Arabic
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 1998-Apr

Sensitivity of wild cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) to the immunotoxic effects of low-level arsenic exposure.

يمكن للمستخدمين المسجلين فقط ترجمة المقالات
الدخول التسجيل فى الموقع
يتم حفظ الارتباط في الحافظة
M Savabieasfahani
R L Lochmiller
D P Rafferty
J A Sinclair

الكلمات الدالة

نبذة مختصرة

Arsenic is a ubiquitous contaminant of many toxic waste sites around the country and experimental animal trials have indicated that arsenic may be immunotoxic to laboratory rodents. Because wild rodents such as the herbivorous cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus) reside on many of these toxic waste sites, we explored the sensitivity of their immune systems to oral exposures of environmentally relevant concentrations of inorganic arsenic. We exposed adult male cotton rats (n = 36) to either 0 (controls), 5 (low dose), or 10 (high dose) ppm sodium arsenite in drinking water for 6 weeks. Daily food intake decreased in a dose-dependent manner, ranging from an average of 10.03 +/- 0.45 in the high-dose group to 11.27 +/- 0.42 (SE) g/animal/day in the control group. Mass of testes in the low-dose group increased significantly compared to controls, but there was no difference between the high-dose and control groups. Masses of liver, kidney, adrenals, popliteal lymph nodes, spleen, epididymides, and seminal vesicles and selected hematological parameters were unaffected by arsenic exposure. In vivo cell-mediated immunity, as measured by a phytohemagglutinin-hypersensitivity response to an intradermal challenge, was suppressed 30% in the low-dose group compared to controls; however, responses of those receiving a high dose of arsenic were similar to controls. Arsenic treatment did not have a measurable impact on lymphoproliferative responses of cultured splenocytes to the mitogens Concanavalin A and Pokeweed mitogen, or to the lymphokine interleukin-2. We also observed no impact of low-level arsenic exposure on macrophage phagocytic activity and tumoricidal activity of lymphokine-activated killer cells in vitro. It is possible that malnutrition caused by decreased food intake may eventually lead to atrophy of lymphoid organs and render animals more susceptible to environmental pathogens. However, direct effects of low-level arsenic exposure on immune function of cotton rats was minimal (a moderate depression in the in vivo cell-mediated immunity assay) and may not be clinically relevant with regard to susceptibility to disease in the wild.

انضم إلى صفحتنا على الفيسبوك

قاعدة بيانات الأعشاب الطبية الأكثر اكتمالا التي يدعمها العلم

  • يعمل في 55 لغة
  • العلاجات العشبية مدعومة بالعلم
  • التعرف على الأعشاب بالصورة
  • خريطة GPS تفاعلية - ضع علامة على الأعشاب في الموقع (قريبًا)
  • اقرأ المنشورات العلمية المتعلقة ببحثك
  • البحث عن الأعشاب الطبية من آثارها
  • نظّم اهتماماتك وابقَ على اطلاع دائم بأبحاث الأخبار والتجارب السريرية وبراءات الاختراع

اكتب أحد الأعراض أو المرض واقرأ عن الأعشاب التي قد تساعد ، واكتب عشبًا واطلع على الأمراض والأعراض التي تستخدم ضدها.
* تستند جميع المعلومات إلى البحوث العلمية المنشورة

Google Play badgeApp Store badge