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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 62 (1984), S. 276-283 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Rat ; Brain ; Lead intoxication ; Protein deprivation ; Growth and development
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Most studies on lead toxicity in the suckling rat have been performed with doses leading to growth retardation. In a previous paper (Sundström et al. 1983), the effects of different lead doses on normal suckling rats were described. The dose of 10 mg/kg body weight daily given on days 1–15 pp produced minute hemorrhagic lesions on day 15 in the cerebellum, whereas rats given 5 mg/kg body weight daily lacked microscopically discernible pathologic changes in the brain. None of these groups exhibited growth retardation. To further elucidate the association between lead encephalopathy and malnutrition, lead was administered to protein-deprived suckling rats. Protein deprivation was achieved by a diet with 50% reduction of protein content. The móthers of the pups were fed this diet from 2 weeks before conception throughout the experiment. Experimental animals were injected i.p. with 5 mg or 10 mg lead nitrate/kg b.wt. daily. Littermates, injected with vehicle without lead nitrate served as controls. Protein-deprived rats without either treatment were “external” controls. Animals were killed at 10, 15, and 20 days age for determination of lead content in blood and brain and for light-microscopic examination. The protein-deprived rats given 10 mg/kg b.wt. daily were growth-retarded as compared to unexposed protein-deprived rats. The mortality was almost 100% at 15–20 days pp. At 15 days, the cerebellum of these rats showed abundant hemorrhages, and the cerebrum was also hemorrhagically discolored. Protein-deprived rats given 5 mg/kg b.wt. daily did not differ significantly from unexposed protein-deprived rats with regard to body weight gain. They presented a mortality of about 20% on days 15–20. At 15 days, cerebellar hemorrhages were a regular finding, though not as devastating as in the animals given 10 mg lead nitrate/kg b.wt. daily. The results imply an increased vulnerability to lead in protein-deprived rats as compared to normal rats. The severe encephalopathy in protein-deprived rats was associated with higher blood lead levels than in normal rats exposed to an equivalent lead burden.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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