Methyl mercury decomposition in mice treated with antibiotics
- PMID: 7342686
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0773.1981.tb00903.x
Methyl mercury decomposition in mice treated with antibiotics
Abstract
The role of intestinal flora in the decomposition and faecal excretion of methyl mercury was studied in mice treated with antibiotics. The antibiotics, neomycin sulfate and chloramphenicol, were given to mice in drinking water for six days before intraperitoneal administration of methyl mercuric chloride (MMC), and intestinal microorganisms were thereby reduced. Inorganic and organic mercury were determined separately for faeces, intestinal contents and organs. On the fourth day after the mercury administration, the percentage ratios of inorganic mercury to total mercury in the contents of the caecum and large intestine were less in the mice treated with antibiotics, at 37% and 39%, respectively, than in the control mice (66% and 65%, respectively). Administration of the antibiotics reduced the excretion of inorganic mercury in the faeces to 26% of that of control mice and also reduced the excretion of total mercury to 60%. Reduction of intestinal microorganisms by the antibiotics was assumed to have caused the reduced decomposition of methyl mercury in the caecal contents and the reduced excretion of total mercury in the faeces.
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