Body Concentrations (body + concentration)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Accumulation of tributyltin in Hyalella azteca as an indicator of chronic toxicity: Survival, growth, and reproduction

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 12 2004
Adrienne J. Bartlett
Abstract The chronic toxicity of tributyltin (TBT) was examined by exposing two successive generations of the freshwater amphipod, Hyalella azteca, to sediments spiked with TBT. Survival was the most sensitive measure of effect, with lethal concentration resulting in 50% mortality (LC50) values on a water and body concentration basis ranging from 76 to 145 ng Sn/L and 2,790 to 4,300 ng Sn/g, respectively. Individual growth of amphipods was not negatively affected by TBT, and although reproduction might be more sensitive than survival, the data were too variable to use on a routine basis. There were no detectable TBT-induced differences in the response between first- and second-generation animals. The relationship between toxicity and bioaccumulation of TBT in H. azteca was determined and can be used as a tool to predict the toxicity of TBT in environmental samples. Body concentrations exceeding 2,000 ng Sn/g in H. azteca exposed to field-collected samples would indicate that chronic toxicity due to TBT is likely occurring in amphipod populations at those sites. [source]


Tributyltin uptake and depuration in Hyalella azteca: Implications for experimental design

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 2 2004
Adrienne J. Bartlett
Abstract The purpose of this study was to address four aspects of the kinetics of tributyltin (TBT) in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca: time to steady state, route of uptake, depuration rates, and effect of gut clearance. The amphipods accumulated TBT rapidly, reaching steady state within 14 d. Body concentrations were similar between caged and sediment-exposed animals, indicating that the primary route of uptake is via dissolved TBT. However, the rate of uptake was significantly higher in sediment-exposed amphipods. During depuration, body concentrations of TBT exhibited a biphasic decline, with a stronger decrease over the first 24 h that is attributed primarily to gut clearance, followed by a more gradual decrease most likely due to excretion from the body. Gut contents contributed significantly to body concentrations of TBT, accounting for 30% of the initial total body burden in sediment-exposed amphipods. Half-lives of TBT in gut-cleared H. azteca were 8 d and 14 d for amphipods exposed to spiked water and spiked sediment, respectively. The results of this study have significant implications in the experimental design and interpretation of studies involving the effects of TBT in H. azteca. [source]


Original Article: Amniotic fluid lamellar body concentration as a marker of fetal lung maturity at term elective caesarean delivery

AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 4 2010
Susan P. WALKER
Background:, Caesarean birth, without prior labour, is associated with an increased risk of neonatal respiratory morbidity among term infants. The concentration of lamellar bodies in amniotic fluid reflects pulmonary surfactant production and release, and is thus used in preterm populations as a marker of fetal lung maturity. Whether amniotic fluid lamellar body concentration (AFLBC) may correlate with risk factors for term respiratory distress has not previously been evaluated. Aims:, To determine the relationship between AFLBC and risk factors for respiratory distress following term caesarean birth. Methods:, The AFLBC of 249 women at the time of term caesarean birth was examined for an association with gestational age, gender, presentation and neonatal respiratory distress requiring special care nursery (SCN) admission. Results:, There was a significant increase in AFLBC with gestation. When compared with caesarean deliveries performed during the 37th week of gestation, there was a 50%, 54% and 56% increase in lamellar body concentrations (LBCs) taken during the 38th, 39th and 40th week of gestation respectively (P < 0.05 for all). Female fetuses had a 16% higher LBC than males (P < 0.05). An LBC <100 × 109 mL,1 was associated with increased risk of admission to the SCN with respiratory distress (RR = 5.6; 1.2,26.5, P < 0.05). Conclusion:, Known risk factors for term respiratory distress are reflected in the AFLBC. A significant relationship exists between AFLBC and respiratory morbidity following term caesarean birth. However, the low prevalence of this condition limits the clinical role of AFLBC as a predictive test for term respiratory morbidity. [source]


Subcellular cadmium distribution, accumulation, and toxicity in a predatory gastropod, Thais clavigera, fed different prey

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2006
Ma-Shan Cheung
Abstract Bioaccumulation and toxicity of Cd were investigated in a marine predatory whelk, Thais clavigera, after being fed with the rock oyster, Saccostrea cucullata, or the herbivorous snail, Monodonta labio, for up to four weeks. The oysters and snails had different subcellular Cd distributions and concentrations in their bodies given their different metal-handling strategies and were exposed to dissolved Cd for two weeks before being fed to the whelks. After four weeks of dietary exposure, the Cd body concentrations in T. clavigera increased from 3.1 ,g/g to between 22.9 and 41.8 ,g/g and to between 22.7 and 24.1 ,g/g when they were fed with oyster and snail prey, respectively. An increasing proportion of Cd was found to be distributed in the metallothionein (MT)-like proteins and organelle fractions, whereas the relative distribution in the metal-rich granules fraction decreased when the whelks were fed Cd-exposed prey. At the highest Cd dosage, more Cd was distributed in the pool of metal-rich granules when the whelks were fed the oysters than when they were fed the snails. Among all the biomarkers measured (MT induction, condition index, lipid peroxidation, and total energy reserve including carbohydrate, lipid, and protein), only MT showed a significant difference from the control treatments, and MT was the most sensitive biomarker for dietary Cd exposure. No toxicity was found in the whelks fed different Cd-exposed prey as revealed by various biomarkers at the different biological levels. Our results imply that metal fractionation in prey can alter the subsequent subcellular metal distribution in predators and that dietary Cd toxicity to the whelks was low, even when the accumulated Cd body concentrations were high. [source]


Uptake and accumulation of sediment-associated 4-nonylphenol in a benthic invertebrate (Lumbriculus variegatus, freshwater oligochaete)

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 5 2005
Valeria Croce
Abstract In the present work, the oligochaete Lumbriculus variegatus was exposed for 56 d to lake sediment spiked with 4-nonylphenol (4-NP), which is a breakdown product of alkylphenol polyethoxylates, an important class of nonionic surfactants. During the exposure period, the content of 4-NP was determined in the oligochaetes, sediment, overlying water, and pore water in order to monitor the distribution of the 4-NP in the compartments of the test system. Concentration of 4-NP in L. variegatus increased linearly over the course of the test, with an uptake rate coefficient of 1.9 × 10,2 (± 0.2 × 10,2; [g carbon/(g lipid-h)]). No steady state was reached at the end of the exposure period, suggesting that the elimination of 4-NP by the organism was negligible. Ingested sediments played an important role in the accumulation of 4-NP in L. variegatus, which may achieve very high 4-NP body concentrations. The 56-d biota sediment accumulation factor (BSAF) was 24 ± 7 g carbon/g lipid. L. variegatus also was exposed to 4-NP-contaminated field sediment, and field oligochaetes and sediments were collected for 4-NP pollution assessment in aquatic ecosystem. The 4-NP uptake with natural sediment was in accordance with that measured with spiked sediments, suggesting that the bioavailability of sediment-associated 4-NP for L. variegatus was not affected by 4-NP sediment concentration and abiotic sediment characteristics. The BSAFs measured in field oligochaetes, ranging from 39 to 55 g carbon/g lipid, was relatively higher than the bioaccumulation factor measured in laboratory tests. The results suggest that 4-NP concentration can reach high levels in benthic oligochaetes; this can be an important way of exposure for their pelagic predators. [source]


Water-extractability, free ion activity, and pH explain cadmium sorption and toxicity to Folsomia candida (Collembola) in seven soil-pH combinations

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 8 2004
Cornelis A. M. van Gestel
Abstract Toxicity of cadmium to Folsomia candida was determined in soils at different pHs (3.5, 5.0, and 6.5). The Langmuir sorption constant (KL), based on pore-water or water-extractable concentrations, showed a pH-related increase of cadmium sorption that was most pronounced when using free Cd2+ ion activities ({Cd2+}s). Two-species Langmuir isotherms that used total cadmium concentration ([Cd]) or {Cd2+} and pH in the water-extractable fractions gave the best description of cadmium sorption on all soils together. Cadmium concentrations causing 50% reduction of growth and reproduction (median effective concentrations [EC50s]) differed by a factor of 4.5 to 20 when based on total soil concentrations and increased with increasing pH. However, when based on water-extractable or pore-water [Cd] or {Cd2+}, EC50s decreased with increasing pH, but differences between soils were still a factor of 4.5 to 32. The EC50s differed by less than a factor of 2.2 when based on body [Cd] in the surviving animals. Two-species Langmuir isotherms were used to relate body [Cd] in survivors to {Cd2+}, corrected for pH in water-extractable or pore-water fractions. An excellent description of effects on growth and reproduction was found when related to the body concentrations predicted in this way; the difference in EC50s between soils was reduced to a factor <2. This demonstrates that F. candida is mainly exposed to cadmium through the soil solution, and suggests that principles of a biotic ligand model approach may be applicable for this soil organism. [source]


Tributyltin uptake and depuration in Hyalella azteca: Implications for experimental design

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 2 2004
Adrienne J. Bartlett
Abstract The purpose of this study was to address four aspects of the kinetics of tributyltin (TBT) in the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca: time to steady state, route of uptake, depuration rates, and effect of gut clearance. The amphipods accumulated TBT rapidly, reaching steady state within 14 d. Body concentrations were similar between caged and sediment-exposed animals, indicating that the primary route of uptake is via dissolved TBT. However, the rate of uptake was significantly higher in sediment-exposed amphipods. During depuration, body concentrations of TBT exhibited a biphasic decline, with a stronger decrease over the first 24 h that is attributed primarily to gut clearance, followed by a more gradual decrease most likely due to excretion from the body. Gut contents contributed significantly to body concentrations of TBT, accounting for 30% of the initial total body burden in sediment-exposed amphipods. Half-lives of TBT in gut-cleared H. azteca were 8 d and 14 d for amphipods exposed to spiked water and spiked sediment, respectively. The results of this study have significant implications in the experimental design and interpretation of studies involving the effects of TBT in H. azteca. [source]


Plasma concentration of anti-diuretic hormone and urine volume in response to intraruminal administration of acetate, propinata and butyrate in suckling calves

ANIMAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, Issue 3 2009
Tsunenori IRIKI
ABSTRACT Acetate, propionate, and butyrate were intraruminally administered to dry feed-fed suckling calves to evaluate their effects on plasma ketone bodies, anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) concentrations, and urine volume. Four male Holstein calves (5,7 weeks old) were given 1.0 L of warm water or 0.5 mole of one of the acids in 1.0 L of warm water. A 4 × 4 Latin square design was adopted for the experiment. The acetate group showed significantly higher plasma acetate concentrations than the other three groups between 0.25 h and 2.0 h after administration (P < 0.01). Plasma glucose concentrations did not differ markedly among the groups. The butyrate group showed significantly higher plasma ketone body concentrations than the other three groups until the end of the experiment (P < 0.01). Plasma ADH concentrations quickly rose in the butyrate group and remained significantly higher than in the other three groups from 0.25 h to 2.5 h after administration (P < 0.05). In accordance with the elevation of plasma ADH levels, the butyrate group showed decreases in urine volume and increases in urine osmolarity (P < 0.05). Plasma osmolarity and hematocrit values (Ht) were not different among the groups. These results suggest that the administration of acetate and propionate had little effect on ADH secretion. [source]


Original Article: Amniotic fluid lamellar body concentration as a marker of fetal lung maturity at term elective caesarean delivery

AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 4 2010
Susan P. WALKER
Background:, Caesarean birth, without prior labour, is associated with an increased risk of neonatal respiratory morbidity among term infants. The concentration of lamellar bodies in amniotic fluid reflects pulmonary surfactant production and release, and is thus used in preterm populations as a marker of fetal lung maturity. Whether amniotic fluid lamellar body concentration (AFLBC) may correlate with risk factors for term respiratory distress has not previously been evaluated. Aims:, To determine the relationship between AFLBC and risk factors for respiratory distress following term caesarean birth. Methods:, The AFLBC of 249 women at the time of term caesarean birth was examined for an association with gestational age, gender, presentation and neonatal respiratory distress requiring special care nursery (SCN) admission. Results:, There was a significant increase in AFLBC with gestation. When compared with caesarean deliveries performed during the 37th week of gestation, there was a 50%, 54% and 56% increase in lamellar body concentrations (LBCs) taken during the 38th, 39th and 40th week of gestation respectively (P < 0.05 for all). Female fetuses had a 16% higher LBC than males (P < 0.05). An LBC <100 × 109 mL,1 was associated with increased risk of admission to the SCN with respiratory distress (RR = 5.6; 1.2,26.5, P < 0.05). Conclusion:, Known risk factors for term respiratory distress are reflected in the AFLBC. A significant relationship exists between AFLBC and respiratory morbidity following term caesarean birth. However, the low prevalence of this condition limits the clinical role of AFLBC as a predictive test for term respiratory morbidity. [source]