Title : Toxicity of repeated doses of organophosphorus esters in the chicken - Wilson_1988_J.Toxicol.Environ.Health_23_115 |
Author(s) : Wilson BW , Henderson JD , Kellner TP , Goldman M , Higgins RJ , Dacre JC |
Ref : J Toxicol Environ Health , 23 :115 , 1988 |
Abstract :
Hens were repeatedly exposed to paraoxon (PO, phosphonothioic acid, diethyl paranitrophenyl ester), the chemical warfare agent VX/phosphorofluoridic acid, methyl-S-(2-[bis(1-methylethyl)amino/ethyl)O-ethyl ester], or the neuropathic DFP [phosphorofluoridic acid, bis(1-methylethyl)ester] as evidence was sought for nerve or other tissue damage following long-term treatments at high dose levels. Thirty-day and 90-d trials were performed in which each bird was injected 3 or 5 times per week with atropine as protection, weighed, their eggs collected, and their blood enzymes (cholinesterases creatine kinase, and lactic dehydrogenase) and locomotion periodically examined. Muscle and brain enzymes were assayed at the end of the experiments. Doses of PO and VX were at or above LD50 levels. DFP doses were lowered with each run to estimate a no-observable-effect level for organophosphate-induced delayed-neuropathy (OPIDN). No abnormalities attributable to repeated exposures to either PO or VX were found, even though acute, short-term symptoms of toxicity appeared after each injection. No evidence for OPIDN was obtained with repeated exposures to PO and VX under conditions where OPIDN was caused by DFP. Histological signs of OPIDN appeared in the spinal cord without gross symptoms of ataxia following repeated treatments of 25 mg/kg of DFP. The results of one experiment suggested that exposure to protective injections of atropine delays the appearance of the locomotor symptoms of the DFP-induced neuropathy. |
PubMedSearch : Wilson_1988_J.Toxicol.Environ.Health_23_115 |
PubMedID: 3336056 |
Wilson BW, Henderson JD, Kellner TP, Goldman M, Higgins RJ, Dacre JC (1988)
Toxicity of repeated doses of organophosphorus esters in the chicken
J Toxicol Environ Health
23 :115
Wilson BW, Henderson JD, Kellner TP, Goldman M, Higgins RJ, Dacre JC (1988)
J Toxicol Environ Health
23 :115