Abstract

Acute toxic effects of three commonly used insecticidal preparations of the organophosphates chlorpyrifos, diazinon, and dichlorvos were examined in mixed breed broiler chicks, and cholinesterase activity in plasma and brain were measured. The acute (24 h) oral median lethal doses (LD50) of chlorpyrifos, diazinon, and dichlorvos were 10.79 mg kg(-1), 6.32 mg kg(-1), and 6.30 mg kg(-1), respectively, as determined by the up-and-down method in chicks. Signs of cholinergic toxicosis in the chicks appeared within two hours after dosing, and they included salivation, lacrimation, gasping, frequent defecation, drooping of wings, tremors, convulsions, and recumbency before death. Halving the oral LD50 of chlorpyrifos (5 mg kg(-1)), diazinon (3 mg kg(-1)), and dichlorvos (3 mg kg(-1)) caused immobility and wing drooping, but not the clinical signs of cholinergic toxicity. However, at full LD50 doses of these insecticides, chicks showed clinical signs of cholinergic toxicity similar to those seen in the LD50 experiments. Two out of six chicks died within two hours after treatment with LD50 doses of chlorpyrifos and dichlorvos, whereas LD50 dosing with diazinon caused death in three out of six chicks. Compared to control values, the insecticides reduced plasma and whole brain cholinesterase activities by 29% to 84% and 18% to 77%, respectively, depending on the dose. The decrease in plasma cholinesterase correlated well (r=0.82) with that of the brain. These data suggest that organophosphate insecticides administered orally at LD50 doses induce clinical signs of cholinergic poisoning and concurrently reduce brain and plasma cholinesterase activities in chicks.

Highlights

  • Acute toxic effects of three commonly used insecticidal preparations of the organophosphates chlorpyrifos, diazinon, and dichlorvos were examined in mixed breed broiler chicks, and cholinesterase activity in plasma and brain were measured

  • Various reports indicate close association between reduced blood or brain ChE activity and acute toxicosis induced by doses close to or higher than the median lethal doses (LD50) of OP insecticides in rodents and birds [3, 9, 16,17,18,19]

  • Oral treatment of chicks with half the LD50 dose of chlorpyrifos (5 mg kg-1), diazinon (3 mg kg-1), and dichlorvos (3 mg kg-1) caused immobility and wing drooping, but not the clinical signs of cholinergic toxicity seen in the LD50 experiment with these insecticides

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Summary

Introduction

Acute toxic effects of three commonly used insecticidal preparations of the organophosphates chlorpyrifos, diazinon, and dichlorvos were examined in mixed breed broiler chicks, and cholinesterase activity in plasma and brain were measured. The decrease in plasma cholinesterase correlated well (r = 0.82) with that of the brain These data suggest that organophosphate insecticides administered orally at LD50 doses induce clinical signs of cholinergic poisoning and concurrently reduce brain and plasma cholinesterase activities in chicks. Chlorpyrifos and diazinon inhibit ChE activity via their active metabolites [25,26,27], whereas dichlorvos directly inhibits the enzyme [25] Another aim of this study was to see if there is a correlation between plasma and brain cholinesterase activity in chicks dosed with OP insecticides. This will further enhance our understanding of the clinical response of chicks acutely poisoned with OP insecticides, as this animal species is frequently used in the evaluation of acute OP toxicity [17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24, 28, 29]

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