Acetazolamide dysmelia was induced in rat embryos by giving drug to mothers during days 9, 10 and 11 of pregnancy. With appropriate technique 100 per cent of deformed young could be produced. Individual anomalies were made up of one or more of 5 basic malformations—dislocation, reduction and supernumerary defects, syndactyly and synarthrosis. Right forepaws were invariably, left forepaws were less frequently and hindpaws were rarely involved. Most paws showed a postaxial to preaxial sequential involvement of digits, but on occasions digit 4 was more severely affected than the fifth digit. In all but 5 of 94 bilateral defects right forepaw lesions were of equal or greater severity than left forepaw lesions. The number of deformed paws and probably the severity of the paw defects were linearly related to drug dosage. Digital ray defects were accompanied by defects in the carpal bones and ulna of matching severity. During the phase of acute intoxication following drug treatment mothers lost weight and this was linearly related to the amount of drug given. The full term weight of foetuses was depressed in proportion to drug dosage but the drug displayed little if any embryolethal effect.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2072375 | PMC |
The treatment of pregnant rats with the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, acetazolamide, produced gross limb malformations primarily affecting the forepaw, but also producing variable ulnar dysmelia. Analysis of the cytoarchitecture of the ulnar dysmelic limbs showed the presence of cartilaginous and fibrocartilaginous connections between the ulnar and radial chondroepiphyses, with variable deformation of the radial chondroepiphysis by the tethering effect (although the growth plate, per se, did not appear affected at the stage of development studied). The extremely variable experimental appearances duplicated most of the variations seen in the human disease analogue, and suggest this drug-induced embryopathy may be useful as a model for the study of postaxial forelimb deformities in the postnatal phase in order to adequately assess the structural changes of disparate growth between radius and ulna due to the presence of the cellular continuity between the two distal chondroepiphyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcetazolamide dysmelia was induced in rat embryos by giving drug to mothers during days 9, 10 and 11 of pregnancy. With appropriate technique 100 per cent of deformed young could be produced. Individual anomalies were made up of one or more of 5 basic malformations—dislocation, reduction and supernumerary defects, syndactyly and synarthrosis.
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