Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 1 de 1
Filter
Add filters








Language
Year range
1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 31(3): 439-43, Mar. 1998. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-212281

ABSTRACT

Bothrops erythromelas is responsible for many snake bites in northeastern Brazil. In the present study we determined the in vivo distribution of the venom following its subcutaneous injection into mice. B. erythromelas venom and albumin were labeled individually with I by the chloramine T method, and separated in a Sephacrylr S-200 column. The efficiency of labeling was 68 percent. Male Swiss mice (40-45 g), which had been provided with drinking water containing 0.05 percent KI over a period of 10 days prior to the experiment, were inoculated dorsally(sc) with 03. ml (2.35 x 10(5) cpm/mouse) of I-venom (N=42), I-albumin or I (controls, N=28 each). Thirty minutes and 1, 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24 h after inoculation, the animals were perfused with 0.85 percent NaCl and skin and various organs were collected in order to determine radioactivity content. There was a high rate of venom absorption in the skin (51 percent) within the first 30 min compared to albumin (20.1 percent) and free iodine (8.2 percent). Up to the third hour after injection there was a tendency for venom and albumin to concentrate in the stomach (3rd h), small intestine (3rd h) and large intestine (6th h). Both control groups had more radioactivity in the digestive tract, especially in the stomach, but these levels decreased essentially to baseline by 12-18 h postinjection. In the kidneys, the distribution profiles of venom, albumin and iodine were similar. Counts at 30 min postinjection were low in all three groups (1.37, 1.86 and 0.77, respectively), and diminished to essentially 0 percent by 12-18 h. Albumin tended to concentrate in muscle until the 3rd h postinjection (1.98 percent). There was a low binding of labeled venom is the liver (<0.54 percent), thyroid (<0.11 percent) and lungs (<0.08 percent), and no iodinated venom was detected in brain, heart, diaphragm, spleen or bladder. The low venom binding observed in most internal organs, comparable to that of albumin, suggests that B. erythromelas venom does not specifically target most internal organs. That is, the systemic effects of envenomation are mainly due to an indirect action.


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Male , Bothrops , Crotalid Venoms/pharmacokinetics , Albumins , Crotalid Venoms/chemistry , Crotalid Venoms/toxicity , Injections, Subcutaneous , Mice
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL