TY - JOUR
T1 - Neurotoxic effects of combined treatment of 2, 5-hexanedione and triethyllead chloride
AU - Lapadula, Daniel M.
AU - Tilson, Hugh A.
AU - Campbell, Gerald
AU - Abou-Donia, Mohamed B.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported in part by grant OHO 0823 from the National Institute of Occupational and Safety Health of the Centers for Disease Control. Request for reprints should be sent to Mohamed B. Abou-Donia, Department of Pharmacology, P.O. Box 3813, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710.
PY - 1987/8
Y1 - 1987/8
N2 - Triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione are known neurotoxicants that apparently work through separate mechanisms. The effect of combined treatment of triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione for 6 weeks on Fischer 344 rats was investigated. Ten rats were given 0.7 mg/kg triethyllead chloride in a volume of 2 ml/kg by gavage while another group was given 0.5% 2, 5-hexanedione in drinking water and vehicle by gavage (2 ml/kg). A third group was given a combination of the two treatments. A fourth group served as controls and was given vehicle by gavage. 2, 5-Hexanedione produced a reversible loss of body weight, decreased grip strength, and decreased horizontal motor activity. Triethyllead chloride alone increased hot-plate latencies. Triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione treated animals recovered 4 weeks after cessation of treatment. Neither treatment alone produced fatalities. In combination (2, 5-hexanedione + triethyllead chloride) decreases in body weight appeared additive and there was a 40% mortality by 6 weeks of dosing. Rats given the combined treatment had significant loss of both grip strength and increased hot-plate latencies. Neurobehavioral deficits and neuropathological changes were greater in the combined treatment with 2, 5-HD and TEL than when either chemical was used alone; there was little indication of a synergistic interaction between these two types of neurotoxicants.
AB - Triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione are known neurotoxicants that apparently work through separate mechanisms. The effect of combined treatment of triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione for 6 weeks on Fischer 344 rats was investigated. Ten rats were given 0.7 mg/kg triethyllead chloride in a volume of 2 ml/kg by gavage while another group was given 0.5% 2, 5-hexanedione in drinking water and vehicle by gavage (2 ml/kg). A third group was given a combination of the two treatments. A fourth group served as controls and was given vehicle by gavage. 2, 5-Hexanedione produced a reversible loss of body weight, decreased grip strength, and decreased horizontal motor activity. Triethyllead chloride alone increased hot-plate latencies. Triethyllead chloride and 2, 5-hexanedione treated animals recovered 4 weeks after cessation of treatment. Neither treatment alone produced fatalities. In combination (2, 5-hexanedione + triethyllead chloride) decreases in body weight appeared additive and there was a 40% mortality by 6 weeks of dosing. Rats given the combined treatment had significant loss of both grip strength and increased hot-plate latencies. Neurobehavioral deficits and neuropathological changes were greater in the combined treatment with 2, 5-HD and TEL than when either chemical was used alone; there was little indication of a synergistic interaction between these two types of neurotoxicants.
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U2 - 10.1080/15287398709531037
DO - 10.1080/15287398709531037
M3 - Article
C2 - 3599091
AN - SCOPUS:0023187982
SN - 0098-4108
VL - 21
SP - 483
EP - 492
JO - Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health
JF - Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health
IS - 4
ER -