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Toxicity Comparison of Melamine, Cyanuric Acid, Dicyandiamide and Cyanamide

In 2007, a large-scale pet poisoning incident occurred overseas, causing thousands of cats and dogs to die unexpectedly. Subsequent inspections found that melamine and its analogues were illegally added to imported plant protein raw materials for animal feed. Since the Kjeldahl method only measures total nitrogen, these high-nitrogen chemicals were used to fraudulently inflate the apparent protein content of feed products.

Melamine waste residue commonly contains four main components: melamine, cyanuric acid, dicyandiamide and cyanamide. To clarify the actual health risks of these substances, researchers conducted systematic cell toxicity tests and acute toxicity tests. This article breaks down the test methods, key data, toxicity rankings and safety assessments of the four compounds, providing reliable references for feed safety, chemical application and risk assessment.

Test Materials & Experimental Methods

Test Materials

The experiment used baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells for cell toxicity analysis, and healthy Kunming mice (half male and half female) for acute toxicity evaluation. Test chemicals included analytical-grade melamine, cyanuric acid, dicyandiamide and cyanamide. Supporting reagents, such as DMEM culture medium, fetal bovine serum, MTT solution and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), were also used in the tests.

Cell Toxicity Test

All four substances were dissolved in culture medium and glycerol as a solubilizer. Melamine, cyanuric acid and dicyandiamide were prepared into 5 mg/mL stock solutions, while cyanamide was prepared into a 2 mg/mL solution. All solutions were diluted 3 times in series under sterile conditions.

BHK cells were seeded into 96-well plates and incubated to allow cell attachment. Different concentrations of sample solutions were added to each well, with 5 parallel groups for every dilution. After 20 hours of incubation, MTT reagent was added, followed by DMSO to dissolve cell crystals. The absorbance value at 570 nm was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) reader.

Cell survival rate was calculated using the standard formula, and the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) — a key index of cell toxicity — was determined using professional software. Lower IC50 values mean stronger cell toxicity.

Acute Toxicity Test

Healthy mice were divided into 5 groups for each chemical, with 6 mice per group. All samples were administered via oral gavage with graded doses:
  • Melamine: 5000, 7500, 12500, 15000, 17500 mg/kg
  • Cyanuric acid & Dicyandiamide: 5000, 6500, 8500, 10500, 13000 mg/kg
  • Cyanamide: 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 mg/kg
Researchers continuously observed the mental state, behavior and mortality of mice after administration. Dead individuals were dissected to check internal organ lesions, and the median lethal dose (LD50) was determined. A higher LD50 indicates lower acute toxicity.

Key Test Results

Cell Toxicity (IC50 Data)

After 24 hours of exposure to the test substances, cell morphology and survival rate were recorded. The calculated IC50 values of the four chemicals are as follows:
  1. Melamine: 10.11 mg/mL
  2. Cyanuric acid: 3.17 mg/mL
  3. Dicyandiamide: 22.56 mg/mL
  4. Cyanamide: 0.305 mg/mL
Cell toxicity ranking (from weakest to strongest):
Dicyandiamide < Melamine < Cyanuric acid < Cyanamide
At high concentrations, all four chemicals significantly reduced cell survival rates (P<0.05). Cyanamide showed the most severe inhibitory effect on cell growth, while dicyandiamide had the mildest cell toxicity.

Acute Toxicity (LD50 Data & Clinical Symptoms)

According to national acute toxicity classification standards, chemicals with an LD50 greater than 5000 mg/kg are classified as slightly toxic or practically non-toxic.

Melamine

The LD50 of melamine is higher than 5000 mg/kg. Mice in high-dose groups showed restlessness, jumping and rapid breathing before death. Dissection revealed a large number of crystals accumulated in the ureter and kidney capsule, while other organs had no obvious lesions. Low-dose groups only had mild symptoms like lethargy and poor appetite, with sporadic deaths within 24 to 48 hours.

Cyanuric Acid

Cyanuric acid also has an LD50 above 5000 mg/kg. The clinical symptoms of poisoned mice were similar to those of the melamine groups, and no obvious damage to major organs was observed after dissection.

Dicyandiamide

Dicyandiamide’s LD50 exceeds 5000 mg/kg. Its maximum non-lethal dose reached 6500 mg/kg. Poisoned mice displayed consistent stress responses, and no abnormal organ lesions were found in the autopsy results.

Cyanamide

Cyanamide is far more toxic than the other three compounds, with an LD50 ranging from 200 mg/kg to 500 mg/kg, which falls into the high-toxic category. Dead mice had visible bleeding spots on the liver. Even low doses caused obvious discomfort in test animals, and deaths occurred within 12 to 24 hours.
Acute toxicity ranking (from weakest to strongest):
Dicyandiamide < Melamine < Cyanuric acid < Cyanamide
The acute toxicity results are fully consistent with the cell toxicity test conclusions.

Comprehensive Toxicity Classification & Analysis

Combining IC50 and LD50 data, the four substances are divided into two hazard levels:

Slightly Toxic / Practically Non-Toxic

Melamine, cyanuric acid and dicyandiamide belong to this category. Their LD50 values are all over 5000 mg/kg, meaning a very high oral dose is required to cause acute poisoning in animals.

It is noteworthy that long-term or excessive intake of melamine can lead to crystal deposition in the urinary system, which may damage the kidneys and ureters over time, even though it does not cause acute death easily.

Highly Toxic

Cyanamide is defined as a highly toxic substance. Its low LD50 and IC50 values indicate that it poses severe threats to living cells and animal organisms. Even at relatively low doses, it can trigger acute poisoning, liver damage and death.

Root Cause of Feed Fraud

Melamine and its derivatives have an extremely high nitrogen content (melamine waste residue contains about 44.8% nitrogen). Traditional Kjeldahl nitrogen determination cannot distinguish nitrogen sources, so the illegal addition of these substances artificially inflates the feed’s protein content reading. This deceptive practice directly led to the widespread pet poisoning incident.

Practical Safety Guidance

Animal Feed Industry

  • Strictly prohibit the addition of melamine waste residue and its four main components to feed. Although melamine, cyanuric acid and dicyandiamide are not highly toxic acutely, long-term intake causes urinary system damage in livestock and pets.
  • Cyanamide must be completely excluded from feed production due to its high toxicity.
  • Adopt advanced detection methods, such as High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), to accurately identify melamine and its analogues, rather than relying solely on nitrogen testing.

Industrial Production & Handling

For workers engaged in the production and application of these chemicals:
  • Wear standard protective equipment when handling cyanamide to avoid skin contact and inhalation.
  • Store all four chemicals separately from feed, food and drinking water to prevent cross-contamination.
  • Dispose of melamine waste residue in accordance with hazardous waste regulations, rather than casual dumping or reuse.

Risk Assessment Reference

This set of toxicity data provides a scientific basis for food safety supervision, chemical hazard classification and environmental risk evaluation. Relevant institutions can use IC50 and LD50 values to formulate access standards for industrial chemicals.

conclusion-Toxicity Comparison of Melamine, Cyanuric Acid, Dicyandiamide and Cyanamide

This dual evaluation of cell toxicity and acute toxicity clearly defines the safety profile of melamine, cyanuric acid, dicyandiamide and cyanamide:
  1. Dicyandiamide, melamine and cyanuric acid are slightly toxic or practically non-toxic with LD50 > 5000 mg/kg, but melamine may cause urinary crystal deposition.
  2. Cyanamide is a highly toxic compound, with an LD50 between 200 mg/kg and 500 mg/kg, which can easily cause acute poisoning and liver injury.
  3. The toxicity trend is consistent across both cell tests and acute animal toxicity tests: Dicyandiamide < Melamine < Cyanuric acid < Cyanamide.
The illegal use of high-nitrogen melamine derivatives in feed is a serious hidden danger to animal health. Strengthening targeted detection and supervision is essential to avoid similar safety accidents. Meanwhile, chemical enterprises should fully recognize the differences in toxicity among these compounds and implement strict safety management during production, transportation and waste treatment.

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