Abstract

Pigmented (Long-Evans) and albino (Wistar) rats were chronically exposed to an organophosphate pesticide (fenthion). Fenthion (50 mg/kg) was administered subcutaneously twice a week for 1 year; the total dosage for each animal ranged from 1.6 to 1.8 g. Concurrent with the fenthion administration, the amplitude of the scotopic electroretinogram (ERG) gradually declined, disappearing by the 12th month in all treated pigmented rats. For the albino experimental rats, however, the ERG amplitude disappeared as early as the 6th month in 7 out of 15 treated animals. Funduscopically, degeneration of the retina was observed in all rats when ERG responses had disappeared. Histopathological studies confirmed degeneration of the sensory retina and marked abnormalities in the pigment epithelium cells. Treated pigmented rats also had reduced a rhodopsin concentration in the retina by the 3rd month even though the photoreceptors were structurally normal. Interestingly, the plasma vitamin A levels remained normal and liver stores of vitamin A actually increased during the course of the study. Levels of butylcholinesterase in plasma and liver, on the other hand, were extremely reduced after 3 months of fenthion treatment. In general, the biochemical and functional (ERG) changes appeared before any structural damage could be detected in the retina.

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