Trichloroacetic acid; Evaluation of the effects on reproduction, recommendation for classification
In the present report the Health Council of the Netherlands reviewed trichloroacetic acid (TCA). The main use of TCA is in the production of its sodium salt, which is a known herbicide. It is also used as an etching agent in metal surface finishing and as a solvent in the plastics industry. This report is part of a series, in which the Health Council evaluates the effects of substances on reproduction, at request of the Minister of Social Affairs and Employment. It mainly concerns substances to which man can be occupationally exposed. The Committee for Compounds toxic to reproduction, a committee of the Health Council, evaluates the effects on male and female fertility and on the development of the progeny. Moreover, the committee considers the effects of a substance on the lactation and effects on the progeny via lactation.
Committee
- BJ Blaauboer, chairman
Toxicologist, Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht - AM Bongers, advisor
Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment, Den Haag - JHJ Copius Peereboom-Stegeman
Toxicologist, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen - HFP Joosten
Toxicologist, NV Organon, Department of Toxicology and Drug Disposition, Oss - D Lindhout
professor of Medical Genetics, paediatrician, University Medical Centre, Utrecht - AH Piersma
Reproductive toxicologist, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven - N Roeleveld
Epidemiologist, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen - DH Waalkens-Berendsen
Reproductive toxicologist, TNO Quality of Life, Zeist - PJJM Weterings
Toxicologist, Weterings Consultancy BV, Rosmalen - ASAM van der Burght, scientific secretary
Health Council of the Netherlands, Den Haag
Download publications
Health Council of the Netherlands. Committee for Compounds toxic to reproduction. Trichloroacetic acid; Evaluation of the effects on reproduction, recommendation for classification. The Hague: Health Council of the Netherlands, 2006; publication no. 2006/03OSH ISBN 90-5549-605-7
