A recent editorial is discussed, which implied that animal-based developmental and reproductive toxicology tests will continue to be crucial, that the thalidomide disaster could have been prevented by more animal testing, and that tests on juvenile animals would help to protect children (as developing adults) from the adverse effects of pharmaceuticals. It is argued that animal tests in these scientific areas do not provide reliable data that are predictive for human responses and, even if they did, the tests are too expensive and time-consuming for application to the very large number of substances that need to be tested. It is estimated there are already more than 100,000 man-made chemicals to which humans may be exposed on a regular basi...
Periodically, WellBeing News (WBN) carries a story on using animals to test the safety of chemicals ...
Conventional toxicological testing methods are often decades old, costly and low-throughput, with qu...
The numbers of animal tests being conducted are on a sharp incline. Much of this increase is directl...
A recent editorial is discussed, which implied that animal-based developmental and reproductive toxi...
BACKGROUND: Current developmental toxicity testing adheres largely to protocols suggested in 1966 in...
A review is presented of the use of developmental toxicity testing in the United States and internat...
This review is the second in a series of four papers emanating from a workshop entitled ‘‘Developmen...
Due to public pressure, in vivo methods of toxicity testing is being attempted to be replaced by in ...
Much progress has happened in understanding developmental vulnerability to preventable environmental...
The thalidomide tragedy stimulated an intense research in the etiology, prevention and treatment of ...
Large scale toxicological testing programmes which are currently ongoing such as the new European ch...
For regulatory information requirements, developmental toxicity testing is often conducted in two ma...
'Many of the in vitro toxicological studies have not been sufficiently validated to determine their ...
In this chapter, we propose a new, pragmatic approach that could accelerate the replacement of most,...
The assumption that animal models are reasonably predictive of human outcomes provides the basis for...
Periodically, WellBeing News (WBN) carries a story on using animals to test the safety of chemicals ...
Conventional toxicological testing methods are often decades old, costly and low-throughput, with qu...
The numbers of animal tests being conducted are on a sharp incline. Much of this increase is directl...
A recent editorial is discussed, which implied that animal-based developmental and reproductive toxi...
BACKGROUND: Current developmental toxicity testing adheres largely to protocols suggested in 1966 in...
A review is presented of the use of developmental toxicity testing in the United States and internat...
This review is the second in a series of four papers emanating from a workshop entitled ‘‘Developmen...
Due to public pressure, in vivo methods of toxicity testing is being attempted to be replaced by in ...
Much progress has happened in understanding developmental vulnerability to preventable environmental...
The thalidomide tragedy stimulated an intense research in the etiology, prevention and treatment of ...
Large scale toxicological testing programmes which are currently ongoing such as the new European ch...
For regulatory information requirements, developmental toxicity testing is often conducted in two ma...
'Many of the in vitro toxicological studies have not been sufficiently validated to determine their ...
In this chapter, we propose a new, pragmatic approach that could accelerate the replacement of most,...
The assumption that animal models are reasonably predictive of human outcomes provides the basis for...
Periodically, WellBeing News (WBN) carries a story on using animals to test the safety of chemicals ...
Conventional toxicological testing methods are often decades old, costly and low-throughput, with qu...
The numbers of animal tests being conducted are on a sharp incline. Much of this increase is directl...