Literature DB >> 19043275

Effects of reduced food intake on toxicity study parameters in rats.

Tomoyuki Moriyama1, Shigeharu Tsujioka, Takashi Ohira, Satoko Nonaka, Hisataka Ikeda, Hiroki Sugiura, Masayuki Tomohiro, Keiji Samura, Masaru Nishikibe.   

Abstract

This study comprehensively describes the effects of various levels of food reduction on a wide range of toxicological parameters in dietary-optimized rats (fed with approximately 75% of ad libitum food consumption daily; 16 g and 22 g/day for females and males, respectively) that has been established as a nutritionally appropriate and well-controlled animal model in conducting toxicity studies. Toxicological parameters, including general condition, ophthalmology, clinical pathology and anatomic pathology, were examined in dietary-optimized Crl:CD(SD) female and male rats fed 16 g and 22 g/day (control), 12 g and 17 g/day (75% group), 8 g and 11 g/day (50% group), or 4 g and 6 g/day (25% group), respectively for 2 weeks. There was mortality and morbidity including reddish urine in 25% group females. The reddish urine was identified as "hemoglobinuria" that resulted from extra/intra-vascular hemolysis induced by severe food reduction. Hemoconcentration, decreased leukocytes and platelets, decreases in nutritional elements (serum glucose, protein, and lipids), increased aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, imbalanced electrolytes, and/or decreased urinary pH were observed in all restriction groups. Histopathologically remarkable changes included erythrophagocytosis in the spleen/liver and renal tubular necrosis with hyaline cast/droplets in 25% group; in addition to bone marrow depletion, lymphoid depletion in thymus/spleen/lymph node, and/or decreased secretion in the prostate/seminal vesicle in all restriction groups. Most of these changes were considered attributable to nutritional deficiency, dehydration, accelerated protein catabolism, stress and/or hemolysis secondary to severe food reduction. These results will enable toxicologists to help distinguish primary drug-induced effects from secondary changes associated with decreases in food consumption.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19043275     DOI: 10.2131/jts.33.537

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Toxicol Sci        ISSN: 0388-1350            Impact factor:   2.196


  2 in total

1.  Hematological, Biochemical, and Immunological Laboratory and Histomorphological Effects of Sleeve Gastrectomy on Female Rats.

Authors:  Ali Aktekin; Kazım Kazan; Pembegul Gunes; Murat Yekrek; Tolga Muftuoglu; Abdullah Saglam
Journal:  Indian J Surg       Date:  2013-05-05       Impact factor: 0.656

2.  Mitigation of Iron Irradiation-Induced Genotoxicity and Genomic Instability by Postexposure Dietary Restriction in Mice.

Authors:  Bing Wang; Takanori Katsube; Kaoru Tanaka; Masahiro Murakami; Mitsuru Nenoi
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2021-11-25       Impact factor: 3.411

  2 in total

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