Abstract

30 adult virgin female mice (2 strains) received either high or low doses of Anovlar or Lyndiol oral contraceptives and were tested for induction of dominant lethal mutations. The pregnant mice were dissected on Day 14 of pregnancy and total implantations, early deaths, late deaths, and corpora lutea were counted in each pregnancy. A significant reduction in fertile mating (p .025) was found in 1 strain of those who received the high dose of Lyndiol (10 times that of the low dose, which is physiologically equivalent to the human dose). This dose also increased the number of dead implants in both strains which resulted in higher estimates of dominant lethal mutations. It is concluded that when Lyndiol and Anovlar were given at the physiological dose level to control ovulation in mice, the frequency of dominant lethal mutations was not increased above the control level.

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