Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Arch Environ Health ; 59(1): 31-6, 2004 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16053207

ABSTRACT

The authors investigated the impact of effluents from a car battery manufacturing plant in Nnewi, Nigeria, on water, soil, and food qualities. The authors analyzed heavy metals mercury, arsenic, lead, cadmium and nickel in tap and cassava waters, soil, dried cassava tuber, and edible fruit samples from the company, using an atomic absorption spectrophotometer. Other parameters the authors analyzed include pH, electrical conductivity (EC), salinity (SAL), total hardness (TH), biological oxygen demand (BOD), volatile and non-volatile solids, and bacterial and fungal loads of the soil samples. Results show that lead had the highest concentration in all the samples, with the soil samples having the highest lead concentration (38-12 ppm, 102 ppm) and the water samples having the lowest (0.02-0.20 ppm). Mercury had the lowest concentration (<0.0002 ppm) in all the samples. Soil sample B had the highest concentration of all the metals tested. Cassava water had higher levels of EC, SAL, TH, BOD, and volatile and nonvolatile solids, but lower pH than tap water. Bacterial loads were higher than fungal loads in all the soil samples. Because there was moderate contamination of the environment by some of the metals studied, with lead being exceptionally high and above the specified international standards, the authors recommend control measures to reduce lead exposure to the local populace within and around this industry.


Subject(s)
Automobiles , Environmental Pollution/analysis , Metals, Heavy/toxicity , Soil/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity , Water Supply/analysis , Arsenic/toxicity , Cadmium/toxicity , Ecosystem , Electric Conductivity , Food Contamination/analysis , Humans , Industry , Lead/toxicity , Manufactured Materials/analysis , Manufactured Materials/toxicity , Mercury/toxicity , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Metals, Heavy/chemistry , Nickel/toxicity , Nigeria , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Soil Pollutants/toxicity , Spectrophotometry, Atomic , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
2.
Biol Pharm Bull ; 25(8): 1022-5, 2002 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12186402

ABSTRACT

The aqueous leaf extract of rinbacin was tested for toxic effects on prepubertal rat kidneys following chronic administration. Two doses of rinbacin extract (26.25 g/l and 52.50 g/l) were administered in the rats' drinking water for 13 weeks, and various toxicologic indices tested. Histological study of the kidneys was also carried out at the expiration of the test period. Rinbacin at both dose sizes significantly (p<0.05) increased the absolute and relative kidney weights. Also the serum HCO3- level was significantly (p<0.05) increased, while the serum K+ level was decreased significantly at both dose levels. Only the high dose significantly (p<0.05) increased the serum urea level of the rats. Histological study showed that rinbacin at both dose sizes caused renal pathologic changes, which included necrosis and cellular infiltration of glomeruli and epithelia of the tubules. The effects were less marked in the low dose than the high dose group. Chronic administration of rinbacin extract induces nephrotoxicity in young rats.


Subject(s)
Kidney/drug effects , Kidney/pathology , Plant Extracts/toxicity , Plants, Medicinal/toxicity , Animals , Kidney/metabolism , Male , Nigeria , Plant Leaves , Rats
3.
Biol Pharm Bull ; 25(2): 206-8, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11853167

ABSTRACT

Rinbacin is a local Nigerian herbal remedy. The effects of rinbacin on testicular histology were studied in prepubertal rats. Sexually immature male rats, divided into seven per group, were given rinbacin in drinking waters at 0, 26.25 g/l, or 52.50 g/l for 13 weeks, after which the animals were killed and testes excised, weighed, and processed for histologic study. The epididymal sperm number (ESN) was determined. There were no significant effects of either the low or high doses of rinbacin on fluid intake, body weight, testicular weight, and testis-body weight ratio. There was, however, a significant (p<0.05) decrease in the ESN of animals at both doses of rinbacin. Histologic examination of the testes indicated that the high dose of rinbacin induced significant degenerative changes, while the low dose had only a mild effect on testicular histology. Rinbacin decreases the ESN and causes degenerative lesions, especially at the high dose, in prepubertal rats.


Subject(s)
Phytotherapy/adverse effects , Plant Extracts/toxicity , Testis/drug effects , Animals , Body Weight/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Male , Nigeria , Rats , Sperm Count , Testis/pathology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...