J Pharmacol Toxicol Methods
March 2022
Implantable radiofrequency transponders may be adequate for the characterization of hazardous chemicals targeting body temperature control in experimental animals when colonic probes and automated monitoring systems based on intraperitoneal transmitters are not available, installable or applicable for any reason. In this work, we summarize a series of experiments showing the implantation protocol and utility of rice-grain size transponders to monitor subcutaneous temperature (T) after exposure to pharmacological or toxicological treatments targeting body temperature control in laboratory rats. In addition, to explore the responsiveness of this thermometric system, the influence of physiological activity on T readings was examined by monitoring T after a motor exercise in a RotaRod system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicol Sci
December 2019
Most pyrethroid insecticides (PYRs) share a similar primary target site in mammals. However, the potency estimates of the lethal and sublethal effects of these compounds differ up to 103-fold. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the dose administered, the target tissue dose, and the effect of 2 highly toxic PYRs, tefluthrin (TEF; 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicology
November 2018
Pyrethroids (PYRs) are synthetic insecticides increasingly used in agricultural and household pest control. Little is known on how the toxicity of highly effective bolus doses of single compounds compares to more realistic scenarios of low-level exposure to PYR mixtures. In this study, we examined a quaternary mixture of two noncyano (tefluthrin, TEF; bifenthrin, BIF) and two cyano (α-cypermethrin, α-CPM; deltamethrin, DTM) PYRs in young adult rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost pyrethroid (PYR) insecticides may be classified either as type-I compounds, which produce whole body tremors and hyperthermia, or type-II compounds, which produce salivation, choreoathetosis, and hypothermia (i.e., producing T and CS neurobehavioral syndromes, respectively).
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