AI Article Synopsis

  • Little research exists on the environmental risks of expired pesticides, prompting a study to assess the acute toxicity (LD50) of expired versus unexpired malathion, chlorpyrifos, and lambda-cyhalothrin in rats.
  • The study found that expired lambda-cyhalothrin was more toxic than its fresh counterpart, while malathion and chlorpyrifos showed reduced toxicity when expired; all formulations caused clinical toxicity signs in rats.
  • Residue analysis revealed higher concentrations of pesticides in the liver and kidneys after treatment, with significant decreases noted during recovery, indicating that expired pesticides may pose unique dangers that necessitate proper disposal to protect the environment.

Article Abstract

Little information is available on the adverse effects of expired pesticides on the environment, so it is essential to characterize the risk of these chemicals to non-target organisms. Therefore, this work aims to estimate and compare the acute toxicity (LD50) of unexpired and expired formulations of malathion, chlorpyrifos, and lambda-cyhalothrin in rats and to determine their residues in the liver and kidneys of treated rats. This is the first study to investigate the toxic effects of expired pesticides on rats. The acute toxicity of expired lambda-cyhalothrin was higher than that of non-expired rats, while the opposite was observed in rats treated with malathion and chlorpyrifos. All formulations tested caused clinical signs of toxicity in the treated rats. The data showed that some expired formulations significantly affected body weight and estimated vital signs compared to non-expired pesticides. The data showed that the highest residues were found in the liver and kidneys of rats treated with both malathion formulations, followed by chlorpyrifos; however, the lowest residues were found in rats treated with lambda-cyhalothrin, which can be referred to as LD50 values of the insecticides tested. The residues detected after the 10th dose gradually decreased at the end of the recovery period, and their losses ranged from 80.0 to 95.4% in the liver and from 92.3 to 99.99% (undetectable). The results show that the toxic effects of expired and non-expired formulations are different. This underlines the need to dispose of expired compounds carefully to prevent their discharge into the ecosystem.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1519-6984.281418DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

acute toxicity
12
residues liver
12
effects expired
12
rats treated
12
rats
9
expired
8
toxicity expired
8
expired pesticides
8
expired formulations
8
malathion chlorpyrifos
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!