm,
Nereis virens
Cockle.
Cardium edule
Cockle,
Cardium edule
Atlantic oyster (larva).
Crassostrea virginica
Hard clam (larva) ,
Mercenaria mercenaria
Soft shell clam,
Mya arenaria

Copepod,
Acartia clausi
Stone crab,
Carcinus maenas
Brown shrimp,
Crangon crangon
Brown shrimp.
Crangon crangon
Crab,
Pagurus longicarpus
Shrimp,
Pandalus montagui
Snail.
Nassarius obsoletus
Starfish,
S
S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S

S
Test
CoriC .**
U
U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U

U
Time
(tirs)
ili f
96
48

48

48

48

96

96

48

48

48

96

48

96

96
LC50
(UCI/i)
25,
500

330

1



320

2

300

150

100

47

200

72

150
,000
.000

,000

,180

310

.000

,850

,000

,000

,000

,000

.000

.000

,000
Adjusted
LCbO
(Ufl/l)
21,175
182,105

120.189

999

262

271,040

2,414

109.263

54,631

36,421

39.809

72,842

60,984

127.050
ivctfci ence

Eisler & Hennekey.
Portmann,

Portmann.

Calabrese

Calabrese
1974
Eisler &

U.S. EPA,

Portmann,

Portmann,

Portmann,

Eisler &

Portmann,

Eisler &

Eisler &
1968

1972

, et al.

& Nelson,

Hennekey,

1974

1968

1968

1972

Hennekey,

1968

Hennekey,

Hennekey ,

1977




1973



1977









1977



1977

1977
Asterius forbesi

-------
                                     Table  9.   (Continued)
            Organism
Bioaesay  Test
Method    Cone.
          Adjusted
LC50      LC5U
(uq/11     (ug/1)
                                                                                       Keterence
             *   S  =  static
             ** U  =  unmeasured
                Geometric  mean of adjusted  values = 24,970 ug/1
DO
I
N)
00

-------
CD

to
                           Table  10-  Marine plant effects for nickel
             Oman ism
                                     Ettect
Concentration
(ug/i)	
                                                                        Ret ereii
             Giant kelp,              507. inactivation   2.000
             Macrocystis  pyrifera    of photosynthesis

             Alga,                   Reduced growth     1,000
             Phceodactylum tricornutum
                    Clendenning & North,  1959
                    Skaar,  et al.   1974
             Lowest Plant Value = 1,000 yg/1

-------
                             Table  11. Other marine  data  for  nickel
          Orgdfiism
                                  Test
                                  Duration
                                   Ettect
                                  Result
                                  juq/l)
                                                                      Retereijcfc
00
I
u>
o
          Winner flounder,
          Pseudopleuronectes
             americanus

          Mummichog,
          Fundulus heteroclitus

          Sofc-shell clam,
          My a arenaria

          Sea urchin (embryo),
          Lytechinus pictus

          Sea urchin (embryo),
          Lytechinus pictus
Sea urchin (embryo),
Arbacia punctulata
                         96 hrs   LC50
                         72 hrs   LC50
                                 >33,000    U.S.  EPA,  1975a
                                 >50,000    U.S.  EPA,  1973
                         48 hrs   LC50                     >50,000


                         20 hrs   Delayed  development           58


                         20 hrs   Abnormal  development        580
                                            U.S.  EPA,  1975b
                                            Timourian  & Watchmaker,
                                            1972

                                            Timourian  & Watchmaker,
                                            1972
42 hrs   >507. embryo mortality    17,000    Waterman,  1937

-------
                            NICKEL

                          REFERENCES



Anderson, B.C.  1948.  The  apparent  thresholds of  toxicity

to Daphnia magna for chlorides of various metals when  added

to Lake Erie water.  Trans. Am. Fish. Soc.  78: 96.



Baudouin, M.F. , and P. Scoppa.  1974.  Acute toxicity  of

various metals to  freshwater  zooplankton.  Bull. Environ.

Contam. Toxicol.   12: 745.



Biesinger, K.E., and G.M. Christensen.  1972.  Effects of

various metals on  survival, growth,  reproduction,  and  metabo-

lism of Daphnia magna.  Jour. Fish.  Res. Board Can.  29:

1691.



Brown, V.M., and R.A. Dalton.  1970.  The acute lethal toxi-
                         %
city to rainbow trout of mixtures of copper, phenol, zinc

and nickel.  Jour. Fish Biol.  2: 211.



Buikema, A.L., Jr., et al.  1974.  Evaluation of Philodina

acuticornis  (Rotifera) as a bioassay organism for  heavy

metals.  Water Resour. Bull., Am. Water Resour. Assoc.

10: 648.



Calabrese, A., et  al.  1973.  The toxicity of heavy metals

to embryos of the Atlantic oyster (Crassostrea virginica).

Mar.  Biol.  18: 162.
                               B-31

-------
Calabrese, A., and D.A. Nelson.  1974.  Inhibition of embry-



onic development of the hard shell clam, Mercenaria mercenaria,



by heavy metals.  Bull. Environ. Contain. Toxicol.  2: 92.








Clendenning, K.A., and W.J. North.  1959.  Effects of wastes



on the giant kelp, Macrocystes pyrifera.  In  E.A. Pearson,



Ed., Int. Conf. on Waste Disposal in  the Mar. Environ. Berke-



ley, Cal. Proc.








Eisler, R., and R.J. Hennekey.  1977.  Acute toxicities



of Cd  , Cr +, Hg + , Ni +, and Zn + to estuarine macrofauna.



Arch. Environ. Contam. Toxicol.  6: 315.








Hale, J.G.  1977.  Toxicity of metal mining wastes.  Bull.



Environ. Contam. Toxicol.  17: 66.








Hutchinson, T.C.  1973.  Comparative  studies of  the toxicity



of heavy metals to phytoplankton and  their synergistic inter-



actions.  Water Pollut. Res. (Canada)  8: 68.








Hutchinson, T.C., and P.M. Stokes.  1975.  Heavy metal toxicity



and algal bioassays.  ASTM STP 573, Am. Soc. Test.  Mater.



pp. 320-343.








Lind, D., et al.  Regional copper-nickel study, Aquatic



Toxicology Study, Minnesota Environmental Quality Board,



State of Minnesota (Manuscript).
                              B-32

-------
Patrick, R.,  et  al.   1975.   The  role  of  trace elements in



management  of nuisance  growths.   U.S.  Environ.  Prot.  Agency,



EPA  660/2-75-008,  250 p.








Pickering,  Q.H.  1974.  Chronic  toxicity of nickel to the



fathead minnow.  Jour.  Water Pollut.  Control Fed.   46: 760.








Pickering,  Q.H., and  C. Henderson.   1966.   The acute  toxicity



of some heavy metals  to different species  of warmwater fishes.



Air Water Pollut.  Int.  Jour.   10:  453.
Portmann? J.E.   1968.  Progress  report  on a programme of
insecticide analysis  and  toxicity-testing  in relation to



the marine environment.   Helgolander  wiss.   Meeresunters



17: 247.








•'PGTtrncmr,,~~J-.-E	197?-  Results  of  acute  toxicity tests with



marine organisms,  using a standard method.   In M.  Russo



(ed.), Marine Pollution and Sea Life.  Fishery News Ltd.,



London, England.








Rehwoldt, R., et al.  1971.  Acute toxicity  of copper, nickel



and zinc ions to some Hudson River fish  species.   Bull.



Environ. Contain. Toxicol.  6: 445.








Rehwoldt, R., et al.  1972.  The effect  of  increased tempera-



ture upon the acute toxicity of  some  heavy metal ions.



Bull.   Environ.  Contain. Toxicol.   8:  91.
                               B-33

-------
Rehwoldt, R.,  et  al.   1973.  The acute  toxicity of some



heavy metal  ions  toward  benthic organisms.  Bull. Environ.



Contain. Toxicol.   10:  291.
Skaar, H.B., et  al.   1974.  The uptake of  3N, by the diatom



Phaeodactylum  tricornutum.  Physiol. Plant.  32: 353.
Timourian, H.,  and G. Watchmaker.  1972.  Ni uptake by sea



urchin embryos  and their  subsequent development.  Jour.



Exp. Zool.  182:  379.








U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research



Laboratory-Narragansett,  Rhode  Island.  Semi-Annual Report.



July-Dec., 1973.








U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research



Laboratory-Narragansett,  Rhode  Island.  Semi-Annual Report.



Jan.-June, 1974.








U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research



Laboratory-Narragansett,  Rhode  Island.  Semi-Annual Report.



Jan.-June, 1975a.








U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research



Laboratory-Narragansett,  Rhode  Island.  Semi-Annual Report.



July-Dec., 1975b.
                               B-34

-------
Warnick, S.L., and H.L. Bell.  1969.  The acute toxicity



of some heavy metals to different species of aquatic insects.



Jour. Water Pollut. Control Fed.  4T: 280.








Waterman, A.J.  1937.  Effect of salts on heavy metals on



development of the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata.  Biol.



Bull.  73: 401.








Willford, W.A.  1966.  Toxicity of 22 therapeutic compounds



to six fishes.  Bur. Sport Fish. Wildl. Resour. Publ. 35,



U.S. Dep. Inter., 10 p.
                              B-35

-------
Mammalian Toxicology and Human Health Effects







                                EXPOSURE







     Assessment of the risk posed by nickel to public health in the United



States entails consideration of two general facets of the issue:  sources of



exposure relevant to U.S. populations at large and population response.



     Some obvious questions about the exposure aspects of nickel are:  (1)



What are the environmental sources of nickel in the United States?  (2)  What



are the various routes by which nickel enters the body?



     Nickel, in common with other metallic elements, is a multimedia contaminant.



Thus, one needs to have a clear understanding of fractional contributions on



total body burden in humans through various routes of exposure before one can



assess the relative significance of any given avenue of intake.   A second



complicating factor is the impact of a primary route of environmental entry on



other compartments of the environment.  For example, to what degree does



airborne nickel contribute to contamination of water and soil via fallout?



     Some aspects of the problem of human population response to nickel include:



(1)  the relevant human biological and pathophysiological responses to nickel;



(2)  subgroups of the U.S. population that can be identified as being at par-



ticular risk to effects of nickel  by virtue of either exposure setting or some



physiological status imparting heightened vulnerability; (3) the magnitude of



the risk to these subgroups in terms of the numbers exposed and as can best be



determined by available population data.



     A discussion of the various effects  of nickel on man includes dose-effect



and dose-response relationships and the various parameters that are of utility



in assessing both magnitude of exposure and the extent of response.
                                  C-l

-------
      "Dose"  is  the  amount  or concentration of a  substance which is presented



over  a  defined  time  to  the specific site where a given effect is elicited.  In



man,  it is rarely feasible to assess this directly, and one must depend on



some  other means which  reflects the target-site  level of the toxicant.  Usually,



one must  select levels  of  the agent in urine, blood, hair, etc. as indices of



internal  exposure,  and  these levels are integrated reflections of the total



contributions from  various external exposures.



      "Effect" is a  physiological change resulting from exposure to a toxic



substance, while "adverse  health effect" is taken to mean an impairment of



either  the organism's ability to function optimally or the organism's reserve



capacity  to  cope with other systemic stresses.



      A  dose-effect  relationship is a quantitative statement of the relationship



between changes in  the  quantity of an agent and observed gradations of severity



in effect resulting  therefrom.   Dose-response refers to the frequency with



which a given effect occurs within a population at a defined dose.



      Furthermore, Nordberg (1976) has defined the concept of critical organ,



critical  concentration  and critical effect.   "Critical organ" is that organ



which first  obtains  the critical concentration of a metal under defined



conditions.  "Critical  concentration" is that mean concentration of the



toxicant  in  the critical organ at which adverse effects are first manifested.



That point in the dose-effect relationship at which an adverse effect exists



is termed the "critical effect."



     Nickel  enters the  environment via both natural and anthropogenic activity,



and a detailed description  of sources and prevalence of nickel in the environ-



ment is given in the comprehensive National  Academy of Sciences (NAS) review



(Natl. Acad.  Sci. , 1975).
                                   C-2

-------
     In 1972, U.S. consumption of nickel, exclusive of scrap, was estimated to



total about 160,000 tons (Reno, 1974).  The estimate consisted mainly of



commercially pure nickel (about 110,000 tons).  The main uses for this



commercially pure nickel were stainless steel, various other alloys, and



electroplating.  Presumably, the commercial utility of nickel is such that



growth in the use of nickel is assured.



     From the total consumption of nickel in the United States, it is difficult



to determine what fraction of each of the end uses is dissipated into the



environment in ways that are relevant to general population exposure assessment.



Similarly, the relative contribution of naturally emitted nickel cannot be



precisely stated, although the relative impact of this source is not as great



as that arising from man's activities.



     The approach taken in this document is to give attention to the various



media by which the general population comes into contact with nickel and to



define the nickel levels therein:   ambient air, water, foodstuffs,  soil, and



other exposure sources.



Ingestion from Water



     The values for nickel levels in 969 U.S.  public water supplies for 1969-1970



are presented in Table 1.   The survey includes eight metropolitan areas (Natl.



Acad. Sci., 1975).  The average value, taken at the consumer tap, was 4.8



ug/1, with only 11 systems of this total exceeding 25 ug/1.   The highest level



was in one supply, 75 ug/1.



     Since the data in Table 1 do not furnish any measure of the number of



people consuming drinking water of variable nickel  content,  the,nickel  levels



for water supplies of the 10 largest U.S.  cities have been listed in Table 2.



This table is based on the data of Durfor and Becker (1964).
                                   C-3

-------
     TABLE 1.  NICKEL LEVELS IN U.<
                  WATER, 1969-1970'
                 DRINKING
Ni concn,
mg/1.
0.000
0.001-0.005
0 ..006-0. 010
0.011-0.015
0.016-0.020
0.021-0.025
0.026-0.030
0.031-0.035
0.036-0.040
0.041-0.045
0.046-0.050
0.051-0.055
0.075
Total
No. of Ni frequency
samples (percent of samples)
543
1,082
640
167
46
14
4
2
1
1
1
1
1
2,503
21.69
43.22
25.57
6.68
1.84
0.56
0.16
0.08
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
100.00
 Samples from 969 water systems.
 Data from Natl. Acad. Sci. (1975),
   TABLE 2.  NICKEL LEVELS OF DRINKING WATER

         OF 10 LARGEST U.S. CITIES3
    City
Nickel level,  ug/1
New York City
Chicago
Los Angeles
Philadelphia
Detroit
Houston
Baltimore
Dallas
San Diego
San Antonio
2.3"
7.4C
4.8
13.0°
5.6b
4.5C
4.7C
5.2C
<7.8
Not detected
 Tabulation adapted from Natl.  Acad. Sci. (1975);
.values for 1962 survey of Durfor and Becker (1964),
 In storage.
 Post-treatment.
                      C-4

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     The values for New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles do not appear to
be markedly at variance with the value of 4.8 (jg/1. from Table 1.
Ingestion from Food
     The route by which most people in the general population receive the
largest portion of daily nickel intake is through foods.
     The assessment of average daily nickel intake in food can be done either
by considering the aggregate nickel content of average diets in the population
or by fecal nickel determinations.  Although fecal nickel levels would be more
meaningful than diet analysis, given the very small gastrointestinal absorption
of nickel in man, such data have been sparse in the literature in terms of
representative groups of individuals.
     Some representative nickel values for various foodstuffs, adapted from
data in the MAS Nickel Report, are given in Table 3.   These values have been
obtained by different laboratories using different methods and may be dated in
some cases.  Total daily dietary intake values may range up to 900 ug nickel,
depending on the nature of the diet, with average values of 300 to 500 ug daily.
Total daily dietary intake values may range up to 900 ug nickel, depending on
the nature of the diet, with average values of 300 to 500 ug daily (Natl.  Acad.
Sci., 1975).
     Schroeder et al.  (1962) calculated an average oral nickel intake by
American adults of 300 to 600 ug/day,  while Louria and co-workers (1972)
arrived at a value of 500 ug/day.   Murthy et al.  (1973) calculated the daily
food nickel intake in institutionalized children, 9 to 12 years old, from 28
U.S.  cities at an average value of 451 ug/day.   In a related study, Myron et al.
(1978) determined the nickel content of nine institutional diets in the
U.S.  and calculated an average intake  of 165 ug/day.
                                   C-5

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    TABLE 3.  NICKEL CONTENT OF VARIOUS CLASSES

               OF FOODS IN U.S.  DIET3
Food class and examples
Nickel content,
ppm, wet weight
Grains/grain products
   Wheat flour, all-purpose
   Bread, whole-wheat
   Corn, fresh frozen
   Rice, polished American
   Rye flour
   Rye bread
     0.54
     1.33
     0.70
     0.47
     0.23
     0.21
Fruits and vegetables
Potatoes, raw
Peas, fresh frozen
Peas, canned
Beans, frozen
Beans, canned
Lettuce
Cabbage, white
Tomatoes, fresh
Tomato juice
Spinach, fresh
Celery, fresh
Apples
Bananas
Pears
Seafood
Oysters, fresh
Clams, fresh
Shrimp
Seal lops
Crabmeat, canned
Sardines, canned
Haddock, frozen
Swordfish, frozen
Salmon
Meats
Pork (chops)
Lamb (chops)
Beef (chuck)
Beef (round)

0.56
0.30
0.46
0.65
0.17
0.14
0.32
0.02
0.05
0.35
0.37
0.08
0.34
0.20

1.50
0.58
0.03
0.04
0.03
0.21
0.05
0.02
1.70

0.02
Not detected
Not detected
Not detected
 Adapted from Natl.  Acad.  Sci.  (1975).
                      C-6

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     Food processing methods apparently  add  to the  nickel levels
already present in foodstuffs via  (1)  leaching from nickel-con-
taining alloys in food-processing  equipment  made  from stainless
steel,  (2) the milling of flour, and  (3)  catalytic  hydrogenation
of fats and oils by use of nickel  catalysts.
     Several studies have reported daily  fecal excretions of
nickel.  Nodiya (1972) reported a  fecal  excretion average of 258
ug in Russian students.  Horak and Sunderman  (1973)  determined
fecal excretions of nickel in 10 healthy  subjects and arrived at
a value of 258 ug/day, identical to the  Russian study.
     A bioconcentration factor (BCF)  relates  the  concentration  of
a chemical in water to the concentration  in  aquatic organisms.
Since BCFs are not available for the  edible  portions of  all  four
major groups of aquatic organisms  consumed in  the United States,
some have to be estimated.  A recent  survey  on fish and  shellfish
consumption in the United States (Cordle, et  al.  1978) found that
the average per capita consumption is  18.7 g/day.   From  the  data
on the nineteen major species identified  in  the survey,  the  rela-
tive consumption of the four major groups can  be  calculated.
     A mean measured bioconcentration  factor of 61  was obtained
for fathead-minnow larvae (Lind, et al. Manuscript)  based on
whole body measurements after a 28-day exposure to  nickel.   The
values were corrected for nickel in the control organisms and
corrected from dry weight to wet weight.  Based on  data  for  lead
and cadmium, nickel would probably have a lower BCF for  fish and
decapod muscle than for fish whole body, but probably would  have
a higher BCF for molluscs.
                            C-7

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                              Consumption         Bioconcentration
       Group                    (Percent)          	Factor	

 Freshwater fishes                 12                     6

 Saltwater fishes                  61                     6

 Saltwater molluscs                 9                    70

 Saltwater decapods                18                     6

 Using  the data  for  consumption  and estimated  bioconcentration

 factors  for  each of these  groups,  the weighted  average BCF for

 nickel is 11 in consumed fish and  shellfish.

 Inhalation

     Perhaps the most  comprehensive  assessment  of  ambient air

 levels of nickel in the U.S.  is  that of the National  Air  Surveil-

 lance Network.  Tabulation of air  nickel  levels for the period

 1964 through 1969 are  contained  in the NAS Nickel  Report  (Nickel.

 NAS, 1975) for  231  urban and  47  nonurban  localities.   More recent

 figures  are  available  for  the period 1970-1974  (EPA,  1976).

     Table 4 tabulates the air  nickel averages  for urban  stations

 for the  period  1970-1974.   For  1974, the  most recent  entry,  the

 arithmetic mean level  was  9 ng/m3.

     Table 5 presents  the  corresponding values  for all nonurban

 stations for the same  period.  Again for  1974,  the arithmetic

mean level was  2 ng/m3.

     It  may  be  seen from Tables  4  and 5 as well as earlier sur-

veys in  the  NAS Nickel Report,  that  there is a  clear  difference

 in urban versus nonurban nickel  levels, with  urban values being

around three- to four-fold  higher.

     Trends  in air  metal level changes for urban and  nonurban

areas have been assessed for a number of  elements  including

nickel (Faoro and McMu/Llen, 1977).


                            C-8

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           TABLE 4. ; URBAN CUMULATIVE FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTIONS
                  OF AMBIENT AIR NICKEL LEVELS3
Year
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
No. of ; Percentile
sites Min. . 10 50
797 0.001 0.001 0.001
717 0.001 0.001 0.001
708 0.001 0.001 0.001
559 0.001 0.001 0.001
594 0.001 0.001 0.001
Arithmetic Mean
99
0.127
0.126
0.100
0.133
0.057
(SD)
0.015 (0.028)
0.015 (0.028)
0.011 (0.023)
0.014 (0.037)
i
0.009 (0.029)
Contracted tabulation from U.S. EPA data (1976), Table 4.1.
Values under given percentile indicate the percentage of stations
below air level. Values in ug/m .
TABLE 5. NONURBAN CUMULATIVE FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTIONS
OF AMBIENT AIR NICKEL LEVELS3
Year
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
No. of Percentile
sites Min. 10 50
124 0.001 0.001 0.001
97 0.001 0.001 0.001
137 0.001 0.001 0.001
100 0.001 0.001 0.001
79 0.001 0.001 0.001

99
0.076
0.046
0.076
0.188
0.020
Arithmetic mean
(SD)
0.005 (0.024)
0.003 (0.011)
0.004 (0.012)
0.011 (0.037)
0.002 (0.004)
Contracted tabulation from U.S.  EPA data (1976),  Table  4.2.

 Values under given percentile  indicate  the-percentage of  stations
 below the given air value.   Values  in ug/m .
                                    C-9

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Figure 1 depicts the trend  in the 50th percentile at urban sites of annual air
                                                                             »
nickel averages for the period 1965-1974.  Nickel shows a downward trend over

this period, being most pronounced in the latter half of the survey period

with an approximate drop of 40 percent from the 1970-71 to the 1973-74 values.

NickeKis one of the metals associated with fuel combustion, particularly oil.

This relationship is based on documented season-dependent gradients in air

levels with highest levels  in the winter quarter when space heating is at a

maximum.

     Sulfur regulations which have been in effect over the period 1965-1974

appear to be the major factor in lower air nickel levels, particularly in the

northeastern United States.  Sulfur removal from residual oil  necessitated by

these regulations indirectly removes nickel as well (Faoro and McMullen,

1977).

     How long this trend to lower air nickel values in urban areas will continue,

in view of the above, will depend primarily on the future status of sulfur

regulations as well as the level of fuel  oil consumption.

Dermal

     The discussion of nickel exposure routes so far has focused on intake and

systemic absorption from various media:   air, food, and water.   External

contact with nickel is associated with clinically defined skin disorders.

There is an extensive list of commodities which contain nickel  and through

which the general  population can be externally exposed.   In particular, the

use of stainless steel kitchens, nickel-plated jewelry,  and various other

nickel-containing materials has created a widespread problem for nickel-

sensitive individuals.
                                   C-10

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  01
£
Z
M
u

o



2 ooi


5                                              \
                                                          \
  0001
               6S    it    i>    M   69   70    71    12    11

                                     YIAB
           Figure   1.  Trend  in the 50th percent!le at  urban sites of
                        average for nickel.   From Faoro  and  McMullen (1977),
                               C-ll

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Other Sources of  Exposure
Nickel  In Soil
     Soil nickel  levels are considered in this section chiefly from the aspect
of the  influence  of soil nickel on man's food chain:  plants •* animals -> man.
     Soils normally contain nickel in a wide range of levels, 5 to 500 ppm and
soils from serpentine rock may contain as much as 5,000 ppm (Natl. Acad. Sci.,
1975).  While these levels may appear high in some instances, nickel content
of soils as such  is less important for plant uptake than such factors as soil
composition, soil pH, organic matter in soil, and the classes of plants grown
therein.
     Natural levels of soil nickel may be added to by contamination from human
activity such as  atmospheric fallout in the areas of nickel-emitting industrial
activities or auto traffic as well as treatment of agricultural lands with
nickel-containing super phosphate fertilizers or municipal sewage sludge.
     Ragaini et al. (1977), in their study of trace metal contaminants of
soil and grasses  near a lead-smelting operation in Idaho, found that surface
soil nickel levels are enriched 39-fold in sampling sites in the vicinity of
the smelter.
     Contamination of roadside soil with nickel, leading to increased nickel
content of grasses, has been noted by Lagerwerff and Specht (1970).   There was
an increase in grass nickel levels from 1.3 to 3.8 ppm dry weight, dependent
on the distance from the roadside.  Sources of roadside nickel were presumed
by the authors to arise from fuel combustion as well as from external abrasion
of nickel from auto parts.
     In a study on the uptake of nickel by the edible portions of food crops
such as bush beans, cabbage, onions,  tomatoes, and potatoes grown in test pots
in municipal sludge from Ithaca, N.Y., Furr et al.  (1976) observed:   (1) at
                                  C-12

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first-year harvest, nickel levels in the above food crops were increased
two-to-threefold compared to control soil, the corresponding soil pH levels
being 7.1 for sludge-amended samples and 5.3 for control soils; (2) at second
harvest, the increases seen in the first harvest did not recur, except for
about a twofold increase in onions and tomatoes.
     John and Van Laerhoven (1976) determined the effect of applying sludge at
various loading rates on trace metal uptake by romaine lettuce and beets grown
on amended soil with and without liming.   Sludge used with unlimed soil signifi-
cantly increased nickel levels in lettuce, did not affect the element level in
beet tops, and reduced the nickel content of beet tubers.  On the other hand,
liming led to increases of nickel in all  plant tissues at a 25 g/kg loading
rate for one type of sludge (Milorganite) but not with a second type produced
at a local treatment plant.
Cigarette Smoke
     Cigarette smoking can contribute significantly to man's daily nickel
intake by inhalation and nickel  from this source probably exceeds the amount
absorbed by breathing ambient air.   An individual smoking two packs of cigarettes
a day would inhale 1 to 5 mg of  nickel per year or about 3 to 15 ug nickel daily.
The possible existence of nickel  in cigarette smoke as nickel carbonyl  suggests
that there would be a net daily  absorption of about 1.5 to 7.5 ug into the blood-
stream.   This may be contrasted  to the markedly smaller amounts taken in by
inhalation of nickel in ambient  air (vide supra).
                                   C-13

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                               PHARMACOKINETICS

     Routes of nickel intake for man and animals are inhalation, ingestion,
and percutaneous absorption.  Parenteral exposure is mainly of importance in
experimental animal studies.
     The relative amount of inhaled nickel which is absorbed from various
compartments of the pulmonary tract is a function of both chemical and physical
forms.   Pulmonary absorption into the blood stream is probably greatest for
nickel  carbonyl vapor, with animal studies suggesting that about half of the
inhaled amount is absorbed.  Nickel in particulate matter is absorbed from the
pulmonary tract to a considerably lesser degree than nickel carbonyl.  Smaller
particles are lodged deeper in the respiratory tract and the relative absorption
is greater than with larger particles.  Lung model and limited experimental
data suggest several percent absorption.  While insoluble nickel compounds may
undergo limited absorption from the respiratory tract,  their relative insolu-
bility has implications for the carcinogenic character of nickel, as will be
noted below.
     Absorption from the gastrointestinal  tract of dietary nickel is on the
order of 1 to 10 percent in man and animals from both foodstuffs and beverages.
     Percutaneous absorption of nickel occurs and is related to nickel-induced
hypersensitivity and skin disorders.   The extent to which nickel enters the
bloodstream by way of the skin cannot be stated at the present time.
     Absorbed nickel is carried by the blood, although the extent or partition-
ing between erythrocyte and plasma cannot be precisely stated.   In any event,
                                   C-14

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plasma or serum levels reflect the blood burden.  Normal serum nickel values
in man are 2 to 3 pg/1.   Albumin is the main macromolecular carrier of nickel
in a number of species,  including man.  In man and rabbit, there also appear
to be nickel-specific proteins.
     Tissue distribution of absorbed nickel appears to be dependent on the
route of intake.  Inhaled nickel carbonyl leads to highest levels in lung,
brain, kidney, liver, and adrenals.  Parenteral administration of nickel salts
usually results in highest levels in the kidney, with significant uptake shown
by endocrine glands, liver, and lung.
     Based on animal studies, nickel appears to have a half-time of several
days in the body.   There is little evidence for tissue accumulation.
     The main excretory  route of absorbed nickel in man and animals appears to
be through the urine, with biliary excretion also occurring in experimental
animals.   While hair deposition of nickel also appears to be an excretory
mechanism, the relative  magnitude of this route, compared to urinary excretion,
is not fully known at present.
     A number of disease states or other physiological stresses can influence
nickel metabolism in man.   In particular, heart and renal disease,  burn trauma,
and heat exposure can either raise or lower serum nickel  levels.
Absorption
     The major routes of nickel absorption are inhalation and ingestion via
the diet.   Percutaneous  absorption is  a less significant factor for nickel's
systemic effects but important in the  allergenic responses to nickel.   Parenteral
administration of nickel  is mainly of  interest to experimental  studies  and
particularly helpful in  the assessment of the kinetics of nickel  transport,
distribution,  and excretion in addition to maximizing the physiological  parameters
for nickel's effects.
                                  C-15

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     The amounts of nickel absorbed by organisms are determined not only by



the quantities inhaled or ingested, but also by the chemical and physical



forms of nickel.   Other factors, such as host organism nutritional and



physiological status, also play a role, but this has been little studied



outside of investigations directed at an essential role for nickel.



     Gastrointestinal intake of nickel by man is surprisingly high, relative



to other toxic elements, which is at least partly accounted for by contributions



of nickel from utensils and equipment in processing and home preparation of



food.



     Collectively, the data of Tedeschi and Sunderman (1957), Perry and Perry



(1959), Nomoto and Sunderman (1970), Nodija (1972), and Horak and Sunderman



(1973) indicate that 1 to 10 percent of dietary nickel is absorbed.



     One question that arises in considering the dietary intake and absorption



of toxic elements has to do with the bioavailability of the agent in solid



foodstuffs versus water and beverages.  Ho and Furst (1973) observed that



intubation of 63 Ni in dilute acid solution leads to 3 to 6 percent absorption of



the radio-labeled nickel regardless of the dosing level.   It does not appear,



then,  that nickel in simple aqueous solution is absorbed to any greater extent



than that incorporated into the matrix of foodstuffs.



     Percutaneous absorption of nickel is mainly viewed as important in the



dermatopathological effects of this agent, such as contact dermatitis, and



absorption viewed this way is restricted to the passage of nickel past the



outermost layers of skin deep enough to bind with apoantigenie factors.



     Wells (1956) demonstrated that divalent nickel penetrates the skin at



sweat-duct and hair-follicle ostia and binds to keratin.   Using cadaver skin,
                                   C-16

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 Kolpokov  (1963) found that nickel  (II) accumulated  in the malpighian  layer,


 sweat glands, and walls of blood vessels.  Spruitt  et al. (1965)  have  shown


 that nickel penetrates to the dentil's.


     Values for the amounts of nickel passing through outer  layers  of  skin


 relative  to amounts applied have not been determined.  Samitz and Pomerantz
                                                                          \

 (1958) have reported that the relative extent of nickel penetration is  enhanced


 by sweat  and detergents.


     Mathur and co-workers (1977)  have reported the  systemic absorption of


 nickel from the skin using nickel  sulfate at very high application  rates.


 After 30  days of exposure to nickel at doses of 60  and 100 mg Ni/kg, a  number


 of testicular lesions were observed in rats, while  hepatic effects  were seen


 by 15 days at these exposure levels.  It is not possible to calculate any


 absorption data from this study.


     Respiratory absorption of various forms of nickel is probably  the major


 route of  nickel entry into man under conditions of  occupational exposure.  Of


 these forms, nickel carbonyl is one that has been found to be toxic.


     Nickel carbonyl, Ni(CO)4, is  a volatile, colorless liquid (b.p. 43°C),


Armit (1908) judged its relative toxicity to be a hundred fold higher than
                                   •

that of carbon monoxide.  More recently, the threshold limit value  (TLV) for a


work day  exposure has been set at  50 parts per billion (ppb).  In contrast,


the corresponding value for hydrogen cyanide is 10 parts per million (ppm),


200-fold  greater (Am. Conf.  of Gov. Ind. Hyg., 1971).  The presence and


toxicological history of Ni(CO). as a workplace hazard followed closely upon


the development of the Mond process of nickel purification in its processing


(Mond et  al., 1890).   A detailed discussion of the toxicological  aspects of


nickel  carbonyl poisoning is included in the NAS Report on Nickel (1975) as


well  as a recent review by Sunderman (1977).
                                   C-17

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     Studies of nickel carbonyl metabolism by Sunderman and co-workers



(Sunderman and Selin, 1968; Sunderman et al., 1968) indicate that pulmonary



absorption is both rapid and extensive, the agent passing the alveolar wall as



Ni(CO). intact.  Sunderman and Selin (1968) observed that rats exposed to



nickel carbonyl at 100 mg Ni/1 .air for 15 minutes excreted 26 percent of the



inhaled amount in the urine by 4 days postexposure.  On taking into account



the exhaled quantity, as much as half of the inhaled amount could have been



initially absorbed.



     Few data on the pulmonary absorption of nickel from particulate matter



deposited in the lung exist.  The International Radiological Protection



Commission Task Group on Lung Dynamics (1966) has advanced detailed deposition



and clearance models for inhaled dusts of whatever chemical origin as a



function of particle size, chemical properties, and compartmentalization



within the pulmonary tract.  Nickel oxide and nickel halides are classified as



Class W compounds, i.e., compounds having moderate retention in the lungs and



a clearance rate from the lungs of weeks in duration.



     While the model described above has limitations,  it can be of value in



approximating deposition and clearance rates for nickel compounds of known



particle size.   For example, Natusch et al. (1974) based on a detailed study



of eight coal-fired power plants, found that nickel is one of a number of



elements emitted from these sources that is found in the smallest particles of



escaped fly ash, about 1 to 2 urn mass median aerodynamic diameter (MMAD), this



being a size that penetrates deepest into the pulmonary tract.   According to



the approaches of the IRPC model, particles of 1 urn undergo a total deposition



percentage of 63 percent, with 30 percent in the nasopharyngeal tract, 8
                                   C-18

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percent in the tracheobronchial part, and 25 percent in the pulmonary compartment.
The clearance rate of deposited participate matter in the IRPC model is based
on chemical homogeneity of the particulates, however, and one can only approximate
such clearance if heterogeneous particles are considered.  According to Natusch
et al. (1974), nickel-enriched particles in fly ash have much of the nickel
on the particle surface.  If one approximates the clearance rate by assuming
that particles enriched in nickel in the outer portions of the particle are
handled by the model lung in a fashion similar to a homogenous particle of,
say, nickel, then one obtains a total approximate absorption (clearance) of
about 6 percent,  with major clearance calculated as taking place from the pulmonary
compartment, 5 percent.
     Wehner and Craig (1972), in their studies of the effect of nickel  oxide
aerosols on the golden hamster, observed that inhalation by these animals of
nickel oxide particles in a concentration of 2 to 160 jjg/1 (2 to 160 mg/m ) and
particle size of 1.0 to 2.5 um MMAD led to a deposition of 20 percent of the
total amount inhaled.  After 6 days postexposure, 70 percent of the nickel
oxide remained in the lungs, and even after 45 days approximately half  the
original deposition was still present.   Since no material increase in nickel
levels of other tissues had occurred, it appeared that absorption in this
interval was negligible.  In a later, related study (Wehner et al., 1975),
co-inhalation of cigarette smoke showed no effect on either deposition  or
clearance.
     Leslie and co-workers (1976) have described their results with exposure
of rats to nickel  and other elements contained in welding fumes.   In this
case, the particle size vs.  nickel  content was known precisely, highest nickel
                                  C-19

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 levels  being  determined  in particles 0.5 to 1.0 urn in diameter at an air level of

 8.4  (jm  Ni/m  .  While  the  authors did not determine the total nickel deposition


 in the  lungs  of these animals, they observed that essentially no clearance of


 the  element  from  the  lung had occurred by 24 hours, nor were there elevations


 in blood  nickel,  suggesting negligible absorption.  In contrast, Graham et

 al.,  (1978),  using  nickel chloride aerosol and mice (<3 pm diameter, 110 pg


 Ni/m  )  found  about  75 percent clearance by day 4 postexposure.  The rapid


 clearance of  the  nickel  halide was probably due to its solubility relative to


 the oxide.

      In addition  to nickel exposure in man due to inhalation of ambient and


workplace air, cigarette  smoking constitutes a possible significant source


 among heavy smokers.   Studies by Sunderman and Sunderman (1961a), Szadkowski


 and co-workers (1969), and Stahly (1973) indicate that 10 to 20 percent of


 cigarette nickel  is carried in mainstream smoke, with better than 80 percent


 of this amount being  in gaseous, rather than particulate, form.   Since it is


 quite possible that nickel carbonyl constitutes the gaseous fraction (Sunderman


 and Sunderman, 1961a), one must assume that the relative absorption of nickel


 from cigarette smoke  is proportionately greater than from airborne nickel
                                                                  *

particulates  and with heavy smokers may be the main source of inhalatory


 nickel absorbed.  Individuals smoking two packs of cigarettes daily can inhale


up to 5 mg nickel annually (Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975).   By contrast, an individual in


an urban U.S. area having an air level of Ni of 0.025 ug/m  (Natl. Acad.  Sci.,


1975 for regional average values of airborne nickel)  and breathing 20 m  daily


would inhale  somewhat less than 0.2 mg.  The relative significance for absorption


would be even greater (vide supra).
                                   C-20

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Distribution



     The kinetic processes governing the transport and distribution of nickel



in various organisms are dependent upon the modes of absorption, the rate and



level of nickel exposure, the chemical form of nickel and the physiological



status of the organism.



     Blood is the main vehicle for transport of absorbed nickel.  While it is



difficult to determine from the literature the exact partitioning of nickel



between erythrocytes and plasma or serum for unexposed individuals, serum



levels are rather good reflections of blood burden and exposure status (Natl.



Acad. Sci., 1975).   In unexposed individuals,  serum nickel  values are approximately



0.2-0.3 ug/dl.



     Distribution of serum-borne nickel among  the various biomolecular components



has been discussed in some detail  in a recent  review (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975),  and



it will mainly be noted here that serum albumin is the main carrier protein in



sera of man, the rabbit, the rat,  and bovines.   Furthermore, there exists



in sera of man and rabbits a nickel-rich metalloprotein identified as an



o^-macroglobulin (nickeloplasmin)  in rabbits and in man as  a 9.5 S c^-glyco-



protein.   Sunderman (1977) has suggested that  nickeloplasmin may be a complex



of the a,-glycoprotein with serum or,-macroglobulin.



     While the relative amounts of protein-bound nickel  in  sera of various



species have a considerable range  (Hendel  and  Sunderman,  1972) which reflect



relative binding strengths of albumins, the total nickel  levels are markedly



similar,  as may be seen in Table 6.



     A number of studies of the distribution of nickel in experimental animals



exposed to nickel carbonyl have been described (Natl.  Acad.  Sci.,  1975).
                                  C-21;

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      TABLE 6.   SERUM NICKEL  IN HEALTHY ADULTS OF SEVERAL SPECIES3
                                        Nickel concentration,
     Species (N)
.From Sunderman et al.  (1972a)
 Mean (and range)
Domestic horse (4)
Man (47)
Jersey cattle (4)
Beagle dog (4)
Fischer rat (11)
British goat (3)
New Hampshire chicken (4)
Domestic cat (3)
Guinea pig (3)
Syrian hamster (3)
Yorkshire pig (7)
New Zealand rabbit (24)
Main lobster (4)
2.0 (1.3-2.5)
2.6 (1.1-4.6)
2.6 (1.7-4.4)
2.7 (1.8-4.2)
2.7 (0.9-4.1)
3.5 (2.7-4.4)
3.6 (3.3-3.8)
3.7 (1.5-6.4)
4.1 (2.4-7.1)
5.0 (4.2-5.6)
5.3 (3.5-8.3)
9.3 (6.5-14.0)
12.4 (8.3-20.1)
                               t-22

-------
     Armit (1908) exposed dogs, cats, and rabbits to nickel carbonyl vapor and



was able to measure elevated nickel levels in lung, brain, kidney, and adrenal



glands.  Later investigators have observed elevated, rapidly cleared levels of



nickel in lungs, brain, kidney, and liver of various'animal species (Barnes



and Denz, 1951; Sunderman et al., 1957; Ghiringhelli and Agamennone, 1957;



Sunderman and Selin, 1968; Mikheyev, 1971).



     Sunderman and Selin (1968) have shown that one day after exposure to



inhaled (  Ni) - nickel carbonyl, viscera contained about half of the total



absorbed label with one-third in musc'ie and fat.  Bone and connective tissue



accounted for about one-sixth of the total.   Spleen and pancreas also appear



to take up an appreciable amount of nickel.   Presumably, nickel carbonyl



crosses the alveolar membrane intact from either direction, inhalation or



injection, suggesting that its stability is greater than has usually been



assumed (Kasprzak and Sunderman, 1969; Sunderman et al., 1968; Sunderman and



Selin, 1968).   Retained nickel carbonyl undergoes decomposition to carbon



monoxide and nickel of zero valency in tha erythrocyte and tissues, followed



by intracellular oxidation of the element to the divalent form with subsequent



release into serum.



     In human subjects acutely exposed to nickel carbonyl vapor, highest



nickel levels were found in the lung, followed by kidney, liver, and brain



(Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975).



     A number of reports in the literature describe the tissue distribution of



divalent nickel following parenteral administration of nickel  salts.   These



studies have been of two types:   tissue nickel content assessment or studies



measuring the kinetics of nickel deposition and clearance within a modeling



framework.   These data are summarized in Table 7.
                                   C-23

-------
                          TABLE 7.   TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF NICKEL (II)  AFTER PARENTERAL  ADMINISTRATION0
Species
Dosage1
Relative distribution of 63Ni
Reference
Mouse
Rat
Guinea pig   6
Rabbit
Rabbit
6.2 rag/kg
  (one intraperitoneal
  injection)
617
  (one intravenous
  injection)
1 mg/kg
  (subcutaneously
  for 5 days)

240 ug/kg
  (one intravenous
  injection)
4.5 ug/kg
  (intravenously for
  34-38 days)
Kidney > lung > plasma > liver > erythrocyte
  spleen > bladder > heart > brain > carcass
  (muscle, bone, and fat)

Kidney > lung > adrenal > ovary > heart > gastro-
  intestinal tract > skin > eye > pancreas >
  spleen = liver > muscle > teeth > bone >
  brain = fat

Kidney > pituitary > lung > liver > spleen > heart >
  adrenal > testis > pancreas > medulla >
  oblongata = cerebrum = cerebellum

Kidney > pituitary > serum > whole blood > skin >
  lung > heart > testis > pancreas > adrenal >
  duodenum > bone > spleen > liver > muscle >
  spinal cord > cerebellum > medulla oblongata =
  hypothalamus

Kidney > pituitary > spleen > lung > skin > testis >
  serum = pancreas = adrenal > sclerae duodemun =
  liver > whole blood > heart > bone > iris > muscle >
  cornea = cerebellum = hypothalamus > medulla
  oblongata > spinal cord > retina > lens > vitreous
  humor
Wase et al.
  (1954)
Smith and
  Hackley
  (1968)
Clary (1975,
Parker and
Sunderman
1974)
 'From Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975.

-------
     It can be generally stated that nickel administered this way leads to



highest accumulation in kidney, endocrine glands, lung, and liver.  Rela-


tively little nickel is lodged in neural tissue, consistent with the observed



low :neurotoxic potential of divalent nickel salts.  Similarly, there is rela-



tively slight uptake into bone, consistent with other evidence that nickel is



rather rapidly and extensively cleared from organisms, with little retention



in soft or mineral tissue.



     Onkelinx et al. (1973) studied the kinetics of injected   Ni metabolism



in rats and rabbits.  In both species, a two-compartment model of clearance



could be discerned, consisting of fast and slow components.  In the rabbit,



better than 75 percent of the dose was excreted within 24 hours, while



comparable clearance in the rat required 3 days.  In a later study, Onkelinx



(1977) reported whole body kinetics of   Ni in rats.  The time course of



plasma nickel levels entailed first-order kinetics analyzable in terms of a



two-compartment model.   The major portion of nickel  clearance is accounted for



by renal  excretion.

                                                                       63
     Chausmer (1976) has measured exchangeable nickel  in the rat using   Ni



given intravenously.   Tissue exchangeable pools were directly estimated and



compartmental analysis performed by computer evaluation of the relative



isotope retention versus time.   Kidney had the largest labile pool within 16



hours with two intracellular compartments.   Liver, lung, and spleen pools



could also be characterized by two compartments, while bone fit a one-compart-



ment model.   Corresponding half-times for the fast and slow components were



several hours and several  days, respectively.
                                  C-25

-------
       Oral  exposure  of experimental  animals  to  nickel with  regard to absorption
  and  tissue distribution appears  to  be  dependent  upon the relative amounts of
  the  agent  employed.   Schroeder et al.  (1974) could  find no uptake of nickel in
  rats chronically exposed to  nickel  in  drinking water (5 ppm) over the  lifetime
1  of the  animals.   Phatak and  Patwardhan (1950)  reported the effects of  differ-
  ent  nickel  compounds  given orally to rats in terms  of tissue accumulation.
  Among the  three  chemical forms of nickel used, i.e., carbonater nickel soaps,
  and  metallic  nickel catalyst, tissue levels were greatest  in the groups fed
  the.carbonate..   O'Dell  and co-workers  (1971) fed calves supplemental nickel in
  the  diet at levels  of 62.5,  250, and 1000 ppm.   While levels of nickel were
  somewhat elevated in  pancreas, testis,  and  bone  at  250 ppm, pronounced
  increases  in  these  tissues were  seen at 1000 ppm.   Whanger (1973) exposed
  weanling rats to nickel  (acetate) in the diet  at levels up to 1000 ppm.  As
  nickel  exposure  was increased, nickel  content  of kidney, liver, heart, and
  testes  was  also  elevated,  with greatest accumulation in the kidneys.   Spears,
  et al.  (1978) observed  that  lambs given tracer levels of   Ni orally with or
  without supplemental  nickel  in diet had £he highest levels of the label in
  kidney, the relative  levels  in kidney,  lung and  liver being less for the
  low-nickel  group.
       Comparing the  above studies suggests that a homeostatic mechanism exists
  to regulate low  levels  of nickel intake, e.g., 5 ppm, but such regulation is
  overwhelmed in the  face  of large levels of  nickel challenge.
       The blood values for nickel, as shown  in  Table 8, are limited to those
  utilizing  atomic absorption  spectrometry.  The data are taken from the report
                                    C-26

-------
by the National Academy of Sciences (1975) and expanded by the addition of
three relevant later studies.
     The values agree well with the exception of the earliest study, that done
by Schaller et al. (1968).  The mean value reported for the Hdgetveit and
Barton study (1976) is of interest, since the authors report in another
publication (Hrigetveit and Barton, 1977): "These figures today (1977) appear
high.  There has been a distinct lowering of plasma nickel levels .  .  .  partly
due to improved laboratory reliability .  .  .  more recent tests of 21 unexposed
adults  .  .  .  revealed an average plasma nickel level of 0.21 ug/dl  in contrast
to the previous control group of 0.42 ug/dl."
     Age and sex do not appear to be associated with nickel blood levels, as
authors frequently report mean values for the total group only because they
have found no significant differences by age or sex.  There are no data for
this population segment or about lifespan gradient.
     Other variables such as race, residence, and geographic location similarly
cannot be evaluated, and further, there are no data for "unacculturated"
populations who are not exposed to industrial pollution.  The only study
addressing the question of differences in mean blood nickel levels for normal
populations living in environments with differing degrees of pollution due to
the absence or presence of nickel refineries is that of McNeely (1972),  who
examined normal adults who were not occupationally exposed to nickel in Sudbury,
Ontario, the location of North America's  largest nickel  refinery,  and compared
them to adults from Hartford,  Conn.   The  Sudbury mean serum nickel level for
25 adults  was  0.46 ± 0.14 with a range of 0.20 to 0.73 ug/dl, while  respective
values for Hartford were 0.25  ± 0.09 (range 0.08 to 0.52 ug/dl).
                                  C-27

-------
                                       TABLE 8.   "NORMAL"  BLOOD NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS
No. of
subjects




o
i
oo


Author
Schaller et al. (1968)
Nomoto and Sunderman (1970)
McNeely et al. (1972)
Pekarek and Hauer (1972)

Nomoto (1971)
Hrfgetveit (1976)
Spruit (1977)
Method
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption

Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Area and sex
Germany
Connecticut
Connecticut
Washington, D.C.

Japan
Norway
Holland
26
40
26
20

23
3
10
Serum (S)
or plasma
(P)
P
S
S
S

S
P
P
Nickel concentration of jjg/dl
Mean (± SO)
2.1
0.26
0.26
1.5 (± 0.5)

0.21 (± 0.11)
0.42
0.16
Range
0.6-3.7
0.11-0.46
0.08-0.52
-

™
0.2-0.6
-
86 samples, number of subjects not given.

-------
      It should also be noted that smoking status of the individuals tested has



 not been considered systematically in these reports.  The National Academy of



 Sciences report (1975) cites several studies which showed "that 10 to 20



 percent of the nickel in cigarettes is released in the mainstream smoke."  The



 authors conclude that an individual smoking two packs per day may inhale



 between 1 and 5 mg of nickel a year.  There is some evidence that about



 four-fifths of the nickel in mainstream smoke is in the gaseous phase



 (Szadkowski et al., 1969).   Further, there is inferential evidence that this



 gaseous nickel is in the form of nickel carbonyl (Kasprzak, 1969; Sunderman,



 1968; Stahly, 1973), which has a very high retention in the respiratory tract.



 It would seem quite possible that regular smoking of one or more packs of



 cigarettes a day would contribute the major fraction of daily inhaled nickel



 in the general population.



     Data from three studies reporting values of nickel in blood for occupa-



 tional ly exposed persons and nonexposed controls show significant differences.



 Clausen et al. (1977) report on a study in which atomic absorption spectrometry



 was used to determine blood nickel levels in a group of Danish garage mechanics



 as well as a control group of laboratory workers and blood donors.  The mean



 whole blood level  of the group of workers was for nickel 5.3 ± 4.8 ug/dl,



 while the 54 controls showed a mean of 1.7 ± 1.5, range 0.4 to 5.4 ug/dl.



 The difference was significant at p <0.01.



     Hdgetveit and Barton (1976) reported on the results of monitoring blood



 plasma Ni  levels in workers in the Falconbridge nickel  refinery.   They found



 Ni plasma values of 0.74 ug/dl  for 701 samples from 305 workers while controls



 showed an average value of 0.42 ug/dl  in 86 samples.   Atomic absorption spectro-



metry was used in the analyses.   The plasma levels for workers at different



work stations showed that 179 electrolysis department workers had a mean blood
                                  C-29

-------
nickel concentration of 0.74 ug/dl while 126 roasting-smelting workers averaged
0.60 ug/dl.  Workers engaged in electrolysis operations were found to be
exposed to soluble nickel  salts in aerosol form while the workers in roasting
-Jsmelting operations were  exposed to largely insoluble compounds -in dust
(Hrfgetveit and Barton, 1977).  Figure 2 shows the nickel plasma averages for
the two groups of workers  as a function of date of initial employment in the
industry.  Two levels of nickel exposure are evident, as is the finding that
levels reflect intensity of exposure and not duration, i.e., blood plasma
levels appear to reflect current exposure.
     Spruit and Bongaarts  (1977a) tested for blood plasma nickel levels in
eight occupationally exposed volunteers and found average levels of 1.02 and
1.11 pg/dl at different periods during the work year, but 0.53 ug/dl after the
annual two-week holiday.   The controls, patients from the dermatology service
without occupational exposure, showed plasma levels of 0.16 and 0.20 ug/dl for
10 males and 14 females, respectively.   These data support the Hdgetveit and
Barton (1976) finding that plasma concentrations reflect current exposure and,
further, provide evidence  that there is very quick response to exposure.
     The specific effects  on blood levels of nickel of smoking, faulty hygiene,
and failure to observe safety regulations among exposed workers have either
not been evaluated or, if  evaluated, have not been reported.  However, there
is one case study of a recalcitrant worker (Hdgetveit and Barton, 1977) who
showed a plasma nickel level of 10.0 ug/dl.   Ten days after safety measures
were enforced the worker's plasma nickel level had dropped to 3.75 ug/dl  and
he was given sick leave for 3 weeks.  During this leave, the worker's plasma
nickel level dropped to 1.0 ug/dl.  After he returned to work, his nickel
                                   C-30

-------
o
 I
u>
                                                                                   ELECTROLYSIS WORKERS
                                                                       .,0--
                                                           	r»~-
--0,
                                                               •o
                                                                                              	o	«o
                                                                                    ROASTING/SMELTING

                                                                                         WORKERS
                                             1943-     1948-    1953-     1958-     1963-     1968-    1971-    AFTER

                                              47       52      57       62       67      70       72   JAN 1.1973
                                  Figure 2. Average plasma nickel levels in employees according to year beginning employment.

                                  From Hogeveit and Barton (1976).

-------
level rose steadily until strict safety enforcement brought about a reduction
once more.
     The data presented for urinary nickel levels are subject to the same
strictures as those for blood nickel levels.   The analytic technique is subject
to considerable error, and the selection of subjects varies from volunteers to
clinic patients "not occupationally exposed."  The criteria for determining
nonexposure and recruitment and selection of volunteers and other "normals"
are not specified.  Several of the studies evaluating urine nickel concentrations
appear in Table 8 for plasma and serum concentrations as well.
     The available data for nickel concentrations present a further problem,
namely the comparability of values for single samples or 24-hour collections.
Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a) reported nickel  urine concentrations for different
samples collected on consecutive days and found considerable unexplained
variation as shown in Figures 3, 4, and 5.
     Hrigetveit and Barton (1976) state that they consider urine Ni concentrations
an undesirable monitoring method since only 24-hr, collection totals are
indicative of atmospheric nickel concentrations.  The authors point out that ,
24-hr,  collections require cooperation by workers and avoiding contamination
during sample collection at work.
     Some investigators present both types of sets of values, but not all  did,
in fact, collect 24-hour urines.  In addition, the calculation of nickel con-
centration relative to creatinine to control  for renal function is not employed
or reported by most investigators.
     Finally, the number of subjects in most studies is quite small, and the
effects of sex and age cannot be evaluated.   Equally, there are no data to
assess the association between race, urban-rural residential status, geographical
                                   C-32

-------
             30 H
            20 J
           "r 'OH
           £ 5
           if 0
                          -...,
                          "
                 8  :fi
0 8 !Ci 0  0  '•"• 0 '''•
 T/nii-.'.!uy  FncJay i5v'.l,ir
                                         0  o  V 0
Figure 3.  Urine Ni concentrations  in consecutive  determinations
           of  urinary nickel from a healthy, nonallergic
           volunteer.   Mean Ni  content:   2.2 ug  Ni/1  urine.
           From Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a).
                     C-&3

-------
   4 -!
              JLS
  j  i  r.
r?
n
•rv
                                  s-
                                  4.'
                                 a. 3J
                      I

                      3


                      - Jl:'i
                                            5 [•
                                            I!.
                                 ;n
                                 Mir
                                                  .---•0
     6  12
            0  6  <:  i?  0  6  i?  '8
                                               •506
Figure 4.  Urine Ni concentration of two  nonallergic patients

           showing influence of toothache and  extraction.

           From Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a).
                   C-34

-------
            30
           I

           5
           R 10
           *i

             S
I

J 0
                            H

                                                     •  •
                                                     Ui'-s
 •« 0 * 'r  0 » 'li 0 1 '<• 0   0  f> •'
TlH...-'ioXlU-l/ S^"Hi-'/  '-'."••.;j.J wifl2»  I'-l-,  ^

  : u            A' ] u    /• [ • a

w«k              >«"«       ~V<
•' o *
1.'  .-
                                       •'• o
                                      .|,  '.'
                                                       •-: o
                                                       M, T.'
                                                        ; a i
               .--..'.-.c 2)
               •  -o
Figure  5.   Urine  Ni  concentration in  an occupationally  exposed,
            nonallergic volunteer.  Mean value 6.0 |jg Ni/1  urine
            and peak  values  up to 40 ug/1  urine  during working
            hours.  From Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a).
                      CJ35

-------
 location, degree  of  industrialization, and urine Ni levels, so that these
 variables cannot  be  examined.  There are no data for children and effect of
 the age gradient  cannot be determined for urine concentrations.
     The values presented in Table 9 show six findings of remarkable agreement
 ranging from 0.20 to 0.27 ug/dl for mean values.  There is no obvious
 explanation for the  other disparate values found, although analytical problems
 may have played a part.
     Bernacki et  al. (1978) determined urine concentrations by volume and
 creatinine ratio  for workers with different environmental  exposures.   Table 10
 shows the findings for exposed, nonexposed, and control subjects as well as
 air concentrations for seven work environments.   There is  only partial
 concordance between  atmospheric concentrations and urine values.   In view of
 Hrfgetveit's findings of the role of different nickel compounds in elevation of
 plasma levels, it seems that total nickel concentrations in air are not the
 most useful indicator of variation in exposure effects, and that concentrations
 of specific compounds might be required to explain associations.
     Hdgetveit and Barton (1976) found an average urine nickel concentration
 of 8.9 ug/dl for 729 samples from 305 workers, while the value for controls
was 2.1 ug/dl. The data for average urine concentrations for different work
 sites and exposure to different nickel compounds are not given.
     Figure 6 shows  the effect of occupational exposure over a 40-day period
 for both plasma and  urine concentrations in two temporary  employees,  while
Figure 7 shows the data for a control  subject over a period of 4.5 months.
The values showed variation between individual determinations but the range
remains below occupational exposure levels.
                                   C-361

-------
                                          TABLE 9.  NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS IN HUMAN URINE
Q
i
u>
Authors
Sunderman (1965)
Nomoto and Sunderman (1970)
Lehnert et al. (1970)
McNeely et al. (1972)
Hdgetveit (1976)
Spruit (1977)
Mikac-Devfc et al. (1977)
Bernacki et al. (1978)
Ader and Stoeppler (1978)
Method
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic absorption
Atomic Absorption
Area
Pennsylvania
Connecticut
Germany
Connecticut
Norway
Netherlands
Connecticut
Connecticut
a
No. of
subjects
17
26
15 .
20
a
10
a
19
a
Nickel concentration, ug/dl (ug/day)
Mean
1.8 (19.8)
0.23 (2.4)
(9.3)
0.20 (2.5)
2.1
0.06
0.27
0.27b
0.2
Range
0.4-3.1
0.10-0.52 (1.
(5.7-12.7)
0.07-0.40 (0.
0.3-4.2
a
a
0.04-0.51b
a


0-5.6)

05-6.0)





     .Not specified.

      Ni:2.5  ±  1.3  ug/g  creatine  (range 0.7-5.7 ug/g  creatine); all samples with specific gravity < 1.012 discarded.

-------
                TABLE  10.  NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS IN URINE SPECIMENS FROM WORKERS  IN TWELVE OCCUPATIONAL GROUPS'
Group
A

B

C

D


E

F

n
w G
00
H

I


J



K

L

Occupation
Hospital workers

Nonexposed industrial
workers
Coal gasification
workers
Buffers/polishers


External grinders

Arc welders

Bench mechanics

Nickel battery workers

Metal sprayers


Electroplaters



Nickel platers

Nickel refinery
workers
No. of
subjects
and sex
19 (15M.4F)

23 (20M.3F)

9M

7 (6M.1F)


9 (7M.2F)

10 (7M.3F)

8 (4M.4F)

6 (5M.1F)

5 (4M.1F)


11M



21M

15M

Description
Physicians, technologists, and
clerks
Managers, office workers and
storekeepers
Ni -catalyzed hydrogenation
process workers
Abrasive buffing, polishing and
deburring aircraft parts made of
Ni -alloys
Abrasive wheel grinding of exteriors
of parts made of Ni alloys
DC arc welding of aircraft parts
made of Ni alloys
Assembling, fitting, and finishing
parts made of Ni alloys
Fabricating Ni-Cd or Ni-Zn electri-
cal storage batteries
Flame spraying Ni -containing pow-
ders in plasma phase onto aircraft
parts
Intermittent exposure to Ni in com-
bined electrodeposition operations
involving Ag, Cd, Cr, or Cr plating
as well as Ni
Full-time work in Ni plating
operations
Workers in a nickel refinery that
employs the electrolytic process
Atmospheric Ni
cone, ug/m
Not measured

Not measured

Not measured

26148
(0.05-129)

1.613.0
(2.1-8.8)
6.0114.3
(0.2-46)
52194
(0.011252)
Not measured

2.412.6
(0.04-6.5)

0.810.9
(0.04-2.1)


Not measured

4891560
(20-2,200)
Urine ug/1.
2.711.6
(0.4-5.1)
3.212.6
(0.3-8.5)
4.212.4
(0.4-7.9)
4.113.2
(0.5-9.5)

5.412.4
(2.1-8.8)
6.314.1C
(1.6-14)
12. 2113. 6C
(1.4-41)
11.7l7.75d
(3.4-25)
17.2i9.8d
(1.4-26)

10.5l8.1d
(1.3-30)


27. 5121. 2e
(3.6-65)
2221226s
(8.6-8.3)
Concn ug/g
creatinine
2.511.3
(0.7-5.7)
2.711.7
(0.6-6.1)
3.211.6
(0.1-5.8)
2.411.4
(0.5-4.7)

3.511.6
(1.7-6.1)
5.616.2
(1.1-17)
7.2l6.8C
(0.7-20)
10.2+6.4d
(7.2-23)
16.0121.9
(1.4-54)

5.9l5.0c
(1.0-20)


19. 0114. 7e
(2.4-47)
12411096
(6.1-287)
aFrom Bernacki  et al.  (1978).
 Mean 1 SD with range in parentheses.
cp < 0.05 vs control subjects in Group A, computed by t test.
 p <  0.01 vs  control  subjects  in Group A, computed by t test
Jp <  0.001 vs control  subjects in Group A, computed by t tes

-------
•CO-,
                  IKON
                  (FILTER PRESSES eie)
                              OAT
Figure 6.  Plasma  and urine nickel values in two temporary
           workers tested every 10 days.
           From  Hrfgetveit and Barton  (1976).
                    C-39

-------
O
 I
*>.
o
                                         I    !    LI        II    I    I    I    I    I
                               10
                                  73
276_!§26j6.162657.  1525   4.   14.24   6.  16  26   5    _AT_
10  11  11  11  12  12  12  1    1    1   2   2   2    3  3   3    4    UAIt
                         Figure 7. Plasma and urine nickel concentrations in a student volunteer. From H0geveit and Barton (1976).

-------
     Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a) found a mean nickel urine concentration of
1.8 |jg/dl for seven occupationally exposed individuals and 0.06 ug/dl for 10
unexposed males.  After a two-week vacation period, the mean value for the
exposed workers had gone down to 0.18 |jg/dl.
     The same authors report on the urine and plasma concentrations in a
healthy, nonexposed volunteer after ingestion of 5 mg of nickel as a solution
of nickel sulfate.   Figure 8 shows these concentrations during the first 8
days after ingestion.  Plasma and urine concentrations do not follow the same
pattern of response.
     As in the case of plasma and serum concentrations, studies of urine
concentrations in occupationally exposed persons have not reported smoking
status or age.  The effect of smoking, consequently, cannot be examined at
this time.   Age as  a variable in nickel urine concentrations cannot be assessed
at this time, since there are no available data.   It should be pointed out
that Htfgetveit and  Barton's data (1976) showing employment cohorts cannot serve
as a surrogate variable for age cohorts.   Kreyberg's (1978) analysis of lung
cancer in workers from that nickel refinery found that post-World War II
employees were considerably older at the start of their employment than the
prewar groups and that age cannot be assumed from employment cohort membership.
     The use of hair in assessing toxic metal exposure has several appealing
features:   hair sampling represents a rapid,  noninvasive means of assessing
internal exposure and involves a matrix which can be stored indefinitely in
sealed containers.   Also,  segmental  analyses  along the length of the hair
                                   C-4I

-------
        SOH
        40 -I
        30-1
                                                jUima
1
h
£
z
6
a I' ' ' :'K u N' • ,
':V .;•••••• T - .1
* i V
1 1 &•» ^.B* ^H^ ^H^ a^
1 ,, . «
;
t » 1

0 17 21 .36 4a 00 72 8-> 95
Titne tfttr Hi contunpdon, ft
Figure 8.  Blood plasma and Urinary Ni content of a healthy,
           non-allergic volunteer after oral consumption of 5 mg
           Ni (solution of nickel sulfate at time 0.  Mean of 11
           urine determinations during the first 48 hrs.  10.9 yg
           Ni/1 urine; mean of 8 plasma determinations during the
           first 48 hrs.  13.5 ug Ni/1 plasma.
           From Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a).
                    C-42

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samples should provide some sort of chronological index of chronic and episodic
acute exposure to an agent.
     One of the most vexing problems associated with determination of hair
nickel levels is that of external contamination, not only from airborne and
water-borne nickel but also from the use of hair preparations which may contain
appreciable amounts of nickel.   Thus, the relative effectiveness of chemical
debridement methods will markedly influence the resulting nickel levels.
Cleaning techniques which not only remove surface nickel but penetrate the
matrix of the hair may yield values that are too low.   Conversely, ineffective
cleaning will yield nickel  levels from both internal and external exposure.   A
second problem is the sampling from different places along the hair shaft by
different laboratories.
     It would appear that standardization of cleaning and sampling techniques
is urgently required before hair nickel levels from various laboratories can
be compared and conclusions made regarding the exposure - hair level  relationship.
     Table 11 shows hair nickel  values from studies employing atomic absorption
spectrometry techniques.  Samples for the Schroedar study were of unspecified
length and were collected from a barbershop.   Nechay's samples consisted of
hair obtained 5 cm from the scalp.   The Eads study obtained samples from
barbershops and beauty shops but the location and length of the hair fibers
are not specified.   Spruit reports taking hair samples at about 1 cm from the
scalp.
     In the Schroeder study, the hair was washed in tetrachloride.   Eads
reports elimination of "obviously bleached and dyed hair," 48-hour soaking and
several rinses in deionized water,  1-hour soak, repeated rinses in methanol,
                                   C-43

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TABLE 11.   NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS IN HUMAN HAIR
Authors
Schroeder
and Nason (1969
Eads
and Lambdin (1973)
Nechay
i Spruit
*»
(1973)
(1977)
Method Area
Atomic absorption New Hampshire
Atomic absorption Texas
Atomic absorption Connecticut
Atomic absorption Netherlands
No. and sex
of subjects
79M
25F
19M
21F
20M
10M
14F
Nickel concentration, ppj
Mean Range
0.97
3.69
1.9 0.9-7.2
3.4 0.7-7.5
0.22 0.13-0.51
0.6
1.0

-------
and drying in a draft oven at 110°C.  Nechay states that hair was washed in


nonionic detergent, and Spruit gives no information on washing procedures.

     All authors except Nechay and Sunderman report significant differences in


values for men and women.  In view of the differences in sample collection,


washing techniques, and details of analytic procedures, it is impossible to

reach conclusions about the nickel content of hair from adults without


occupational exposure.

     Chattopradhyay and Jervis (1974) reported hair nickel values for 76 rural


subjects, 45 urban subjects, and 121 subjects from urban regions near refineries.


The hair samples were taken by clipping "close to the head," and the samples
                                                                            i
were washed sequentially with ether, alcohol, and distilled water, and then


analyzed by nuclear activation techniques.   Precision and accuracy for nickel


determination as evaluated by the National  Bureau of Standards and Environmental


Protection Agency - NBS standard materials analyses were good:  the value for

orchard leaves was 1.27 ± 0.08 ppm compared to the NBS value of 1.3 ± 0.2 ppm

and the value for fly ash was 96.8 ± 3.2 compared to the EPA-NBS concentration


of 98 ± 3 ppm.  The median and range for the rural subjects were 2.1 (1.6 to 17)


ppm; for the urban subjects 2.4 (1.2 to 20) ppm; and 3.6 (1.1 to 32) ppm for the


subjects from urban regions near refineries.


     Creason et al. (1975) investigated hair nickel concentrations in adults


and children in communities within the New York metropolitan area.  The

communities had different levels of nickel  in the environment as measured in


dustfall, home dust,  and soil.   The hair samples were contributed by the

subjects as they obtained a "normal hair cut or trim"  Dry ashing and


emission spectroscopy were used as the analytic method.   Hair was washed in a
                                   C-45

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detergent solution.  Nickel concentrations observed showed no significant



differences for children  (0 to 15 years old) and adults > 16 years old.  The



concentrations were:  for 265 children, a geometric mean of 0.51, ± 0.20 to



1.30 geometric SD,  range  of 0.036 to 11.0 ppm; for 194 adults, the results



were 0.74 geometric mean, ± 0.27=2.07 geometric SO, range 0.045 to 11.0 ppm.



For nickel, environmental exposure gradients were significantly associated for



children but not for adults.



     The role of hair as  an excretion tissue for nickel is complicated by the



findings for nickel concentrations in scalp hair and pubic hair of women



studied for maternal-fetal levels of trace elements.   Creason et al.  (1976)



used dry ashing and emission spectroscopy as the method for nickel concentration



assessment.  The mean for 63 samples of scalp hair was 1.7 ug/g and the geometric



mean 1.0 ug/g , while 110 samples of pubic hair showed 0.7 and 0.4 ug/g ,



respectively.   The differences in these values are not explained, and the



question of the relative  role of scalp hair as an indicator of secretion in



relation to exposure and  body burden remains unanswered.



     The excretion of trace metals such as nickel via hair has been demonstrated



in the above studies.  However, the data available for nickel concentrations



in various "normal" populations are too sparse to permit one to reach conclusions,



Most investigators have found significant differences between male and female



hair nickel concentrations (Table 11).



     Spruit and Bongaarts (1977b) reported the mean hair nickel concentration



for eight occupationally  exposed men as 14.5 ppm.  The value for nonexposed



males was reported as 0.6 ppm.



     Hair nickel determinations are not usually carried out with industrial



population assessment and such studies appear to restrict themselves to
                                  C-46

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evaluation of blood and urine nickel levels, since these are more reflective
of current exposure.
     Crucial to the assessment of the effects of nickel on human populations
is the necessity of determining key tissue levels of the element and, where
possible, total body burden.  It is generally not feasible to assess these
levels in humans other than through autopsy studies, and several investigators
have carried out such surveys of nickel levels in selected organs.  These
studies can be roughly classed into case studies concerned with specific
diseases or population studies, as discussed below.   No j_n vivo studies for
nickel have been reported, though Harvey et al.  (1975) performed such a study
using neutron-activation analysis for cadmium.
     It is necessary to point out some limitations of the data obtained from
autopsy studies.   The cases coming to autopsy do not really constitute a
representative sample of a given population.   The requirements for performing
an autopsy vary from country to country, and different population segments
differ significantly in their willingness to consent to autopsies not legally
required.   It is also well known that this attitude is related to social
status, occupation, and housing, all of which are factors associated with
different degrees of exposures to pollutants as  well as with nutritional and
health status.   The technical problems of speed, collection of information
retrospectively,  and the proportion of dead without living contacts all  add to
the difficulty of obtaining reliable data needed to analyze and interpret
findings.   Finally, there is the problem of defining "normal" or "healthy"
individuals.   Usually, accidental  death victims  are defined as "normal"  or
"healthy"  subjects, and the quality of the examination of accident cases to
                                   C-47

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determine this  status may  also vary.  In the case of investigations of nickel
in tissue from  cadavers, there is the problem of the effect of pathology,
stress, or  trauma, all of  which can change nickel levels.
     There  are  very  few data in the literature concerning nickel tissue levels
and total body  burden.  The NAS report (1975) summarized the findings from the
work by Tipton  and her group and concluded that the total nickel content in a
normal man  is approximately 10 mg.  Table 12 is derived from the NAS report
presenting  Schroeder's findings.
     Bernstein  et al. (1974) reported results for 25 autopsies of subjects
aged 20 to  40 years  from New York City, with a diagnosis of sudden death and
no indication of illness.  Tissues taken from the right lung and paratracheal,
peribronchial,  and hilar lymph nodes were ashed in nitric acid and analyzed
with atomic absorption spectrometry.  Mean values were 0.23 ± 0.06 |jg Ni/g wet
weight for  lung tissue and 0.81 ± 0.41 ug net weight for lymph nodes.   Numeric
values for  concentrations  found in liver, kidney, blood, and bone (three
vertebrae)  were not  reported, and Figure 9 shows means and standard deviations.
     Sumino et  al.  (1975)  reported on heavy metals in tissues from autopsies
of 30 persons who lived in the same prefecture in Japan.  The causes of death
were trauma, suffocation,  overdoses of sleeping pills, and carbon monoxide
intoxication. Ages ranged  from 10 to  > 60 for the 15 males and 10 to > 60 for
the 15 females. Twenty different types of tissue were removed but not all
types from  each subject so that the number of samples for different tissues
vary.   Nickel concentrations for those tissue samples with detectable amounts
were reported.  The  analytic method of nickel was dry ashing, residue digestion,
and flame atomic absorption spectroscopy.  The detection level  was not stated,
                                    C-48

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                 TABLE  12.  NICKEL  CONCENTRATIONS  IN  KIDNEY AND  LIVER,  BY  GEOGRAPHIC  REGION1



o
I
*>
Id
Region
United States
Alaska
Honolulu
Non-U.S. subjects

No. of
samples
161
2
5
146
Kidney
Mean nickel
concentration,
ppm of ash
7
35
4
12.4
Liver
Frequency of
nickel
occurrence, %
27
100
40
58.2
No. of
samples
163
1
5
141
Mean nickel
concentration,
ppm of ash
6
36
4
11.0
Frequency of
nickel
occurrence , %
22
100
40
44.0
Trom Nat.   Acad.  Sci.  (1975).

-------
1.
llr
E •
i-t
* »
. n


•KMI






r»n
• T
i


r*-.
l-t-l
i




                                     3iee«
                   Noen
Figure 9.  Distribution  of  nickel  in human tissues.
           From Bernstein (1974).
                   C-50

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but the report of the nickel concentrations in the different tissues indicates
that not all samples showed detectable amounts of nickel.  Table 13 shows some
of the nickel concentrations.  The total body burden for nickel was calculated
as > 5.7 mg of nickel for a body weight of 55 kg.
     The NAS report (1975) contains Sunderman's data (1971) obtained by an
atomic absorption method from material from four autopsies (Table 14).
     Nickel concentrations in lung tissue for 15 control subjects in a study
of bituminous coal miners were reported by Sweet (1974).  Emission spectros-
copy was employed for nickel analysis.  The mean nickel concentration was 0.6
pg/g dry weight.
     Creason (1976) reported maternal and fetal tissue levels of nickel.   Dry
ashing and emission spectroscopy analysis was employed for nickel determinations.
Placenta! tissue from 160 women yielded an arithmetic mean of 3.4 and a geometric
mean of 2.2 ug/100 g with 10 percent of the samples giving values below the
detection limit of the method employed.
     The data available for nickel concentrations in normal human tissue are
very limited and analytic procedures differ.   At this time, it seems unwise to
draw conclusions as to concentrations within various organs or total body
burden in normal  populations.  An age gradient does not seem likely, but
adequate data are not available to assess that aspect either.
     Indraprasit et al.  (1974) reported nickel concentrations in tissues
obtained from 220 random autopsies.   On the basis of clinical  findings  the
patient population was divided into three groups.   The first group was
classified as "controls" (based on serum creatinine < 1.5 mg percent) and
consisted of 116 patients.   The other groups,  consisting of 104 patients, were
                                  C-51

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            TABLE 13.   NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS IN JAPANESE  HUMAN  TISSUES3
                           Nickel  concentration,  pg/g wet weight
Organ   No.  of cases   Mean + SD               Median         Range
Lung        30         0.16  ± 0.094           0.16         0.038-0.44
Liver       27         0.078 ±0.046           0.068        0.028-0.22
Kidney      28         0.098 ±0.070           0.081        0.012-0.30
                                    C-52

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                              TABLE 14.  NICKEL CONCENTRATION  IN  HUMAN  TISSUES'
Ul
Nickel concentration, ug/lOOg
Subject no. Sex Age, years Cause of death
1 M 44 Stab wounds
2 F 40 Barbiturate
poisoning
3 M 18 Hanging
4 F 22 Carbon monoxide
poisoning
Mean
Wet Weight
Lung
2.40
2.20

0.81
0.96

1.59
Liver
0.52
0.86

0.76
1.32

0.87
Heart
<
0.62
0.57

0.43
0.83

0.61
Lung
14.6
12.1

3.3
4.3

8.6
Dry Weight
Liver
2.1
3.2

2.6
4.8

3.2
Heart
2.3
2.4

1.6
3.0

2.3
     ^Derived from Sunderman et al.  (1971).

-------
equally divided into those with acute renal failure and those with chronic
renal failure at time of death.  Freeze-dried tissue samples were analyzed by
emission spectroscopy.  The limit of detection for nickel was 0.5 ppm.  Renal
cortex tissue was obtained for all 220 subjects, but liver and spleen tissue
was collected for only the last 144 subjects.   The 220 cases were obtained by
random sampling of cadavers during 1 calendar year.  Table 15 shows the results
of the analysis for the three organs for the three groups.   The authors state
that the limit of detection and the consequent low percentages of tissues with
detectable limits preclude any significant findings of relationships between
renal failure and nickel concentrations, but it seems worthy of note that
there is a consistent gradient of detectability for the three disease categories,
i.e., levels of nickel rising to detectability.
     There is little in the literature reporting autopsy tissue studies of
nickel refinery workers, except from cases of fatal nickel  carbonyl poisoning
(Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975), where highest levels of nickel are seen in lung,
with lesser amounts in kidneys, liver, and brain.   In a study of coal  workers'
penumoconiosis (CWP), nickel content of lung tissue of bituminous coal miners
with CWP showed significantly higher nickel concentrations  in lung tissue when
compared to values obtained for nonoccupationally exposed males and females
residing in the area (Sweet et al., 1974).  The nickel concentrations for coal
miners with CWP ranged from 5.0 ug/g dry weight to 0.5 ug/g for six groups of
disease severity.   The mean for the entire group was 2.5 ug/g dry weight and
the mean value for controls was 0.6 ug/g .
                                   C-54

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       TABLE 15.   NICKEL CONCENTRATIONS IN RENAL CORTEX,  LIVER, AND SPLEEN FOR
              NORMALS AND PATIENTS WITH ACUTE OR CHRONIC  RENAL FAILURE
Kidney



Normal
ARFC
CRFd

Percent
detectability
'27
39
34
Mean
Ni , ppm
dry wt
1.82
1.86
1.82
Liver

Percent
detectability
16
39
43
Spleen
Mean
Ni , ppm
dry wt
1.85
2.14
1.95

Percent
detectability
16
38
40
Mean
Ni , ppm
dry wt
1.72
2.11
1.97
aFrom Indraprasit et al.  (1974).

 Normal:   no acute or chronic renal  failure present at time of death.

CARF:   acute renal failure present at time of death.

 CRF:   chronic renal failure present at time of death.
                                         C-55

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Metabolism
     A number of disease states and other physiological stresses are reported
to alter the movement and tissue distribution of nickel in man as well as
experimental animals.  Furthermore, ijn vivo movement of nickel may be
deliberately altered to enhance nickel removal from the organism to minimize
toxicity in cases of excessive exposure, specifically via the use of nickel
chelating agents in the clinical management of nickel poisoning.
     In man, increased levels of serum nickel are seen in cases of acute
myocardial infarction (D'Alonzo and Pell, 1963; Sunderman et al., 1972a;
McNeely et al., 1971), such alterations presently being considered as second-
ary to leukocytosis and leukocytolysis (Sunderman, 1977).
     Serum nickel levels are also elevated in acute stroke and extensive burn
injury (McNeely et al., 1971), while reduction is seen in hepatic cirrhosis or
uremia, possibly secondary to hypoalbuminemia.
     Palo and Savolainen (1973) report that hepatic nickel was increased
10-fold over normal values in a deceased patient with aspartylglycosaminuria,
a metabolic disorder characterized by reduced activity of aspartyl-p-glucos-
aminidase.
     Other stresses appear to have an effect on nickel metabolism.   Significant
reduction in serum nickel has been seen in mill workers exposed to extremes of
heat (Szadkowski et al., 1970), probably due to excessive nickel loss through
sweating, as was noted earlier.  While tissue nickel levels are reported to be
elevated in rats during pregnancy (Spoerl and Kirchgessner, 1977), no comparable
data are available for man.
     The use of various classes of chelating agents to expedite the removal of
nickel  from man and animals has been reported with the goal of developing
                                  C-56

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efficient chemotherapeutic agents for use in nickel poisoning.   The data have


been reviewed (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975; Sunderman, 1977) and will only be


summarized in this section.


     On the basis of reported clinical experience, sodium diethyldithiocarbamate
                          f
(dithiocarb) is presently the drug of choice in the management of nickel


carbonyl poisoning, being preferable overall to EDTA salts, 2,  3-dimercapto-


propanol (BAL), and penicillamine.  In all cases, the agents work to accelerate


the urinary excretion of absorbed amounts of nickel before extensive tissue


injury can result.
             i

     There is a growing body of literature that establishes an essential role


for nickel, at least in experimental animals, and the earlier studies have


been reviewed (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975; Neilsen and Sandstead, 1974; Nielsen,


1976; Spears and Hatfield,  1977; Sunderman, 1977).


     Mertz (1970) has spelled out criteria for essentiality of trace elements


as micronutrients,  and this discussion will focus primarily on one of the most


critical of these:   demonstration of specific deficiency-related syndromes


which are prevented or cured by the element alone.


     Earlier workers in trace-element nutritional research coulc not demonstrate


any consistent effects of nickel deficiency  (Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975; Spears


and Hatfield, 1977) owing in part to the technical difficulties of controlling


nickel intake because of its ubiquity.  Later workers have demonstrated adverse


effects of nickel deprivation in various animal models.


     Nielsen and Higgs (1971) have shown a nickel-deficiency syndrome in


chicks fed nickel at levels of 40 to 80 ppb (control diet: 3 to 5 ppm) charac-


terized by swollen hock joints, scaly dermatitis of the legs, and fat-depleted


livers.  Sunderman et al. (1972b) observed ultrastructural lesions such as
                                  C-57

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perimitochondrial dilation of rough endoplasmic reticulum in hepatocytes of



chicks fed a diet having 44 ppb nickel.   Nielsen and Ollerich (1974) also



noted hepatic abnormalities similar to those reported by Sunderman et al.



<1972b).  Nickel is also essential in swine nutrition, pigs fed a diet having



100 ppb decreased growth rate, impaired reproduction, and a rough hair coat



(Anke et al., 1973).



     Growth responses to nickel supplementation have also been reported for



rats (Nielsen et al., 1975; Schnegg and Kirchgessner, 1975a; Schroeder et al.,



1974).  Rats maintained on nickel-deficient diets through three successive



generations showed a 16 percent weight loss in the first and 26 percent weight



loss in the second generation compared to nickel-supplemented controls (Schnegg



and Kirchgessner, 1975).



     Effects on reproduction have been documented in rats (Nielsen et al.,



1975) and swine (Anke et al., 1974; Schnegg and Kirchgessner, 1975a), mainly



in terms of increased mortality during the suckling period in rats and smaller



litter size.



     Nickel appears to be essential also for ruminant nutrition (Spears and



Hatfield, 1977).  Spears and Hatfield (1977) demonstrated disturbances in



metabolic parameters in lambs maintained on a low-nickel diet (65 ppb), indosing



intraperitoneally yields lung carcinomas in mice (Stoner et al., 1976) when



nickel acetate is used, while nickelocene, an organonickel "sandwich" structure,



induces sarcomas in rats and hamsters when given intramuscularly (Haro et al.,



1968; Furst and Schlauder, 1971).



     Schnegg and Kirchgessner (1975b; 1976) demonstrated that nickel deficiency



leads to reduced iron contents in organs and iron deficiency anemia, resulting



from markedly impaired iron absorption.
                                  C-58

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     Nickel appears to pertain also to other criteria for essentiality (Mertz,



1970):   apparent homeostatic control and partial transport by specific



nickel-carrier proteins (see. Metabolism section).  Fishbein et al. (1976),



furthermore, have reported that jackbean urease is a natural nickel metalloenzyme,



and it is also possible that rumen bacterial urease may also have a specific



nickel  requirement (Spears et al., 1977).



Excretion



     The excretory routes for nickel in man and animals depend in part on the



chemical forms of nickel and the mode of nickel intake.



     Unabsorbed dietary nickel is simply lost in the feces.  Given the rela-



tively low extent of gastrointestinal absorption (vide supra), fecal levels of



nickel  roughly approximate daily dietary intake, 300-500 ug/day in man.



     Urinary excretion in man and animals is usually the major clearance route



for absorbed nickel.   Normal levels in urine vary considerably in the litera-



ture, and earlier value variance probably reflects methodological limitations.



More recent studies suggest values of 2-4 ug/1. (McNeely et al., 1972; Anderson



et al.,  1978).



     While biliary excretion is known to occur in the rat (Smith and Hackley,



1968),  the calf (O'Dell et al., 1971), and the rabbit (Onkelinx et al., 1973),



its role in nickel metabolism in man is unknown.



     Sweat can constitute a major route of nickel excretion.  Hohnadel and



co-workers (1973) determined nickel levels in the sweat of healthy subjects



sauna bathing for brief periods at 93°C to be 52 ± 36 ug/1 for men and 131 ±



65 ug/1  for women.
                                  C-59

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     The role of nickel deposition in hair as an excretory mechanism in man
has prompted a number of studies.  The use of hair nickel levels in assessing
overall nickel body burdens as well as exposure chronology remains to be
widely accepted.   Its utility in epidemiological studies is discussed elsewhere.
Schroeder and Nason (1969) have reported sex-related differences in nickel
levels of human hair samples, female subjects having nickel levels (3.96 jjg/g,
S.E.M. = ± 1.06) about fourfold those of men (0.97 ug/g, S.E.M. = ± 0.15).
Such a difference, however, was not encountered by Nechay and Sunderman (1973)
nor were their average sample values as high.  The differences in these two
studies serve to point out some of the difficulties in establishing quanti-
tative relationships for the role of hair levels in nickel metabolism.
     In experimental animals, urinary excretion is the main clearance route
for nickel compounds introduced parenterally.
     Animals exposed to nickel carbonyl by inhalation exhale a part of the
respiratory burden of this agent within 2 to 4 hours while the balance is slowly
degraded j_n vivo to divalent nickel and carbon monoxide, with nickel eventu-
ally undergoing urinary excretion (Sunderman and Selin, 1968; Mikheyev, 1971).
                                   C-60

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                                    EFFECTS'
Acute, Subacute, and Chronic Toxicity
     The purpose of this section of the document is to discuss those biological
and adverse health effects which have been documented for nickel in man and
animals.  It is not the purpose of this treatment to assemble a thorough
review of the literature on nickel, but rather to focus on those reported
effects which have more direct relevance for ultimate evaluation of health
risks in man as posed by nickel in its various forms and under varying
exposure conditions.
     Comparatively speaking, the major concern with nickel on human health
effects has centered on nickel carcinogenesis and nickel's allergenic proper-
ties; thus, for emphasis, these two areas are discussed separately from the
systemic toxicity of nickel.
     Unlike the case with toxic elements such as cadmium, lead, and mercury,
there appears to be an increasingly strong case for nickel being an essential
element, at least in animals, as well as a toxicant.  Thus, the ultimate use
of exposure regulation and health benefit/health cost balance is made more
complicated, in that desirable nickel intake must lie somewhere between amounts
adequate to serve essentiality and not enough to precipitate adverse effects.
The data pertinent to nickel's role as a probable essential element are
discussed in the final segment of this chapter.
     Since the systemic toxicity of an agent is a macroscopic reflection of
the deleterious interactions of the substance at the molecular, organellar,
and cellular level, it is helpful to discuss those studies that characterize
effects at these levels of functional and structural organization.   This
approach of course is an arbitrary, if widely used, device to elaborate the
                                  C-61

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range and types of toxicant effects.  In reality, the overall response of an



organism to a toxic agent is a complex integration of discretely determined



phenomena.  In some cases, it is more appropriate to discuss, subcellular and



cellular effects with the associated systemic effects and hence, the cellular



level is not covered here.



     The toxicity of nickel to man and animals is a function of the chemical



form of the element and the route of exposure.



     With regard to oral intake, nickel metal is comparatively nontoxic, dogs



and cats being able to tolerate up to 12 mg Ni/kg daily for up to 200 days



without ill effects (Stokinger, 1963).   Nickel carbonate, nickel soaps, or



nickel catalysts given to young rats-at levels up to 1000 ppm in diet for



8 weeks had no effect on growth rate (Phatak and Patwardhan, 1952);



similarly, these forms of nickel at 1000 ppm when fed to monkeys for up to 6



months did not affect growth, behavior, or hematological indices (Phatak and



Patwardan, 1952).



     The gross toxicity of a number of inorganic and organometallic complexes



of nickel in terms of dose versus lethal-ity percentages have been tabulated



(Natl. Acad. Sci. , 1975).



     Exposure to nickel by inhalation or parenteral administration as well as



cutaneous contact is of greater significance to the picture of nickel toxicology



and the discussion of nickel effects on various systems in man and animals



mainly relates to these routes of exposure.



     In terms of human health effects,  probably the most acutely toxic nickel



compound is nickel carbonyl, NI(CO)4, a volatile, colorless liquid formed when



finely divided nickel comes into contact with carbon monoxide, as in the Mond
                                  C-62

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process for purification of nickel  (Mond et a!., 1890).   The threshold limit
value (TLV) for a work day is 1 part per billion (ppb) (Am.  Conf.  Gov. Ind.
Hyg., 1971).
     A sizable body of literature has developed over the years dealing with
the acute exposure of nickel  processing workers to nickel carbonyl by inha-
lation (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975; Natl. Inst. Occup.  Safety Health,  1977;
Sunderman, 1977).   Since much of this information is relevant mainly to
occupational  medicine rather than general environmental  health, it is not
appropriate to accord it detailed discussion in this document.
     According to Sunderman (1970)  and Vuopala et al.  (1970), who  have studied
the clinical  course of acute nickel carbonyl poisoning in workmen, clinical
manifestations include both immediate and delayed symptomology.  In the former,
frontal headache,  vertigo, nausea,  vomiting, insomnia, and irritability are
commonly seen, followed by an asymptomatic interval before the onset of insidious,
more persistent symptoms.  These include constrictive chest pains, dry coughing,
hyperpnea, cyanosis, occasional gastrointestinal symptoms, sweating, visual
disturbances,  and severe weakness.   Aside from the weakness and hyperpnea,  the
symptomology strongly resembles that of viral pneumonia.
     The lung is the target organ in nickel carbonyl poisoning in  man and
animals.   Pathological pulmonary lesions observed in acute human exposure
include pulmonary hemorrhage and edema accompanied by derangement  of alveolar
cells, degeneration of bronchial epithelium, and formation of fibrinous
intra-alveolar exudate.  Roentgenological followup on patients surviving the
acute episode of exposure frequently indicates pulmonary fibrosis.
                                  C-63

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     The pronounced pulmonary tract lesion formation seen in animals acutely



exposed to nickel carbonyl vapor strongly overlaps that reported for cases of



acute industrial poisoning, and these have been tabulated in Table 16.



     As in man, the lung is the target organ for effects of nickel carbonyl  in



animals regardless of the route of administration.  The response of pulmonary



tissue is very rapid, interstitial edema developing within 1 hour of exposure.



There is subsequent proliferation and hyperplasia of bronchial  epithelium and



alveolar lining cells.  By several days postexposure, severe intra-alveolar



edema with focal hemorrhage and pneumocyte derangement has occurred.



Death usually occurs by the fifth day.  Animals surviving the acute responses



show regression of cytological changes with fibroblastic proliferation within



alveolar interstitium.



     Adverse effects in animals by inhalation of other forms of nickel  have



been reported.  Bingham et al. (1972) exposed rats to aerosols  of both soluble



(as the chloride) and insoluble (as the oxide) nickel at levels in the region



of those acceptable for human industrial exposure.  Hyperplasia of bronchiolar



and bronchial epithelium with peribronchial lymphocytic infiltrates was seen.



Port et al.  (1975) noted that intratracheal injection of a suspension of



nickel oxide (5 mg, <5 urn) into Syrian hamsters first treated with influenza



A/PR/8 virus 48 hours previously significantly increased mortality versus



controls.   Surviving animals at this dosing and lesser doses showed mild to



severe acute interstitial infiltrate of polymorphonuclear cells and macrophages



several weeks later.  Additional pathological changes included bronchial



epithelial hyperplasia, focal proliferative pleuritis and adenomatosis.
                                  C-64

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                                 TABLE 16.   ACUTE PULMONARY EFFECTS OF NICKEL CARBONYL EXPOSURE IN ANIMALS
     Animal
                    Dosing
                                   Effects
                                                    Reference
     Rabbit
     Rat
n
i
Rat
     Rat, dog
     Rat
     Rat
                    Inhalation
                      1.4 mg/1. ,
                      50 min

                    Inhalation
                      0.9 mg/1.,
                      30 min
Inhalation
  0.24 mg/1.,
  30 min
                    Inhalation
                      1 mg/1.,
                      30 min
                    I.V.
                      65 mg/kg,
                      single dose
                    I.V.
                      65 mg/kg,
                      single dose
Intraalveolar hemorrhages, edema
  and exudate; alveolar cell degen-
  eration by days 1-5

At 2-12 hr, capillary congestion
  and interstitial edema; at 1-3 hr
  days, intraalveolar edema; 4-10
  days, pulmonary consolidation and
  interstitial fibrosis

At 1 hr, pulmonary congestion and
  edema; at 12 hr-6 days, interstitial
  pneumonitis with focal atelectosis
  and peribronchial congestion

At 1-2 days, intraalveolar edema
  and swelling of alveolar lining
  cells; at 3-5 days, inflamation,
  atelectases and interstitial fibro-
  lytic proliferation

At 1-4 hr, perivascular edema; at
  2-5 days, severe pneumonitis with
  intraalveolar edema, hemorrhage
  sub-pleural consolidation, hyper-
  trophy and hyperplasia of alveolar
  lining cells

Ultrastructural alterations, includ
  ing edema of endothelial cells at
  6 hr and massive hypertrophy of
  membranes and granular pneumocytes
  at 2-6 days
                                                                            Armit,  1908
                                                                             Barnes  and  Denz,
                                                                          1951
Kincaid et al.,
  1953
                                                                             Sunderman et al.,
                                                                               1961
                                                                             Hackett and
                                                                          Sundermann,
                                                                               1967
                                                                        Hackett and
                                                                          Sundermann,
                                                                               1969

-------
     A number of studies have been directed to the effects of nickel on


endocrine-mediated physiological processes.  As noted in the previous section


dealing with nickel metabolism, exposure of animals to nickel especially


parenterally consistently shows marked uptake of the element in endocrine


tissue:  pituitary, adrenals, and pancreas.  Thus, disturbances in function


might be anticipated.


     Various laboratories have cited effects of nickel on aspects of


carbohydrate metabolism in different animal species.  Bertrand and Macheboeuf


(1926) reported that parenteral exposure of rabbits or dogs to nickel salts


antagonized the hypoglycemic action of insulin.  Later workers (Kadota and


Kurita, 1955; Clary and Vignati, 1973; Freeman and Langs!ow, 1973; Horak and


Sunderman, 1975a,b) observed a rapid, transitory hyperglycemia after parenteral


exposure of rabbits, rats, and domestic fowl to nickel (II) salts.  In several


reports, Horak and Sunderman (1975a,b) noted the effects of nickel (II) on
                                                                            *

normal, adrenalectomized, and hypophysectomized rats.  Injection of nickel


chloride (2 or 4 mg/kg) produced prompt elevations in plasma glucose and


glucagon levels with a return to normal 2 to 4 hours afterwards, suggesting


that hyperglucagonemia may be responsible for the acute hyperglycemic response


to divalent nickel (Horak and Sunderman, 1975a).   Nickel had the most pronounced


hyperglycemic effect when this element was studied versus effects of other


ions given in equimolar amounts, while concurrent administration of insulin


antagonized the hyperglycemic effect (Horak and Sunderman, 1975b).  Kadota and


Kurita (1955) observed marked damage to alpha cells and some degranulation and


vacuolization of beta cells in the pancreatic islets of Langerhans.   Ashrof


and Sybers (1974) observed lysis of pancreas exocrine cells in rats fed nickel


acetate (0.1 percent).
                                  C-66

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     Human endocrine responses to nickel have been poorly studied, although



Tseretili and Mandzhavidze (1969) found pronounced hyperglycemia in workmen



accidentally exposed to nickel carbonyl.



     Nickel apparently has an effect on the hypothalamic tract in animals,



enhancing the release of prolactin-inhibiting factor (PIF) thereby decreasing



the release of prolactin from bovine and rat pituitary glands (La Bella et



al., 1973a).  Furthermore, intravenous administration of small amounts of



nickel to urethane-anesthetized, chlorpromazine-treated rats produces signficant



depression of serum prolactin without any effect on growth hormone or thyroid-



stimulating hormone, although the iji vitro release of pituitary hormones other



than PIF have been demonstrated for bovine and rat pituitary (La Bella et al.,



1973b).



     Dormer et al. (1973) and Dormer and Ashcroft (1974) have studied the j_n



vitro effects of nickel on secretory systems, particularly the release of



amylase, insulin, and growth hormone.   Nickel (II) was seen to be a potent



inhibitor of secretion in all three glands:  parotid (amylase), islets of



Langerhans (insulin), and pituitary (growth hormone).   Inhibition of growth



hormone release at nickel levels comparable to those which La Bella et al.



(1973b) observed actually to enhance release may reflect differences in tissue



handling prior to assay.   Dormer et al.  (1973) suggested that nickel may block



exocytosis by interfering with either secretory-granule migration or membrane



fusion and microvilli formation.



     Nickel-induced nephropathy in man or animals has not been widely docu-



mented.  Acute renal injury with proteinuria and hyaline casts were observed



by Azary (1879) in cats and dogs given nickel nitrate.   Pathological lesions



of renal tubules and glomeruli have been seen in rats exposed to nickel  carbonyl
                                  C-67

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(Kincaid et al., 1953; Sunderman et al., 1961; Hackett and Sunderman, 1967).
Gitlitz et al. (1975) observed aminoaciduria and proteinuria in rats after
single intraperitoneal injection of nickel chloride, the extent of the renal
dysfunction being dose-dependent.  Proteinuria was observed at a dose of.
2 mg/kg, while higher dosing occasioned aminoaciduria.  Ultrastructurally,
the site of the effect within the kidney appears to be glomerular epithelium.
These renal effects were seen to be transitory, abating by the fifth day.
     In man, nephrotoxic effects of nickel have been clinically detected in
some cases of accidental industrial exposure to nickel carbonyl (Brandes,
1934; Carmichael, 1953).  This takes the form of renal edema with hyperemia
and parenchymatous degeneration.
     Nickel compounds appear to possess low neurotoxic potential save for
fatal acute exposures to nickel carbonyl (Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975; Natl.  Inst.
Occup.  Safety Health, 1977).
Neural  tissue lesion formation in the latter case is profound, including
diffuse punctate hemorrhages in cerebral, cerebellar,  and brain stem regions,
degeneration of neural fibers, and marked edema.
     Intrarenal injection of nickel subsulfide in rats elicits a pronounced
erythrocytosis (Jasmin and Riopelle, 1976; Morse et al., 1977; Hopfer and
Sunderman, 1978), the erythrogenic effect being apparently unrelated to the
carcinogenicity of the compound (Jasmin and Riopelle,  1976).   Morse et al.
(1977) showed that the erythrocytosis is dose-dependent, is not elicited
by intramuscular administration and is associated with marked erythroid hyper-
plasia of bone marrow.  Hopfer and Sunderman (1978) observed a marked inhi-
bition of erythroctyosis when manganese dust was co-administered.
     Effects of nickel on thyroid function have been noted by Lestrovoi  et al.
(1974).  Nickel chloride given orally to rats (0.5-5.0 mg/kg/day, 2 to 4 weeks)
                                  C-68

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or by inhalation (0.05 to 0.5 mg/m ) significantly decreased iodine uptake by



the thyroid, such an effect being more pronounced for inhaled nickel.



Allergenic Response



     Since allergenic responses to contact with nickel containing compounds



has been a major focus of research effort, discussion of this topic is presented



as a unified body of information in this section of the document.



     Nickel dermatitis and other dermatological effects of nickel have been



extensively documented in both nickel worker populations and populations at



large (Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975).  Originally considered to be a problem in



occupational medicine, the more recent clinical and epidemiological picture of



nickel sensitivity offers ample proof that it is a widespread problem in



individuals not having occupational exposure to nickel but encountering an



increasing number of nickel-containing commodities in their everyday environment.



     Occupational sources of nickel that have been associated with nickel



sensitivity include mining, extraction, and refining of the element as well as



such operations as plating, casting, grinding, polishing, and preparation of



nickel alloys (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975).  Although the frequency of nickel



dermatitis has considerably abated owing to advances in both control technology



and industrial medicine, it may still persist in electroplating shops (Natl.



Acad.  Sci., 1975).



     Nonoccupational  exposure to nickel leading to dermatitis includes nickel-



containing jewelry, coinage, tools, cooking utensils, stainless steel kitchens,



prostheses, and clothing fasteners.  Women appear to be particularly at risk



for dermatitis of the hands, which has been attributed to their continuous



contact with many of the nickel-containing commodities noted above  (Maiten



and Spruit, 1969).
                                  C-69

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     Nickel dermatitis in nickel miners, smelters, and refiners and known as
"nickel itch" usually begins as itching or burning papular erythema in the
web of the fingers and spreading to the fingers, wrists, and forearms.  Clini-
cally, the condition is usually manifested as a papular or papulovesicular
dermatitis with a tendency toward lichenification, having the characteristics
of atopic rather than eczematous dermatitis.
     Citing a large number of cases, Calnan (1956), stated that nickel dermatitis
has a unique topographical distribution pattern:  (1) primary:   areas in-
direct contact with the element; (2) secondary:  spreading of the dermatitis
in a symmetrical fashion; and (3) associated:   afflicted areas  having no
relation to contact areas.  Furthermore, the affliction may persist some time
after removal of obvious sources of exposure.
     A clear relationship between atopic dermatitis and that elicited by
nickel has been confused by conflicting reports in the literature.   Watt and
Baumann (1968) showed that atopy was present in 15 of 17 young patients with
earlobe nickel dermatitis, but other workers (Wilson 1956; Marcussen, 1957;
Caron, 1964; Calnan, 1956) have failed to demonstrate any connection between
the two disorders.  Juhlin et al. (1969) demonstrated elevated immunoglobulin
in E (IgE) levels in atopy patients while Wahlberg and Skog (1971) saw no
significant increases of IgE in patients having nickel and atopic dermatitis
histories.
     The occurrence of pustular patch test reactions to nickel  sulfate has
                                          -*
been considered significant in connecting nickel and atopic dermatitis (Becker
and O'Brien, 1959).  Uehara et al.  (1975) have reported that pustular patch
test reactions to 5 percent nickel  sulfate were regularly produced in patients
with atopic dermatitis, but only when applied to areas of papulae, erythema,
                                  C-70

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lichenification,  and minimal  trauma;  such response seldom occurred on



normal-appearing  skin surface.   Furthermore,  traumatizing the test areas in



control as well  as dermatitic subjects furnished positive responses.   These



workers suggest that pustular patch testing is primarily a primary irritant



reaction.



     Christensen  and Mb'ller (1975a) found that of 66 female patients with hand



eczema and nickel allergy,  51 had an eczema of the pompholyx type; i.e., a



recurring itching eruption  with deeply seated fresh vesicles and little erythema



localized on the  palms,  volar aspects, and sides of fingers.  Of these, 41 had



pompholyx only, while the remainder had at least one additional diagnosis:



allergic contact  eczema, irritant dermatitis, nummilar eczema, or atopic



dermatitis.   These workers  also found that the condition was not influenced by



any steps taken to minimize external  exposure.  Subsequently, these investigators



(Christensen and  Mbller  (1975b) discovered that oral administration of nickel



in 9 of 12 of the earlier subjects aggravated the condition, while intense



handling of nickel-containing objects was without effect.



     While Kaaber et al. (1978) found little  correlation between nickel excre-



tion and the status of dermatitis in their patients, Menne and Thorboe (1976)



have reported elevated urinary nickel levels  during flare-ups in the derma-



titis.   De Jongh  et al.  (1978) found limited  correlation between plasma nickel



level,  urinary excretion of nickel and the clinical activity of the condition



in a patient followed during two periods of 5 and 6 weeks each.



     Internal exposures  to  nickel associated  with nickel sensitivity and



arising from prosthesis  alloys have been reviewed (Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975; Samitz



and Katz,  1975;  Fisher,  1977),  and much of these data are summarized in this



section.
                                  C-71

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     The most common prosthesis alloys are stainless steel or cobalt-chromium
(Vitallum), which may contain nickel in amounts up to 35 percent, generally in
the range of 10 to 14 percent (Samitz and Katz, 1975).
     Instances of allergic reactions as well as urticaria! and eczematous
dermatitis have been attributed to implanted prosthesis with resolution of the
condition after removal of the devices (Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975; Samitz and
Katz, 1975).  Apparently, sufficient solubilization of nickel from the surface
of the material occurs to trigger an increase in dermal response.  In support
of this, Samitz and Katz (1975) have shown the release of nickel from stainless
steel prosthesis by the action of blood, sweat, and saline.
     Fisher (1977), in his review, has counseled caution in interpreting the
reports and has recommended specific criteria for proof of nickel dermatitis
from a foreign body, to include evidence of surface corrosion and sufficient
corrosion to give a positive nickel spot test.
     Determination of nickel dermatitis classically involves the use of the
patch test and site response to a nickel salt solution or contact with a
nickel-containing object.  The optimal nickel concentration in patch test
solution is set at 2.5 percent (nickel sulfate).   Patch test reactions may be
ambiguous, in that they can reflect a primary irritation rather than a
pre-existing sensitivity (Uehara et al., 1975).  Intradermal testing as
described by Epstein (1956) has also been employed, but the procedure appears
to offer no overall advantage to the conventional method (Natl. Acad. Sci.,
1975).
     The induction of nickel sensitivity in human subjects has been claimed
by Haxthausen (1936) and Burckhardt (1935).   In their subjects, prior sensi-
tivity was not ruled out.  Furthermore, the concentration of the sensitizing
                                  C-72

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solution, 25 percent,  may easily have induced an irritation response.   More
recently, Vandenberg and Epstein (1963) successfully sensitized 9 percent (16
of 172) of their clinical subjects.
     One area of controversy with regard to nickel  dermatitis involves the
question of hypersensitivity to groups of metals, i.e., cross sensitivity, and
various sides of the issue have been reviewed (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975).   Of
particular concern is the existence of hypersensitivity to both nickel and
cobalt, as the elements occur together in most of the commodities with which
susceptible individuals may come in contact.
     The underlying mechanisms of nickel sensitivity presumably include (1)
diffusion of nickel through the skin, (2) subsequent binding of nickel ion
with protein(s) and other skin components, and (3)  immunological response to
the nickel-macromolecule complex (Natl. Acad.  Sci., 1975).   In the section on
nickel metabolism, the fact that penetration of the outer skin layers  by
nickel does occur was noted.   Jansen et al.  (1964)  found that nickel in complex
with an amino acid (D,L-alaline) was a better sensitizer than nickel alone,
while Thulin (1976) observed that inhibition of leukocyte migration in 10
patients with nickel contact dermatitis could be elicited with nickel  bound to
bovine and human serum albumin or human epidermal protein,  but not with nickel
ion alone.  Hutchinson et al.  (1975) noted nickel binding to lymphocyte surfaces
from both sensitive and control subjects; thus, nickel binding, per se,  is not
the key part of the immunological response (lymphocyte transformation).
     Useful experimental animal models of nickel sensitivity have only slowly
been forthcoming, and only under very specialized conditions.
                                  C-73

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     Nilzen and Wilstrdm (1955) reported the sensitization of guinea pigs to



nickel via repeated topical application of nickel sulfate in detergent solu-



tion.  Samitz and Pomerantz (1958), however, have attributed this to local



irritation rather than true allergenic response.  Samitz et al. (1975) were



unable to induce sensitization in guinea pigs using any nickel compound from



complexation of nickel ion with amino acids or guinea pig skin extracts.



     Wahlberg (1976) employed intradermal injection of nickel sulfate in



highly sensitive guinea pigs.   The reactions to the challenge were statistically



greater than with control animals.  Turk and Parker (1977) reported sensiti-



zation to nickel manifested as allergic-type granuloma formation.   This required



the use of Freund's complete adjuvant followed by weekly intradermal injections



of 25 ug of the salt after 2 weeks.  Delayed hypersensitivity reactions developed



in two of five animals at 5 weeks by use of a split-adjuvant method.  Interestingly,



these workers also observed (Parker and Turk, 1978) suppression of the delayed



hypersensitivity when intratracheal intubation of nickel sulfate was also



carried out on these animals.



     There are no studies of general populations which relate nickel exposures



or levels in tissues and fluids to physiological, subclinical or clinical



changes.   The studies previously cited do not cover properly designed and



executed samples of either total populations or selected population segments



which would permit projection of findings to the total population from which



subjects were selected.   Only occupationally exposed worker populations have



been surveyed or monitored in any statistically adequate manner, and these



studies will be reported later in connection with nickel carcinogenesis.   The



literature on adverse health effects in relation to nickel exposure by the
                                  C-74

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general population is limited to the investigation of nickel dermatitis and
nickel sensitivity,  with only occasional  reports related to other diseases or
conditions.
Nickel Sensitivity and Contact Dermatitis
     There has not been a single population survey to determine the incidence
or prevalence of this allergic condition  and its clinical manifestation.   The
literature is limited to studies of patient populations, and this provides an
unreliable basis for projection to the general  population.   Clinic populations
in specialty clinics are self-selected and represent individuals who have
decided that their condition is severe enough to require medical care or who
have access to medical care and have been referred to specialty clinics.   The
perception of need for medical care for specific health problems varies sig-
nificantly by socio-demographic characteristics.  For example, a hairdresser
or manicurist with dermatitis of the hands will seek medical care, while a
factory worker or clerk with the same condition may not do so simply because
there are no clients who object.  The data presented here,  therefore, are of
limited value.
     The survey conducted by the North American Contact Dermatitis Group
(1973) covered 1,200 subjects from 10 cities in the United States.  The subjects
were selected from outpatient clinics and the private practices of the 13
participating dermatologists.   The specific method of selection was not reported,
and therefore the proportions of private  and clinic patients is not ascertainable
from the published report.   There are no  data on age distribution, but it is
probable that all subjects  were adults since children are not mentioned.   The
group used a standardized patch test consisting of 16 allergens and read
results in a standardized manner.   The nickel allergen was  2.5 percent nickel
                                  C-75

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sulfate.  Table 17 shows the results reported as derived from the group's
report.  The rates of positive reactions are higher for females than for males
and the overall reaction rate was 11.2 percent for the 1,200 individuals.  The
overall rate of reactivity found in data by the International Contact
Dermatitis Group (Fregert et al., 1969) was compared with these data.  The
allergen used in the International group data was 5 percent nickel sulfate,
and 4,825 white individuals tested showed a 6.7 percent rate of positive
reaction, males showing a reaction rate of 1.8 percent and females 9.9 percent.
It is important to point out that both sets of data found nickel sensitivity
most frequent in females.  The North American study testing 16 allergens found
that nine other allergens had higher positive reaction rates than nickel in
white males, while the data for the International Contact Dermatitis Group
testing 11 allergens found seven allergens with higher positive reaction rates
than nickel for the male subjects.  Black males in the North American group
data showed the highest reaction rate to nickel.
     Brun (1974) reported on 1000 cases of contact dermatitis from the Uni-
versity Hospital Clinic in Geneva.  Each patient was patch tested with a
standard group of 13 allergens including nickel as 3 percent nickel sulfate. .
The rate of positive reaction to nickel for females was significantly higher
than for males.   The reaction rates by sex are not reported, but the rate for
the total patient group was given as 12.2 percent.  Turpentine, with a positive
reaction rate of 14.8 percent for the total population exceeded the nickel
reaction rate.  Hexavalent chrome, the allergen showing the third highest
reaction rate, was statistically significantly more frequent in males than
females.  Comparison with data from the International Contact Dermatitis
                                 C-76

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         TABLE 17.   NORTH  AMERICAN  CONTACT  DERMATITIS  GROUP  PATCH  TEST  RESULTS  FOR
                          2.5  PERCENT NICKEL SULFATE IN  10 CITIES3
Subjects
Black
White
All
Total
Females
Males
Total
Females
Males
Total
Females
Males

Positive Reactions
Total No.
79
64
143
612
445
1057
691
509
1200
No.
14
6
20
89
22
111
103
28
131
Percent .
17.7
9.3
14.0
12.7
4.4
10.5
14.9
5.5
11.2
aFrom North American Contact  Dermatitis Group  (1973).
                                         C-77

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group by specific European cities shows nickel sensitivity is by no means the
leading allergen in each location.
     The differences in nickel sensitivity rates are not strictly comparable,
since the International group tested with 5 percent nickel sulfate solution
while the North American group used a 2.5 percent and Brun used a 3 percent
nickel sulfate solution.
     Spruit and Bongaarts (1977a) investigated the relationship of nickel
sensitivity to nickel concentrations in plasma, urine, and hair and found no
association.  The role of atopy, either personal or familial, in nickel-
sensitive and nonsensitive dermatitis cases was examined by Wahlberg (1975).
No differences of rates of personal or familial atopy were found for nickel-
sensitive and nonsensitive patients with hand eczema.  All cases were ladies'
hairdressers; they showed a positive reaction rate of 40 percent to nickel
sulfate (5 percent) solution.
     Both Spruit and Bongaarts (1977b) and Wahlberg (1975) reported that
positive reaction to nickel sulfate occurs at very low dilution levels in some
individuals.  Wahlberg found 5 of 14 positive reactors sensitive to £ 0.039
percent nickel sulfate solution.  Spruit and Bongaarts (1977b) found one
female patient with a positive reaction when the solution was 10 ug Ni  /I.
     Nickel sensitivity is prevalent among women, and nickel content dermatitis
occurs frequently not only among women but also among men who are exposed.
Nickel is extremely common in the articles and substances found in the home
and in metals used for jewelry, metal fasteners of clothing, coinage, etc.
Some preparations used in hair dressing contain nickel and consequently
hairdressers exhibit nickel dermatitis.  The consequences of nickel contact
dermatitis seems to vary with the surrounding social factors:  male factory
                                  C-78

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workers appear not to be handicapped by it (Spruit and Bongaarts, 1977b) and
continue in their work; hairdressers leave their occupation when they develop
dermatitis (Wahlberg 1975).
     The impact of nickel dermatitis on the health of the total U.S. popula-
tion cannot be assessed at this time since the prevalence of this condition in
the population is unknown.   Also, there are no data on the range of severity
and the consequences, the costs, of the condition.
Sensitivity to Nickel in Prostheses
     Stainless steel, chrome, and other metal alloys used in prostheses and
other surgical devices frequently contain proportions of nickel that have
proved to cause reactions in patients ranging from itching to dermatitis to
tissue breakdown, requiring replacement of the device.   The NAS report (1975)
lists the following devices and prostheses reported in the literature as
associated with adverse reactions to their nickel contents:   wire suture
materials; metallic mesh for nasal prostheses; heart valves; intrauterine
contraceptive devices; batteries for implanted pacemakers; alloys for dental
castings and fillings; and orthopedic implants.
     The alloys, contrary to general assumption, appear not to be biologically
inert and produce adverse reactions in some of the individuals sensitive to
nickel.   Two cases of cancer in humans at the site of steel  plate implantation
were reported.  These cancers developed 30 years after implantation in both
cases.   In both cases the alloys of the plates and screws differed and possibly
                            •
electrolysis and metallic corrosion may have occurred.
     Deutman and colleagues (1977) report on metal  sensitivity before and
after total  hip arthroplasty in 212 cases from their orthopedic service in
Groningen, The Netherlands.   They instituted their study because recent
                                  C-79

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literature contains reports of reactions to orthopedic implants including
loosening of total joint prostheses.   The authors studied the pre-operative
sensitivity status of 212 patients scheduled for total hip replacement and
followed up these patients to ascertain if sensitivity developed after the
insertion.   Fourteen patients were sensitive to one or more of three metals
tested and 11 of these were sensitive to nickel.  The allergens used were
those recommended" by the International Contact Dermatitis Group, that is, for
nickel sensitivity, a 2.5 percent nickel sulfate solution was employed in the
patch test.   (The nickel sulfate solution standard has been changed since the
time of the European work reported in this section on Nickel Contact Dermatitis
above.)  The past experience with metallic appliances for bone surgery was
found to be 173 cases without previous experience, 17 cases with less than
total joint replacement, 16 with total joint replacement and subsequent loosen-
ing and reoperations, and six with stable McKee-Farrar prostheses.   Of the
eleven nickel-sensitive patients, three had previous implants.   Histories of
nickel sensitivity showed five cases of eczema due to jewelry or garters and
two cases with previous implants where the eczema appeared over the scar
tissue of the site of the implant.  Four individuals with positive reaction to
the nickel  allergen did not have a previous history of eczema.   In addition,
there were five patients with a history of sensitivity but not a positive
reaction to the patch test.
     A second phase of the study consisted of > six postoperative patch-testing
of 66 of the 198 patients without pre-operative sensitivity to patch tests.
There were 55 women and 11 men, average age 69.5 years, in this group.   Four
of these 66 showed metal sensitivity, three to nickel and one to cobalt.   This
included one woman with a negative preoperative patch test but a history of
                                  C-80

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eczema from garters who was positive on postoperative patch test.   None of the
66, regardless of sensitivity status, had shown pain, loosening of the pros-
thesis, infection, or skin symptoms during the postoperative period of
approximately 2 years.   This represents a conversion rate of 6 percent within
up to about 2 years postoperatively.   A sensitivity rate of 4.6 percent to
nickel by patch test was found in the 173 patients without previous bone
surgery.
     While nickel sensitivity in persons receiving orthopedic implants puts
them at higher risk of complications, this does not represent a health problem
to the population in general and is not related to exposure due to the presence
of nickel in environmental media.
Chronic
     In contrast to acute effects of nickel carbonyl exposure in man, little
has been reported for effects of chronic exposure to this agent.  Sunderman
and Sunderman (1961) have described one case of chronic inhalation of nickel
carbonyl  at low levels, in which the patient had developed asthma and Lb'ffler's
syndrome.
     Adverse pulmonary effects in man due to other nickel compounds, are noted
below and discussed elsewhere in regard to occupational carcinogenicity.
Russian workers (Tatarskaya, 1960; Kucharin, 1970; Sushenko and Rafikova,
1972) have observed chronic rhinitis and nasal sinusitis in workers engaged in
nickel electroplating operations where chronic inahaltion of nickel aerosols
such as of nickel sulfate had occurred.  Associated findings commonly en-
countered were anosmia and nasal mucosal injury including nasal septum
perforation.   Asthmatic lung disease in nickel plating workers has been
documented by Tolat et al. (1956) and McConnell et al.  (1973).  Based on
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various animal studies as described elsewhere, inhalation of nickel
particulate matter is likely to play a role in chronic respiratory infections
in nickel workers via effects on the activity of alveolar macrophages.
     The role of oral nickel in dermatitic responses has also been demon-
strated by Kaaber et al. (1978), who investigated the effect of a low
nickel diet in patients with chronic nickel dermatitis presenting as hand
eczemas of dyshidrotic morphology.   Of 17 subjects in the clinical trial,
nine showed significant improvement during a period of 6 weeks on a low
nickel diet.   Of these nine showing improvement, seven had a flare-up in
their condition when placed on a normal diet.   Furthermore, there was no
correlation apparent between the level of urinary nickel and the degree of
improvement following the diet.  These authors recommend limitation in dietary
nickel as a help in the management of nickel dermatitis.  In this connection,
also, Rudzki  and Grzywa (1977) described an individual having chronic flare-ups
in nickel dermatitis whose chronicity of condition was traced to the nickel
content of margarine, Polish margarine having a rather high nickel content,  up
to 0.2 mg Ni/kg.
                                  C-82

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                        IN VITRO AND IN VIVO STUDIES

Subcellular and Cellular Aspects of Nickel Toxici'ty
     A thorough discussion of the available information on the interactions of
nickel at the molecular level is beyond the purpose of this document and
consideration will be given mainly to data that are more germane to both the
adverse and beneficial effects of nickel jj\ vivo.
     Nickel, in the form of the common divalent ion, is known to bind to a
variety of biomolecular species such as nucleic acids and proteins as well as
their constituent units:  nucleotides, peptides, and amino acids (Natl. Acad,
Sci., 1975).  Of the various ligand groups for divalent nickel, strongest
binding occurs to form chelate structures with sulfhydryl, aza, and amino
groups, with amido-N (peptide group) and carboxyl group binding also being
possible.
     In the previous section dealing with nickel metabolism, it was noted that
serum albumin is the main carrier protein for macromolecular-bound nickel in a
number of animal species including man.  It was pointed out that in man and
rabbit, there also appears to be a specific nickel protein differing as to
structure, such proteins possibly being evidence for an essential role for
nickel.
     A number of relevant reports in the literature have appeared describing
2J2 vivo and jji vitro effects of various nickel compounds on enzyme systems,
nucleic acid and protein synthesis as well as related effects in experimental
animals.   Data obtained j_n vivo are tabulated in Table 18, while _ui vitro
effects are presented in Table 19.
                                  C-83

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                                  TABLE  18.   IN  VIVO  BIOCHEMICAL  EFFECTS  OF  NICKEL  COMPOUNDS
Compound
Ni (C0)4
Ni(CO)4
Ni(CO)4
o
£ Ni(CO)4
Ni(CO)4
Ni(CO).
Animal
Rat
Rat
Rat
Rat
Rat
Rat
Dosing conditions
I.V. 20 mg/kg
Inhalation
0.20 mg/liter air
I.V. 20 mg/kg
I.V. 20 mg/kg
I.V. 22 mg/kg
I.V. 22 mg/kg
I.V. 22 mg/kg
Effects
Inhibition of phenothiazine
Induction of benzopyrene hydroxy-
lase in lungs and liver
Inhibition of cortisone induction
of hepatic tryptophan pyrrol ase
Inhibition of phenobarbital induc-
tion of hepatic cytochrome
Inhibition of RNA polymerase in
hepatic nuclei
Incorporation of ( C)-orotic acid
into hepatic RNA
Inhibition of RNA synthesis by
Reference
Sunderman, 1967a
Sunderman, 1967b
Sunderman, 1968
Sunderman and
fsfahani, 1968
Beach and Sunder-
man, 1969
Beach and Sunder-
Ni(CO),
Ml(CO),
Rat
Rat
I.V.  22 mg/kg
I.V.  22 mg/kg
  hepatic chromatin - RNA polymerase
  complex

Inhibition of phenobarbital
  induction of aminopyrene
  demethylase

Slight inhibition of leucine incor-
  poration into liver microsomal
  proteins
                                                                                                      man, 1970
Sunderman and
  Leibman, 1970
Sunderman, 1970
Ni(CO),
Rat
I.V.  22 mg/kg
Elevated liver ATP level
Sunderman, 1971

-------
                                                     TABLE 18.  (continued)
Compound
NiSO,
NiCl,
NiCl.
Animal
     Dosing conditions
                 Effects
Rat
o
1
00
Ln
Nickel (II)
ion
Young
mouse
Rat
Rat
               Rat
I.P.  3 mg/kg
  daily, 30-90
  days
I.P. 19 mg/kg,
  single dose
  Oral 225 ppm
  long term, water

I.P. 250 mg/kg,
  single dose, 3-6
  hours before
  sacrifice

I.M.
  porphyrin, cytochrome P-450, and total
  heme; heme oxygenase elevation in
  liver, kidney and cardiac tissue

At 60 to 90 days, succinic dehydrogen-
  ase reduced in liver and kidney;
  at 30, 60 and 90 days, ATP-ase activity
  elevated in testes

Inhibition of cytochrome oxidase, iso-
  citric and malic dehydrogenases in
  liver, kidney and heart and inhibition
  of heart muscle phosphorylase

4-fold  increase in serum glucose,
  hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance
  elevated serum triglycerides
ATP-ase activity in brain capillaries
  abolished                Joo, 1969
                              Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydro-
                                genase  inhibited; Glucose-6-
                                phosphate dehydrogenase elevated
                                within  6 hr.
Reference
Ni(CO).
^

NiCl?
Rat I.V. 22 mg/kg

Rat S.C. 16 mg/kg
Inhibition of RNA synthesis in liver Witschi, 1972
but not lungs
Reduced liver ALA-synthetase, reduced Maines and Kappas,
                                                                                                 1977
Mathur et al.,
  1977
                                                                                               Weber and Reid,
                                                                                                 1968
Clary and Vignati,
  1973
Joo, 1968
                                                  Basrur and
                                                    Swierenga,  1970

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                                      TABLE  19.   IN VITRO BIOCHEMICAL EFFECTS OF NICKEL COMPOUNDS
   Compound
System
Exposure
                                                                       Effects
                                                                                                           Reference
   Ni(II)  ion     Rat  liver microsomes      Up  to  100 uM  Ni
Ni(II) ion     Rabbit liver and
                 lung microsomes
,   Ni(II) ion
               DNA polymerase from
                 avian myeloblastosis
                 virus

Ni(II) ion     DNA polymerase from
                 E^ coli

Ni(II) ion     Rat brain synapto-
                 somes

Ni(II) ion     Rat hepatic micro-
                 somes

Ni(II) ion     Cilia of Tetrahymena
                 pyriformis

Ni(II) ion     Sheep alveolar
                 macrophages

Ni(II) ion     Sheep alveolar
                 macrophages
 CO
(  Ni) -       Rat embryo muscle
  Ni0S0          culture
                                           Up  to  50  mM Ni
                    Up to 8 mM Ni


                    5 mM Ni


                    Up to 300 pM Ni




                    5 mM Ni


                    1 mM Ni


                    0.5 mM Ni
                      Activity of benzopyrene
                        hydroxylase reduced to half
                        at 0.5 umolar Ni; total
                        inhibition at 10 umoles

                      N-oxidase activity enhanced
                        30 percent at 1 mM (liver)
                        and 5 mM (lung), respectively.
                        N-oxidase activity inhibited
                        above 10 mM

                      Fidelity of Mg-activated
                        DNA synthesis altered


                      Fidelity of DNA synthesis
                        altered

                      ATP-ase activity inhibited
                        20 percent at 100 uM

                      ATP-ase activity inhibited


                      ATP-ase activity inhibited


                      ATP-ase activity inhibited


                      ATP-creatine phosphotrans-
                        ferase activity  inhibited

                      Inhibition of aldolase,
                        G-6-PD, LDH, and glyceralde-
                        hyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
                                                                                     Thompson et al.,
                                                                                       1974
                                                                                     Devereux and Foil
                                                                                       1974
                                                                                                         Si rover and Loeb
                                                                                                                1977


                                                                                                         Miyaki et al.,
                                                                                                           1977

                                                                                                         Prakash et al.,
                                                                                                           1973

                                                                                                         Federchenko and
                                                                                                           Petrun, 1969
                                                                                                         Raff and Blum,
                                                                                                           1969

                                                                                                         Mustafa et al.,
                                                                                                           1969

                                                                                                         0'Sullivan and
                                                                                                           Morrison, 1963

                                                                                                         Basrur and
                                                                                                           Swierenga, 197

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     A number of investigators have studied the effects of nickel compounds on

inducible enzyme systems in liver and other organs that are involved in the

metabolism and detoxification of drugs and other foreign substances.

     In the rat, nickel  carbonyl inhibits the phenothiazine induction of

benzopyrene hydroxylase  in lungs and liver (Sunderman, 1967a), the cortisone

induction of hepatic tryptophan pyrrolase (Sunderman, 1967b) the phenobarbital

induction of hepatic cytochrome (Sunderman, 1968), and phenobarbital induction

of aminopyrine demethylase (Sunderman and Leibman, 1970).   Nickel carbonyl

inhibition of benzopyrenehydroxylase activity probably reflects reduced enzyme

biosynthesis, since _in vitro exposure to the agent had no effect.  Nickel

sulfate, however, at levels greater than 1 mM does inhibit the enzyme vn vitro
                         o
(Dixon et al., 1970).   Since benzopyrene is an active carcinogen, it has been

suggested that a mechanism for at least co-carcinogenicity of nickel relates

to increased retention of the hydrocarbon, particularly in the case of heavy

cigarette smokers (Dixon et al., 1970; Sunderman, 1967a).

     Maines and Kappas (1977) have reported effects of nickel (II) injection

on cellular heme metabolism in rats including reduced heme levels and enhanced

heme oxygenase activity.  These effects could be abolished if nickel was

complexed to cysteine prior to injection.  In a related study, Maines and

Kappas (1976) demonstrated no effect of nickel (II) ion on hepatic heme oxygenase

activity jjj vitro at levels of 12.5 to 250 uM, indicating that direct activation

of preformed enzyme does not occur ijn vivo.

     Inhibition of RNA symthesis in the rat, probably via an effect on RNA

polymerase (Sunderman and Esfahani, 1968; Beach and Sunderman, 1969, 1970;

Witschi, 1972) has been  demonstrated with nickel carbonyl.   Moderate inhi-

bition by this agent of  hepatic protein synthesis has also been noted (Sunderman,

1970).
                                 C-87

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     The inhibition of ATPase by nickel salts i_n vitro and in vivo has been
reported for the enzyme from different sources (Prakash et al., 1973; Federchenko
and Petrun, 1969; Raff and Blum, 1969; Mustafa et al., 1971; Joo, 1968 and
1969).  In contrast, Mathur et al.  (1977) find that ATPase activity is
elevated in rat testicular tissue for all time points (30, 60, and 90 days)
when rats are given Ni intraperitoneally, 3 mg/kg daily.   Sunderman (1971) has
suggested that the inhibition of ATPase and other ATP-requiring enzymes
likely involves binding of divalent nickel to ATP, making it unavailable for
subsequent utilization since it is known that nickel can form a stable complex
with ATP (Sigel et al., 1967).
     Jji vitro and _ui vivo studies of nickel subsulfide (Ni;^) on muscle
tissue (Basrur and Swierenga, 1970) revealed impairment of glycolytic enzyme
activity.
     Si rover and Loeb (1977) have demonstrated alteration of magnesium-
activated DNA synthesis fidelity at 8 mM levels of nickel (II) ion and using
DNA polymerase from avian myeloblastosis virus.  Similar effects also are
noted with E.  coli DNA polymerase (Miyaki et al., 1977).
     Sunderman and Sunderman (1963) found that nickel carbonyl inhalation in
the rat led to increases in microsomal and supernatant fractions of lung and
liver homogenates.  Webb and co-workers (1972) have found that 70-90 percent
of the nickel  in nickel-induced rhabdomyosarcomas is found in the nucleus.  Of
the total nuclear nickel burden, about half is present in the nucleolus, with
the remainder equally distributed between nuclear sap and chromatin.  Further-
more, nickel binding to RNA and DNA was observed in nuclei of rhabdomyo-
sarcomas from rats given nickel subsulfide intramuscularly (Heath and Webb,
                                  C-88

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1967).   In mouse dermal  fibroblasts grown HI vitro and exposed to various


63
  Ni-labeled compounds,  Webb and Weinzierl (1972) noted a similar distri-



bution.   These data are  consistent with the findings of Beach and Sunderman



(1970) that nickel is bound to the RNA polymerase-chromatin complex obtained



from rat liver nuclei after nickel carbonyl exposure.   Recently, Jasmin and



Solymoss (1977) have reported that intrarenal administration of nickel sub-



sulfide in the rat led to the highest relative amounts in the nuclear fraction



of kidney homogenate with smaller amounts in mitochondria and microsomes.



     Moffitt et al. (1972) observed that alterations in the normal subcellular



distribution of nickel in rat tissue occur with the acute administration of



benzopyrene (8 mg intratracheally).  By 3 days postexposure, significant



reductions of nickel content were seen in nucleus, mitochondria, and micro-



somes.



     Changes in ultrastructure have been reported for various organellar



components from animals  exposed to nickel compounds.



     In rats exposed intravenously to nickel carbonyl  (65 mg/kg), ultra-



structural alterations in hepatocytes included nuclear distortion by 24 hours,



dilation of rough endoplasmic reticulum at 1 to 4 days, and cytoplasmic inclusion



bodies at 4 to 6 days (Hackett and Sunderman, 1969).



     A number of studies of the action of nickel subsulfide have included the



observation of ultrastructural effects.   Tumor cells from nickel subsulfide-



induced rhabdomyosarcomas show pronounced alterations  in ultrastructure (Basrur



et al.,  1970; Friedmann  and Bird, 1969;  Bruni and Rust, 1975) to include



mitochondria! conformational changes, accumulation of electron-dense granules,



and elaboration of cristae which have coalesced and formed wavy or parallel
                                  C-89

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stacks in all cases.  Degenerative changes, including disruption of inner and
outer membranes, were sometimes seen.  Some of these changes could also be
detected in rat muscle tissue exposed to nickel subsulfide for relatively
brief periods, 24 to 48 hours (Basrur et al., 1970).  Cultured rat embryo myo-
blasts exposed to nickel subsulfide exhibited a variety of organellar changes
(Sykes and Basrur, 1971).  At the cell periphery, cytoplasmic blebs containing
clusters of free ribosomes appeared to form and dissociate from the myotube
while cellular organelles aggregated in the center.  Alterations in the fine
structure and alignment of mitochondria caused derangement of the contractile
elements.  Using scanning electron microscopy, Geissinger et al. (1973) showed
that chromosomal abnormalities existed in a nickel subsulfide sarcoma from rat
muscle tissue (20 mg intramuscularly).  Neoplastic cells from renal tumors in
rats induced by intrarenal administration of nickel subsulfide are character-
ized by large swollen mitochondria, cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum,
abundant polysomes, lipid vacuoles, and dense bodies.  Nuclei are irregular in
shape with marginal chromatin and prominent nucleolus.
     A number of investigators have described the effects of nickel compounds
in cultures of cells.  These juj vitro correlates of nickel's effects rn vivo
have proved particularly valuable in helping elucidate the allergenic, immuno-
logical,  and carcinogenic aspects of nickel toxicity in man and experimental
animals.
     Reports have appeared in the literature dealing with the response of
alveolar macrophages and other components that serve a protective function in
respiratory tract to nickel compounds.  Waters et al. (1975) have studied the
toxicity of nickel ion to rabbit alveolar macrophages i_n vitro.   At a concentra-
tion of about 4 mM nickel, a 50 percent reduction in viable cells occurred,
                                  C-90

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viability being determined by trypan blue exclusion.   In a related study,



Graham et al.  (1975) studied the response of rabbit alveolar macrophages to



levels of nickel that did not affect their viability.   Of various metal ions



tested, nickel was the only element that induced changes in phagbcytic activity



without significant effect on cell life.  In a medium containing 1.1 mM nickel



ion, these macrophages had minimal morphological evidence of injury, but



lacked the ability to phagocytize polystyrene latex spheres.   lr\ vitro ex-



posure of rabbit alveolar macrophages to nickel ion at 0.1 mM concentration or



greater caused significant inhibition of antibody-mediated rosette formation,



the extent of inhibition being concentration-dependent (Hadley et al., 1977).



These results suggested to the authors that antibody-mediated rosette forma-



tion may be useful as a rapid and sensitive screen for metal  toxicity.



     Transformation of cultured human peripheral lymphocytes  as a sensitive HI



vitro screening technique for nickel hypersensitivity versus  the classical



patch testing has been studied in a number of laboratories, and the earlier



conflicting studies have been reviewed (Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975).  The studies



of Hutchinson et al. (1972), Forman and Alexander (1972), Millikan et al.



(1973), Gimenez-Camarasa et al.  (1975), and Svejgaard et al.  (1978) have,



however, established the reliability of the technique.



     Jacobsen (1977) has investigated the response of cultured epithelium-like



cells from human gingiva to nickel inasmuch as the element appears in dental



prosthetic materials.   Significant effects on cell viability  are seen at



nickel (II) levels down to 0.08 mM.   In this study, no correlation was seen



between the amount of serum present and cytotoxicity,  suggesting that both



complexed and uncomplexed nickel ion are equally active.
                                 C-9-1

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     Exposure of rat embryo myoblasts in culture to nickel subsulfide dust
results in drastic reduction of mitotic index and cell survival (Sykes and
Basrur, 1971).  Daniel et al. (1974) assessed the effect of nickel-serum
complexation on cultures of chick myoblasts by pre-incubation of nickel
dust in serum for up to 30 days followed by analysis of serum supernatant
for nickel content.   Nickel, at a level of 20 ug/1. serum and greater
prevents normal cell differentiation along with cell degeneration.
     Costa et al. (1978) have used various nickel compounds to assess the
morphological transformations of Syrian hamster cells as a possible rapid
screening technique for carcinogenicity.  Using as an index the frequency of
cell colony pi ling-up/test plate, the most pronounced effects were noted
with nickel subsulfide, nickel dust, and nickel subselenide.  These data are
consistent with other documented comparative effects discussed below in the
section dealing with nickel carcinogenicity.
     Rat fat cells, when exposed to divalent nickel at levels of 1 to 6 mM,
showed decreased adrenalin- and glucagon-stimulated lipolysis, along with
increased glucose incorporation into lipids, possibly mimicking the action
of insulin at the cell plasma membrane (Saggerson et al., 1976).
     According to Taubman and Mai nick (1975), nickel ion at levels of 1.0
uM-1.0 mM did not trigger histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells,
indicating that the anaphylactoid edema seen in the rat following nickel (II)
injection operates by some mechanism other than a direct cellular effect.
Synergisim and/or Antagonism
     There are experimental data that demonstrate that nickel has a synergistic
effect on the carcinogenicites of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.  Toda
(1962) has found that 17 percent of rats receiving intratracheal doses of
                                  c-92

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nickel oxide along with 20-methylcholanthrene developed squamous cell carci-



nomas; Maenza et al. (1971) demonstrated a synergistic rather than additive



effect in the latency period reduction (30 percent) of sarcomas when simul-



taneous exposure to benzopyrene and nickel subsulfide was carried out.  As



stated elsewhere, the inhibitory activity of nickel on enzyme systems that



mediate the metabolism of agents such as benzopyrene was noted.  It is likely,



then, that tissue retention of these organic compounds is prolonged with



nickel exposure.  Kasprzak et al.  (1973) observed pathological reactions in



lungs of rats given both nickel subsulfide and benzopyrene that were greater



than was the case for either agent alone.



     Nickel and other elements are known to be present in asbestos and may



possibly be a factor in asbestos carcinogenicity.  The pertinent literature



has been reviewed (Morgan et al.,  1973; Natl.  Acad. Sci., 1975).   Little in



the way of experimental studies exists to shed light on any etiological role



of nickel in asbestos carcinogenicity, however.   Cralley (1971) has speculated



that asbestos fibers may serve as  a transport mechanism for metals into tissue



and that the presence of chromium and manganese may enhance the carcinogenicity



of nickel.



     Virus-nickel synergism is suggested by the observation of Treagon and



Furst (1970) that jji vitro suppression of mouse L-cell interferon synthesis



occurs in response to Newcastle Disease virus with nickel present.



Teratogenicity



     Little evidence for nickel as a teratogen has been documented.  While



Perm (1972) has claimed unspecified malformations in surviving hamster embryos



when mothers were exposed to parenteral nickel (0.7 to 10.0 mg/kg), Sunderman



et al. (1978) found no teratogenic effects for either nickel chloride (16 mg/kg)



or nickel subsulfide (80 mg/kg) in rats.
                                  C-93

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     In animals, several studies have demonstrated that nickel crosses the



placental barrier and is lodged in fetal tissue.  Whole body analysis of



offspring from rats fed nickel at dietary levels of 250 to 1000 ppm and in



different chemical form showed nickel at 22 to 30 ppm in those offspring whose



mothers were exposed to the highest level in diet and 12-17 ppm for the maternal



exposure of 500 ppm (Phatak and Patwardhan, 1950).  Lu and co-workers (1976)



have reported placental transfer of nickel in pregnant mice.   Intraperitoneal



administration of a single dose of nickel chloride (3.5 mg/kg) at day 16 of



gestation led to maximal accumulation of nickel in fetal tissue at 8 hours



post-exposure, while peak levels of nickel in maternal blood and placentae



were observed 2 hours afterwards.   In a recent detailed study by Sunderman et



al. (1978), the uptake of   Ni label given intramuscularly to rats was seen in



embryo and embryonic membrane at day 8 of gestation, the amount of label being



equivalent to that in maternal lungs, adrenals and ovaries.  Furthermore,



autoradiograms revealed nickel label in yolk sacs of placentae 1 day post



injection (day 18 of gestation) and some passage of label into fetal tissue.



On day 19, fetal urinary bladder had the highest level of label.



     The data of Phatak and Patwardhan (1950) on litter sizes from pregnant



rats fed nickel in various forms at a level of 1000 ppm suggest a reduction in



pup numbers at this exposure level.  Schroeder and Mitchener (1971) followed



three generations of rats continuously exposed to nickel in drinking water (5



ppm).   Increased numbers of runts and enhanced neonatal mortality were seen in



each of three generations, along with a significant reduction in litter size



and a reduced proportion of males in the third generation.   In a similar



endeavor, Ambrose et al. (1976) followed three generations of rats given



nickel in diet at concentrations of 250 to 1000.  There was increased fetal
                                  C-94

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mortality in the first generation while body weights were decreased in all
generations at 1000 ppm.   Perm (1972) noted that intravenous administration of
nickel acetate (0.7-10.0 rtig/kg) to pregnant hamsters at day 8 of gestation
resulted in increases in the number of resorbed embryos.
Gametotoxic Effects of Nickel
     When nickel sulfate was administered to rats subcutaneously at a dosing
of 2.4 ing Ni/kg, Hoey (1966) observed shrinkage of central tubules, hyperemia
of intertubular capillaries and disintegration of spermatozoa in testicular
tissue 18 hours after a single dose.   Multiple dosing produced disintegration
of spermatocytes and spermatids and destruction of Sertoli cells.  Such effects
were noted to be reversible. Von Veltschewa et al.  (1972) noted inhibition of
spermatogenesis in rats given daily oral doses of nickel suflate (2-5 mg/kg)
with reduction in the number of basal cells within the tubules and in the
number of spermatozoa-containing tubules.  Continuation of the dosing regimen
for 120 days resulted in complete obliteration of fertility in these animals.
     No gametotoxic effects have been documented in man.
Carcinogenicity
     The present status of nickel's role in occupational and experimental
                          •
carcinogenesis has been the subject of a number of reviews (Int. Agency Res.
Cancer, 1976; Nat!.  Acad.  Sci., 1975; Natl. Inst. Occup. Safety Health, 1977;
Sunderman, 1973, 1976, 1977).
     A carcinogenic response to various nickel compounds upon injection has
been observed in a number of animal studies (Sunderman et al., 1975, 1976; Lau
et al., 1972; Stoner et al., 1976; IARC, 1976).  In nickel refinery workers,
an excess risk of nasal and lung cancers has been demonstrated (IARC,  1976).
However, there is no evidence at present that orally ingested nickel is
tumorigenie.
                                 C-95

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Experimental Carcinogenesis



     The qualitative and quantitative character of the carcinogenic effects of



nickel as seen in experimental animal models has been shown to vary with the



chemical form of the nickel, the routes of exposure, the animal model employed



(including strain differences within animal models), and the amounts of the



substance employed.



     Some of the experimental models of nickel carcinogenesis which have



evolved out of various laboratories are given in Table 20, along with the



various carcinogenic nickel compounds employed, the levels of material used



and the routes of administration.  Responses are usually at the site of in-



jection, although in the case of nickel acetate injection, pulmonary carcino-



mas were detected in mice given repeated intraperitoneal injections (Stoner



et al., 1976).  There have been no reports of experimental carcinogenesis



induced by oral or cutaneous exposure.



     Nickel metal, in the form of dust or pellets, leads to induction of



malignant sarcomas at the site of dosing in rates, guinea pigs, and rabbits



(Hueper, 1955; Heath and Daniel, 1964;  Heath and Webb, 1967; Mitchell et al.,



1960), while inhalation of nickel dust leads to lung anaplastic carcinomas and



adenocarcinomas (Hueper, 1958).



     In a study of the carcinogenicities of various metal compounds, Gilman



(1962) noted that nickel subsulfide (Ni^S^) was a potent inducer of rhabdomyo-



scarcomas when given intramuscularly.  Later studies of the carcinogenicity of



nickel subsulfide demonstrated adenocarcinomas in rats given the substance



intrarenally (Jasmin and Riopelle, 1976), rhabdomyosarcomas, fibrosarcomas,



and fibrohistocytomas in rat testicular tissue after intratesticular dosing



(Damjanov et al., 1978) and lung epidermoid and adenocarcinomas in rats inhaling



nickel subsulfide (Ottolenghi et al., 1974).
                                 C-96

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TABLE 20.   EXPERIMENTAL MODELS OF NICKEL CARCINOGENESIS
Animal Agent
Rat, mice Ni dust
Guinea pig Ni dust
Rat Ni dust
o
i
15 Rat Ni dust
Rat Ni pellet
Rat, mouse Ni,S2 or
Rio dust
Syrian NioS^
hamster
Rat Nl3S2
Rat Ni3S?
Rat Ni3S2
Dosing
Intrapleural/intraosseous:
0.06% 5% suspension
suspension
Inhalation 3
15 mg 1 m
I.M. , 28 mg in serum
I/P. , intrathoracic
5 mg in saline
S.C. , 2 x 2 mm
I.M. , 20 mg/thigh
I.M. , 5 or 10 mg,
single
Inhalation -
ca 1 mg/m
Intrarenal
5 nig/saline or
glycerol
Intratesticular,
r\ f i f\ 	
Response
Sarcomas
Lung anaplastic carcinomas
and adenocarcinomas
Rhabdomyosarcomas
Mesotheliomas
Sarcomas
Rhabdomyosarcomas
Sarcomas
Epidermoid carcinomas and
adenocarcinomas (lung)
Renal adenocarcinomas
Fibrosarcomas and
._! 	 L J 	 ._ 	 	 	 	
Reference
Hueper, 1955
Hueper, 1958
Heath and Daniel,
1967; Heath an!
Webb, 1967
Furst et al. , 191
Mitchell et al. ,
1960
Gilman, 1962
Sunder man et al . ,
1977
Ottolenghi et al,
1974
Jasmin and Riopel
1976
Damjanov et al. ,
T mo

-------
                                                    TABLE 20 (continued)



o
1
VO
00



Animal
Rat
Rat
Mouse
Rat,
hamster
Rat

Rat
Agent
Ni(CO)4
Ni(CO)4
Ni(0ac)2
Nickel -
ocene
NiV/
Benz-
pyrene
Ni3S2/
Benz-
pyrene
Dosing
Inhalation,
4-80 ppm
I.V., 50 pi/kg
I. P. , 360 mg/kg
I.M.
I.M. , 10 mg/5 mg

Intratracheal:
2-5 mg
Response
Epidermoid and anaplastic
carcinoma, and adenocar-
cinomas (lung)
Carcinomas and sarcomas
Lung adenocarcinomas
Sarcomas
Sarcomas

Squamous cell carcinomas
Reference
Sunderman et al. ,
1959; Sunderman
and Donnelly,
1965
Lau et al. , 1972
Stoner et al. ,
1976
Haro et al. , 1968
Furst and
Schlauder, 1971
Maenza et al. , 19

Karsprzak et al. ,
1968
Rat
NiO/
  methyl-
  cholanthrene
Intratracheal:
Squamous cell carconimas
Toda, 1962

-------
     Exposure to nickel carbonyl either via inhalation (Sunderman et al.,



1959; Sunderman and Donnelly, 1965) or intravenously (Lau et al., 1972)  has



been observed to induce pulmonary carcinomas or carcinomas and sarcomas  in



organs such as liver and kidney, respectively.   As noted above, repeated



dosing intraperitoneally yields lung carcinomas in mice (Stoner et al.,  1976)



when nickel acetate is used, while nickelocene, an organonickel "sandwich"



structure, induces sarcomas in rats and hamsters when given intramuscularly



(Haro et al., 1968; Furst and Schlauder, 1971).



     The underlying biochemical mechanisms governing the carcinogenicities of



various nickel compounds have yet to be fully elucidated.



     Transport to the site(s) of carcinogenic action is known to differ  among



carcinogenic nickel agents.  As noted earlier,  nickel carbonyl decomposes



extracellularly, and the liberated nickel is oxidized intracellularly and



mobilized.  In the case of insoluble dusts, .such as metallic nickel and  nickel



subsulfide, slow dissolution from extracellular deposition by extracellular



fluid presumably occurs.



     Nickel dust gradually dissolves when incubated with horse serum to yield



complexes of oxidized nickel with proteins and amino acids (Weinzierl and



Webb, 1972) while ultrafiltrable nickel complexes obtained by adding nickel



dust to muscle homogenate jji vitro are similar to those formed when nickel



implants slowly dissolved in muscle (Weinzierl  and Webb, 1972).  Webb and



Weinzierl (1972) using   Ni label have demonstrated that mouse dermal



fibroblasts in culture take up nickel complexes with proteins and other



ligands, and they suggest that myoblasts involved in repair of muscle injured



by dust contact take up solubilized nickel and undergo subsequent neoplastic



transformation.
                                  C-99

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     Singh and Gilman (1973), in a study using double-diffusion chambers con-



taining nickel subsulfide implanted intraperitoneally in rats, observed effects



on rhabdomyocytes 2 to 24 days later, indicating the intermediacy of a soluble



nickel complex, since the technique interposes a solution barrier between



agent and cellular surface.   Using   Ni-labeled nickel subsulfide, Sunderman



et al. (1976), observed that intramuscular administration in rats was followed



by localization within macrophages and fibroblasts by the end of the first



week.  In a related report,  Kasprzak and Sunderman (1977) monitored the


                                                 63
relative rates of dissolution of labeled nickel (  Ni) subsulfide in water,



whole rat serum, and rat serum ultrafiltrate.  Dissolution rates were more



rapid in serum or serum ultrafiltrate and were attended by formation of nickel



sulfide and nickel hydroxide.  These authors speculate that subsequent



solubilizing of these latter forms j_n vivo is conceivable owing to the lower



pH existing in lysosomes, nickel particles being observed in the lysosomes of
                                                 o


macrophages from nickel subsulfide-treated rats (Sunderman et al., 1976).



     Experimental clues as to the ways in which intracellular nickel imparts



neoplastic formation include the following:  (1) The intracellular distribution



of nickel in nickel-induced rhabdomyosarcomas is highest in the nucleus (70-90



percent), with roughly half of this amount being in the nucleolus.  (2) Nickel



is bound to an RNA polymerase-chromatin complex from hepatic cell nuclei of



rats with nickel carbonyl; (3) this complex carries out diminished RNA



synthesis; (4) the fidelity of DNA synthesis is impaired in various cell types



jjn vitro; (5) addition of nickel ion to cultures of mouse L-929 cells



interferes with interferon synthesis (Treagon and Furst, 1970); and (6) addi-



tion of nickel subsulfide to cultured embryonic muscle cells inhibits mitotic
                                  C-100

-------
activity and causes abnormal mitotic figures (Basrur and Gilman, 1967;



Swierenga and Basrur, 1968).



     The above discussion has focused on nickel compounds used alone to induce



carcinogenic responses.   An equally important aspect of these effects is the



synergistic action of nickel in the carcinogenicity of other agents, since



environmental situations entail simultaneous exposure to a number of such



substances.  Discussion of this area has been presented previously under the



Synergism and/or Antagonism section.



     Comparative carcinogenicity for various nickel compounds has been studied



and demonstrated in various laboratories (Sunderman and Maenza, 1976; Jasmin



and Riopelle, 1976; Gilman, 1962; Payne, 1964).  Furthermore, there is a



general inverse relationship between solubility and carcinogenic potential:



insoluble nickel metal,  nickel oxide, and nickel subsulfide are carcinogenic,



while most of the nickel salts are noncarcinogens.   A few exceptions to this



do exist:   nickel acetate, for example, is soluble but also has carcinogenic



character (Table 20).  This relationship reflects mainly the relative speed



of clearance of soluble nickel from the organism by the renal excretion, the



time for clearance being shorter than the induction interval for carcinogenic



manifestations.



     Sunderman and Maenza (1976) studied the incidence of sarcomas in Fischer



rats within 2 years after single intramuscular injections of four insoluble



nickel-containing powders:  metallic nickel, nickel sulfide, a-nickel subsulfide



and nickel-iron sulfide matte.  Amorphous nickel sulfide had no tumorigenic



potential, while nickel  subsulfide was most active.  The relative carcinogenicity



of nickel-iron sulfide matte was intermediate between nickel subsulfide and



metallic nickel  powder,  suggesting to these authors that there may also be a
                                 C-101

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previously unrecognized carcinogenic potential in other nickel-sulfur mineral
complexes, as well as the corresponding arsenides, selenides, and tellurides.
Epidemiology
     The epidemiological data on the carcinogenicity of nickel is reported for
occupationally exposed nickel refinery workers from a number of countries.
Cancer of the respiratory tract, specifically the lung and nasal cavities,
among nickel refinery workers has been cited in these reports.  The variety of
processes for different raw nickel materials results in the production of
different nickel compounds and consequently, workers at specific refineries at
different work stations are exposed in significantly different ways.
     The data have been summarized and reviewed by numerous authors and, since
the evidence is incontrovertible, there has been universal agreement that
nickel refinery workers are at significantly higher risk for cancer of the
lungs and nasal cavity (Natl. Acad. Sci., 1975; Int. Agency Res. Cancer, 1976;
Natl. Inst.  Occup. Safety Health, 1977; Sunderman, 1977).   Sunderman (1977), in
a review, points out that in addition to the significantly high risk for
cancer of the lungs and nasal cavities, increased risk has been found for
cancer of the larynx in Norwegian refinery workers and for gastric cancer and
soft tissue sarcoma in Russian refinery workers.
     According to the IARC (1976):  "Epidemiological studies conclusively
demonstrate an excessive risk of cancer of the nasal cavity and lung in workers
at nickel refineries.  It is likely that nickel in some form(s) is carcinogenic
to man."
     Summaries of the cancer risks demonstrated in epidemiological and
occupational studies are given in Tables 21 and 22, respectively.
     The nickel compounds which are implicated are insoluble dusts of nickel
subsulfide (Ni^) and nickel oxides (NiO and Ni^O-) the vapor of nickel
                                  c-102

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                                       TABLE 21.   EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES OF NICKEL CARCINOGENESIS
Agent
Nickel Matte
Concentrated
Feed stock
Nickel dust
and fumes



Unknown


Ni oxides, Ni
o Alloys, Ni
1 cnlfato anH Mi
Dosing
Inhalation



Inhalation



Inhalation


Inhalation »
>0.3 mg Ni/nT
Response
Carcinoma



Carcinoma
epidermoid
anaplastic
adena
Precancerous
lesions

Cancer

Organ/Tissue
Lung Nasal



Lung



Biopsies of
mucosa from
middle turbinate
Lung

Industry
Clydach, Wales
refinery workers


Falconbridge
refinery-
Norway

Falconbridge
refinery-
Norway
Aircraft engine
factory
Reference
Doll, 1977



Kreyberg,



Torjussen
Solberg,

Bernacki,





1978



and
1976

1978

o
u>
chloride

-------
                                        TABLE 22.  OCCUPATIONAL STUDIES OF NICKEL CARCINOGENESIS
o
 i
Agent Dosing
Insoluble dusts
Ni-S^ Inhalation
NiO; Ni203
Vapors
Ni(CO)4
Soluble aerosols
NiS04
Ni(NO,)2 or Inhalation
Ni Cl^
Ni dusts Inhalation
Soluble and Inhalation
insoluble
Ni compounds
plus arsenic
and cobalt dusts
Response
Carcinoma
epidemoid
anaplastic
pleomorphic



Cancer
Carcinomas
Sarcoma
Organ/Tissue
Lung Nasal
69% 45%
27% 12%
0 31%


Kidney
Lung Nasal
Larynx
Gastric
Soft tissue
Industry
Refinery


Canadian refinery
electrolytic workers
Norwegian
refinery
Russian
refinery
Reference
Sunderman, 1973
•

Sunderman, 1977
Pedersen, et al. ,
1973
Saknyn and
Shabynina,
1973

-------
carbonyl [Ni(CO)4]; and soluble aerosols of nickel sulfate, nitrate, or chloride



(NiS04, NiN03, NiCl2) (Sunderman,  1977).



     Inasmuch as respiratory tract cancers have occurred in industrial facili-



ties that are metal!urgically diverse in their operations, carcinogenicity



probably resides in several  compounds of nickel (Natl.  Acad. Sci., 1975).



This is certainly consistent with the animal models of carcinogenicity previously



described.   Furnace workers  appear to have the highest risk in this regard,



and freshly formed hot nickel dusts from some roasting procedures may be



especially carcinogenic.



     In Table 23 is an earlier tabulation (Natl.  Acad.  Sci., 1975) of the



numbers of different types of cancers of the lung and nasal cavities seen in



nickel  workers.   As of March 1977, Sunderman (1977) had tabulated 477 cases of



lung cancer and 143 cases of cancers of the nose and perinasal sinuses.   Other



excess  cancer risk categories reported are laryngeal cancers in Norwegian



nickel  refinery workers (Pedersen et al., 1973),  gastric and soft tissue



carcinomas in Russian nickel refinery employees (Saknyn and Shabynina, 1973),



and the relatively rare renal cancer in Canadian nickel electrolytic refinery



workers (Sunderman, 1977).



     The earliest epidemiological  investigation of the increased risk of



cancer  is that of the nickel refinery workers at Clydach, Wales, where the



Mond refining process had been used since the opening of the refinery in 1900.



The mortality experience of  these workers has been monitored continuously.



The systematic retrospective investigations showed that there were significant



changes in risk for workers  beginning employment after 1925, since the refinery



had undergone basic changes  which resulted in control of pollutants and decrease



of exposure by that time.
                                  C-105

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          TABLE 23.  HISTOPATHOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION OF CANCEROF THE LUNG
                           AND NASAL CAVITIES IN NICKEL WORKERS3
Tumor Classification
Epidermoid carcinoma
(squamous cell)
Anaplastic
(undifferentiated) carcinoma
Alveolar cell carcinoma
Adenocarcinoma
Columnar cell carcinoma
Spheroidal cell carcinoma
Spindle cell carcinoma
Scirrhus carcinoma
Pleomorphic carcinoma
Reticulum cell carcinoma
TOTALS
Lung
No.

34
13
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
49
Cancer
%

69
27
2
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
100
Nasal -Cavi
No.

22
6
0
0
2
1
1
1
15
1
49
ty Cancer
%

45
12
0
0
4
2
2
2
31
2
100
'From  Natl.  Acad.  Sci.,  1975.
                                   C-106

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     Doll et al.  (1977) reports on an update of the mortality experience of the



Clydach workers,  extending the number of men and the years at risk back in



time for inclusion and extending the observation time for mortality forward.



Tables 24, 25, and 26 show the data for Clydach which led Doll and his associates



to revise the time of the reduction of the risk of cancers from "by 1925" to



"until 1930."



     The epidemiological  studies of cancer of the respiratory tract in nickel



refinery workers  had not considered the role of smoking.  Kreyberg (1978)



reports on a study of the nickel refinery workers from the Falconbridge refinery



near Kristiansand, Norway.  The previous epidemiological studies of this



worker population had established their higher risk for cancer of the lungs



and determined that this elevated risk was limited to workers involved in the



roasting, smelting, and electrolysis processes.  This earlier work did not



differentiate the lung cancers histologically, nor did it take account of



smoking behavior.  Kreyberg and associates were able to re-examine the data



for the Falconbridge refinery workers and determine histological characteristics



of lung cancers,  the age at start of employment of the cases, their lifetime



smoking history employment history at Falconbridge and age at diagnosis.  The



total number of cases examined was 44.



     The total number of workers over Falconbridge's history from 1927 until



1975 was available.  Figure 10 shows the number of workers over this time,



those exposed and not exposed, both in permanent and temporary positions, and



the number and types of lung cancers by years of diagnosis.   The gap of cases



between 1950 and  1958 became the focus of the study.  Employment records led



to the separation of the 44 cases into two series.   Series I includes 18 cases



who started employment between 1927 and 1939 (members of a cohort observed for
                                  C-107

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      TABLE 24.   NUMBER OF MEN FIRST EMPLOYED  AT  CLYDACH  NICKEL  REFINERY, WALES3
        AT DIFFERENT PERIODS AND MORTALITY  OBSERVED AND EXPECTED FROM ALL CAUSES'
Year of first
employment
Before 1910
1910-14
1915-19
1920-24
1925-29
1930-44
Al 1 periods
No. of
men
119
150
105
285
103
205
967
Man-years
of risk
1,980.0
2,2666.5
2,204.0
7,126.5
2,678.0
4,538.5
21,193.5
Number
Observed
117
137
89
209
60
77
689
of deaths
Expected
102.01
92.84
55.44
146.25
51.91
60.42
508.87
Ratio of observed
and expected
deaths 0/E
1.15
1.48
1.61
1.43
1.16
1.27
1.35
'From  Doll  et  al.  (1977).
                                        C-108

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                                3000
                                2500
                            O
                            uj

                            O  2000
                            _i
                            a.

                            UJ

                            Ul
n
 i
a.
O
UJ
O.
U.
O
CC
ut
to
5

z
                                1500
                                1000
                                 500
             GROUP I TUMOURS:


              | EPIDERMOID CARCINOMA




              S SMALL CELL ANAPLASTIC CARCINOMA
                                          GROUP (I TUMOURS:
                                           D
                                                             • »/**{A)a
                                                           r;  \A
                                                                                                       <
                                                                                                       O
                                                                                                       u.
                                                                                                       O
                                                                                                       oc
                                                                                                       UJ
                                                                                                       03
                             Figure 10. Lung cancer cases diagnosed 1929-1975 at Falconbridge. Plots of number of
                             people employed at Falconbridge nickel refinery (curves) and number of new cases of
                             lung cancer diagnosed between 1929 and 1975 (histogram):  (A) number of people on
                             the payroll (a = total number, b = those occupationally exposed to nickel); (B) number
                             of people in established positions (a = total number, b = those occupationally exposed
                             to nickel). The two cases from 1951 with development time of 1 year or less are not
                             included. From Kreyberg (1978).

-------
                      TABLE  25.   MORTALITY  BY  CAUSE  AND YEAR OF FIRST EMPLOYMENT, CLYDACH NICKEL  REFINERY, WALES3
O
 I
No. deaths from .
nasal sinus cancer
Year of first
employment
Before 1910
1910-14
1915-19
1920-24
1925-29
All periods
before 1930
1930-44

Observed
14
24
11
7
0 (1)
56 (2)

0

Expected
0.036
0.137
0.025
0.071
0.026
0.195

0.034
Ratio
0/E
389
649
440
99
0
287

0
No. deaths from
lung cancer

Observed
24
34
20
50
9
137

8

Expected
2.389
3.267
3.070
9.642
3.615
21.983

5.463

0/E
10.0
10.4
6.5
5.2
2.5
6.2

1.5
No. deaths from other
malignant neoplasms
Ratio
Observed
10
10
10
27
7
64

11

Expected
14.637
13.549
8.064
20. 902
7.247
64.399

8.786
Ratio
0/E
0.68
0.74
1.24
1.29
0.97
0.99

1.25
No. deaths from
other diseases

Observed
69
69
48
125
44
355

58

Expected
84.95
75.99
44.28
115.63
41.02
361.87

46.14
Ratio
0/E
0.81
0.91
1.08
1.08
1.07
0.98

1.25
            aFrom Doll  et al.  (1977).

-------
                             TABLE  26.  CHRONOLOGICAL CHANGES  IN THE FEED MATERIAL AT CLYOACH NICKEL REFINERY, WALES3
O
 I
H
H
H
Composition of nickel mate

Period
1902-33
1933-64

1964-76
Ni,
percent
40-45
75

75
Cu,
percent
35-40
2-6

2-5
s,
percent
16
23 reducing
to 0.7
0.3
Fe,
percent
1
1

0.7
As,
ppm
0.3
0.3

0.3-0.1
Se.
ppm
trace
trace

50
Te.
ppm
trace
trace

80
Pb.
ppm
trace
trace

0.2-0.4
                  aFron Doll  et al.  (1977).

-------
35 to 47 years, and  almost complete mortality data) with a mean age of 28.6
years at start of employment and a range of 19 to 38 years.  Series II comprises
26 cases who started employment in 1946 (from a cohort observed for at most 30
years) with a mean age  at start of employment of 38.3 years and a range of
24 to 55 years.
     Tumors were identified as Group I (epidermoid and small cell anaplastic
carcinoma) and Group II  (adenocarcinomas and others).   Figure 11 shows the
development time for the two tumor groups for the cases in the two series.
The sharp differences for the developmental time for the two series are
striking.  The relationship of the time of development, year of start of
employment and year  of  diagnosis is shown in Figure 12.
     The age at diagnosis for Group I tumor cases in Series I and II is
shown in Table 27.   This table also shows the data for a control group of
cases from the Norwegian general population.  There is remarkable agreement
between Series I, II and the controls for mean age at diagnosis.
     The Norwegian experience has shown an increase in the ratio of Group I/II
tumors since 1948-50.   Group I tumors are associated with cigarette smoking,
and the proportionate increase of Group I cases is generally attributed to
increase in cigarette smoking.   The smoking status of the cases is shown in
Table 28.
     The 32 Group I  cases had only three possible nonsmokers, but four of
seven Group II cases were documented nonsmokers.   The number of cases, seven,
for Group II is small,  but the nonsmoking/smoking ratio of 4/3 in the counties
from which the Falconbridge workers are drawn is  not unusual.  The implication
is strong that tobacco  carcinogens play a significant role in the development
of Group I cases, as well as the exposure to nickel.   Most of the workers
                                   C-112

-------
o
I
u>
                                 SERIES II
                                 SERIES!
                                                                    • GROUP I TUMOURS



                                                                   (•) GROUP II TUMOURS




                                                                   [•] DEVELOPMENT TIME

                                                                      LESS THAN ONE YEAR
r:i *) t ~> . s.:J&J .
I
0
1
0
III 1 1
5 10 15 20 25
•
I I I II
5 10 15 20 25
I I I
30 35 . 40
• •
II I
30 35 40
                                                            DEVELOPMENT TIME IN YEARS
                                 Figure 11. Development time for lung tumours in Series I and Series II workers in a

                                 nickel refinery.  From Kreyberg (1978).

-------
O
 I
                        40 YEARS
                        20 YEARS
   i
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                                  1927
                                             D
                                               •  O
                                                       .38
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                                             .32
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                                                                   pa o  an
                                                                                 /
                                                                         D  O
                                                                           OOO
                                         DO
                                              .52
                                                                           .50      tf
                                                                       .48
                                    .46
                                                                 .44
                                                             .42
                                                                 .74

                                                                 .72
                                                                 .70
                                                                 .68
                                                                 .66
                                                                 .64
                                                                                               .62
                                                                                           .60

                                                                                        •58     «£>
                                            •    EPIDERMOID CARCINOMA

                                            D    SMALL CELL ANAPLASTIC
                                                 CARCINOMA

                                            O    GROUP II TUMOURS
                                                                                  YEARS OF REDUCED EXPOSURE
                                                                                  (1939-1946)
                        Figure 12.  The scatter of occurrence of lung tumors related to time of first employment (abscissa)
                        and time of diagnosis of tumor(ordinate).  From Kreyberg (1978).

-------
            TABLE 27.   AGE AT TIME OF DIAGNOSIS OF GROUP I TUMORS
                         OF WORKERS EXPOSED TO NICKELa

Series No.
I
II
Kreyberg (1969)

of cases
15
17
596

Mean
57.6
56.0
58.2
Age, years
Minimum
40
44
31

Maximum
75
73
75+
From Kreyberg (1978).
              TABLE 28.   SMOKING AND TUMOR INCIDENCE IN WORKERS
                     AT THE FALCONBRIDGE NICKEL REFINERY3
    Type of tumor
Smokers
Nonsmokers
 Series I
    Epidermoid carcinoma
    Small cell anaplastic carcinoma
    Group II tumor

 Series II
    Epidermoid carcinoma
    Small cell anaplastic carcinoma
    Adenocarcinoma
  10
   2
   0
  13
   4
   3
  3
  0
  2
  0
  0
  2
  From Kreyberg (1978).

 'Smoking history not ascertainable.   Allocation as nonsmokers is the assumption
  against the hypothetical  relationship.
                                   C-115

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started smoking years before being exposed to nickel; thus the nickel exposure



can be relegated, at least  temporally, to a secondary role.



     The development time of cancer when defined as the interval between the



start of exposure to nickel and time of diagnosis has been confusing and not



useful as a variable.  However, when development time to tobacco use is used,



the picture clarifies.   In  Norway, the starting age for cigarette smoking is



between 13 and 18 years, and the mean age at diagnosis can be explained.   The



authors conclude that the developmental time due to nickel alone is obscured



and is unknown at present,  The presence of more than one carcinogen makes it



difficult if not impossible to determine developmental time.   "The incidence



may be increased when weak  carcinogens are involved without the mean age at



diagnosis being markedly altered" (Kreyberg, 1978).



     The medical department of the Falconbridge refinery monitors exposed



workers by obtaining urine  and plasma nickel concentrations,  enforces safety



precautions such as wearing respirators, protective clothing, showering, and



discourages smoking.  In respect to prevention of cancers of the nasal  cavity,



the workers at risk are asked to rinse out their noses with the aid of a



syringe and are examined periodically for pathology of the nose and sinuses.



     Torjussen and Sol berg  (1976) report on a study of 92 randomly selected



workers from Falconbridge exposed to nickel compounds and 37 nonexposed workers



as control.   Biopsies of mucosa from the middle turbinate were examined for



precancerous lesions.  All workers were without known nasal disease.   All



biopsy samples showed inflammatory changes, with more in the exposed than



nonexposed group.   The exposed group showed 17 percent atypical epithelial



changes,  while no such changes were found in the control group.  These changes



were not related to age and smoking habits.  These lesions were considered



precancerous.
                                  C-116

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     The cancer risk status in workers exposed to nickel in workplaces other
than nickel refineries is not established at this time.  Since the nickel
compounds associated with the refining processes may also occur in other
industries, investigations clearly should be conducted.
     Bernacki et al.  (1978) reports on a pilot study of exposure to nickel and
lung cancer mortality in an aircraft engine factory.  The investigators did
nou find an increased relative risk for workers exposed to nickel  compounds.
The atmospheric concentrations were low, below 1 mg Ni/m , the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration threshold limit value, and the nickel compounds
were not identified.
     While nickel is found in asbestos fibers in varying amounts,  the etiological
role of nickel  as a co-carcinogen in the presence of asbestos has  not prompted
any epidemiological studies of this association.
                                  C-117

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                     CRITERION FORMULATION
 Existing  Guidelines  and Standards
      The  threshold  limit values  (TLV)  for a  work  day  exposure
 has  been  set  at  1 ppb (Am.  Conf. Gov.  Ind. Hyg. 1971).
 Current Levels of Exposure
      The  route by which most people  in the general  population
 receive the largest  portion of daily nickel  intake  is  through
 food.  Based  on  the  available data from composite diet analysis,
 between 300 to 600 jug nickel per day are  ingested.  Fecal
 nickel analysis, a more accurate measure  of  dietary nickel
 intake, suggests about 300  jug/day.   The highest level  of
 nickel observed  in water was 75 jjg per  liter.  Average  drinking
 water levels  are about 5 /ig/1.  A typical consumption  of
 2 liters  daily would yield  an additional  10 jug of nickel,
 or which  up to 1 pg  would be absorbed.
 Special Groups at Risk
     Occupational groups such as nickel workers and other
 workers handling nickel comprise the individuals  at the
 highest risk.  Women,  particularly housewives, are  at  special
 risk to nickel-induced skin disorders.  Approximately  47
 million individuals,  comprising the  smoking population  of
 the United States, are potentially at risk for possible
 co-factor effects of  nickel in adverse  effects on the respira-
 tory tract.
Basis for Derivation  of  Criterion
     In arriving at  a  standard for nickel, several  factors
must be taken into account.   There is little evidence for
accumulation of nickel  in various tissues.  Absorption through
                                C-118

-------
the gastrointestinal tract is minimal.  Acute exposure of
man to nickel is chiefly of concern in workplaces where
nickel carbonyl or nickel dust are present at high levels.
In these situations, inhalation is the main route of entry
and the lung is the critical organ although, in some instances
of high exposure, the central nervous system may also be
involved.
     The major problem posed by nickel for the U.S. population
at large is nickel hypersensitivity, mainly via contact
with many nickel-containing commodities.  Nickel could play
a role in altering defense mechanisms against xenobiotic
agents in the respiratory tract, leading to enhanced risk
for respiratory tract infections.
     While nickel has a possible role as a co-carcinogen
in producing respiratory cancer, as suggested by animal
studies, this remains to be demonstrated.  There is no evidence
for carcinogenicity due to the presence of nickel in water.
The role of nickel as an essential element is a confounding
factor in any risk estimate.
     In order to develop a risk assessment based on toxico-
logical effects other than carcinogenicity, dose-response
data would be most helpful.  However, while the frequency
or extent of various effects  of nickel are related to the
level or frequency of nickel  exposure in man, the relevant
data do not permit any quantitative estimation for dose-response
relationships.   The lowest levels  of nickel associated with
adverse health  effects,  therefore,  must be used in establishing
a criterion level for nickel  in drinking water.
                               C-119

-------
     To  arrive at a risk estimate for  nickel/  a modification
of  the approach used for non-stochastic  effects (Fed.  Register
44 (52) :15980,  March 15,  1979)  has been adopted.
     The  studies cited in this document  have  not demonstrated
a no-observable-effect level  (NOEL).   Therefore, the study
demonstrating  the lowest-observable-effect level (LOEL)
for  nickel  in  drinking water  has  been  used to arrive at
a non-stochastic risk estimate.
     In  the  study of Schroder  and Mitchner (1971),  adverse
effects  in  rats were demonstrated at a level  of 5 mg/1 (5
ppin) in  drinking water.   Three generations of  rats  were
continuously exposed to  5 mg/1 (5 ppm) of  nickel in drinking
water.   In  each of the generations, increased  numbers  of
runts and enhanced neonatal mortality  were seen.  A significant
reduction in litter  size and  a reduced proportion of males
in  the third generation  also were observed.
     To  adapt  the LOEL into an Acceptable  Daily Intake (ADI)
for man,  the LOEL is divided  by an uncertainty factor  of
100, as detailed in  a recent National  Academy  of Science
report (Drinking Water and Health, pp. 803-04,  NAS,  1977)
and adopted  by  The U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency
(Fed. Register  44(52) :15980, March 15, 1979).   The  choice
of  this  factor  is based  on the absence of  long-term or acute
human data,  scanty results on  experimental animals,  and
an absence of  evidence for carcinogenicity.
     If the  5.0  mg/1 level were used in  the standard water
quality criteria,  the criterion can be determined to be 133  jjg/1.
                              C-120

-------
          5(mg/1) x 25 ml/day/rat = 125
               .3(kg/av. rat)         ,3

                                  = 416.67 pg

                                  ^ 420

                                    dose/day/av.  rat

              = 4.2 pg  (ADI)

          4.2 x 70 = 294 pg  (ADI for  70 kg/man)

     2(X) =  {Av. Fish intake)(BCF)(X) = Daily  Intake

               2(X)  + (0.0187)(11)(X) = 294 pg

                              2.205 X = 294 jug

                                    X = 133 jug/1  (criterion)

          2 = amount of water ingested, liters/day

          X = Ni concentration, mg/1

     0.0187 = amount of fish/shellfish products consumed, kg/day

          F = 11 (BCF)  mg Ni/kg fish
          t   11 (BCF),  mg Ni/1 Qf waj

     Drinking water contributes 91 percent of  the assumed

exposure while eating contaminated fish products accounts

for nine percent.  The criterion level for nickel can alterna-

tively be expressed as 1.4 mg/1, if exposure is assumed

to be from the consumption of fish and shellfish products

alone.

          X x 0.0187 x 11 = 294 Cwg/1)

               X x 0.2057 = 294

                        X = 1.429 mg

                        X = 1.4 (mg/1)
                               C-121

-------
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