- Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances
Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances (RTECS) is a
database oftoxicity information compiled from the open scientific literature without reference to the validity or usefulness of the studies reported. Until 2001 it was maintained by USNational Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) as a freely available publication. It is now maintained by the private companyElsevier MDL and is available only for a fee or by subscription.Contents
Six types of toxicity data are included in the file:
# Primary
irritation
#Mutagen ic effects
# Reproductive effects
#Tumor igenic effects
# Acute toxicity
# Other multiple dose toxicitySpecific numeric toxicity values such as
LD50 ,LC50 , TDLo, andTCLo are noted as well asspecies studied and the route of administration used. For all data the bibliographic source is listed. The studies are not evaluated in any way.History
RTECS was an activity mandated by the
US Congress , established by Section 20(a)(6) of theOccupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (PL 91-596). The original edition, known as the "Toxic Substances List" was published onJune 28 ,1971 , and included toxicological data for approximately 5,000chemical s. The name changed later to its current name "Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances". In January 2001 the database contained 152,970 chemicals. In December 2001 RTECS was transferred from NIOSH to the private company Elsevier MDL and is now only accessible for charge on an annual subscription base.RTECS is available in English, French and Spanish language versions, offered by the
Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety . The database subscription is offered on the Web, on CD-ROM and as an Intranet format. The database is also available online from NISC (National Information Services Corporation) and ExPub (Expert Publishing, LLC).External links
* [http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/rtecs/default.html RTECS overview]
* [http://mdl.com/products/predictive/rtecs/index.jsp Elsevier MDL website]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.