[Arsenic metabolism. (17) Studies of placental transfer of arsenic and the effects of antidotes and diet]

Nihon Yakurigaku Zasshi. 1976 Sep;72(6):673-87.
[Article in Japanese]

Abstract

Albino rats of Wistar strain (Tamura 1950) breeded in a closed colony were administered arsenic trioxide orally during pregnancy (from the 0 day to the 20th day). Organs of fetuses and mother rats were exenterated on the 21st day of gestation and the contents of arsenic measured using an arsenic analyzer unit with atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Whole organs of the fetus were separated into 3 groupings i.e. liver, brain and remaining organs. The contents of arsenic in the organs in each of these groupings and in the placenta were measured. Even in the non-administered group, arsenic was detected in the every organ. In the arsenic administered group, the content of arsenic in the placenta was the highest among the four preparations tested; and the content in the liver and remaining organs was considerably high, but was low in the brain. The level of accumulation of arsenic differed between each organ. In the placenta, the accumulation reached a plateau, and in the brain this accumulation was below one-tenth that in the liver. In the non-administered group, arsenic was detected in the liver, kidney, spleen and brain of mother rats. In the group on arsenite, the content in the kidney and spleen was large, followed by a large amount in the liver and in the brain respectively. The level of accumulation of arsenic in mother rats differed between each organ. Arsenite was administered with antidotes such as dimercaprol, thioctic acid and L-ascorbic acid during pregnancy (from the 0 day to the 5th day). In this group the content of arsenic in the remaining organs was statistically less than that of the control group. The content in the brain was slightly reduced by a co-administration of the antidotes, however, there was no statistical difference in the placenta and liver between the antidote-treated and control groups. The content of arsenic in the kidney of mother rats treated with antidotes was statistically less than that of the controls. Whether or not the content of arsenic in organs of fetuses and mother rats was affected by a milk diet was also studied. The content of arsenic in the organs of fetuses showed no statistical difference between the animals on an Oriental stock diet group and those on the milk diet. On the other hand, the content of arsenic in the kidney of mother rats on the milk diet was statistically less than seen in those in the Oriental stock diet group.

Publication types

  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Antidotes / pharmacology*
  • Arsenic / metabolism*
  • Ascorbic Acid / pharmacology*
  • Diet*
  • Dimercaprol / pharmacology*
  • Female
  • Fetus / metabolism
  • Male
  • Maternal-Fetal Exchange* / drug effects
  • Pregnancy
  • Rats
  • Statistics as Topic
  • Thioctic Acid / pharmacology*

Substances

  • Antidotes
  • Dimercaprol
  • Thioctic Acid
  • Arsenic
  • Ascorbic Acid