Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5846114 | Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The electroencephalogram (EEG) is an apical measure, capable of detecting changes in brain neuronal activity produced by internal or external stimuli. We assessed whether pesticides with different modes of action produced different changes in the EEG of adult male Long-Evans rats. The EEG was recorded using two montages (visual cortex referenced to the cerebellum and to the frontal cortex) in unrestrained rats at the time of peak behavioral effects. Pesticides included: permethrin and deltamethrin (Type I and Type II pyrethroids; 2Â h), fipronil (single and repeated doses; phenylpyrazole; 6Â h), imidacloprid (neonicotinoid; 2Â h), carbaryl (carbamate; 0.5Â h), and triadimefon (triazole; 1Â h), using dosages that produced approximately an ED30 or an ED50-ED80 change in motor activity. Permethrin (43, 100Â mg/kg) increased amplitudes or areas (delta, alpha, or gamma bands) in the EEG. Deltamethrin (2.5, 5.5Â mg/kg) reduced the amplitudes or areas of the delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma bands, but the changes were not dose-related. A single treatment with fipronil (25, 50Â mg/kg, but not 5, 10Â mg/kg) decreased gamma band area. Additional changes in the delta, theta, and gamma bands were observed when fipronil (5, 10Â mg/kg) was administered for 14Â days. Imidacloprid (50, 100Â mg/kg) did not alter the EEG. Carbaryl (10, 50Â mg/kg) decreased theta area, and decreased delta and increased beta frequency. Triadimefon (75, 150Â mg/kg) produced minimal changes in the EEG. The results show that the EEG is affected differently by approximately equipotent doses of pesticides with different modes of action.
Keywords
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Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Authors
Danielle L. Freeborn, Katherine L. McDaniel, Virginia C. Moser, David W. Herr,