Common Quail (Coturnix coturnix) were subjected to controlled and replicated experiments in the summer of 2008 to investigate the effects of short-term dehydration on cholinesterase activity in brain and plasma and the interaction between dehydration and exposure to the organophosphorus pesticide dicrotophos in these same tissues. Our objective was to determine if dehydration could confound the diagnosis of anticholinesterase exposure using inhibition of cholinesterase activity in quail tissues. The effect of dehydration was quantified using measures of plasma osmolality and hematocrit. Dicrotophos exposure caused significant inhibition of cholinesterase activity in brain, while the effects of dehydration and interaction were not significant. Dehydration caused significant duration-dependent increases in plasma osmolality and hematocrit. Dehydration also caused a significant increase in plasma cholinesterase activity. Variation in the change in plasma cholinesterase activity in response to dehydration was significantly and positively correlated with dehydration-induced variation in both the change in plasma osmolality and the change in hematocrit. These correlations suggest that plasma cholinesterase activity in quail is not limited to plasma but occupies some larger pool of the extracellular fluid volume, and we suggest lymph is part of that pool. The effects of dehydration on plasma cholinesterase activity masked the inhibitory effects of dicrotophos. Here, the combination of dehydration and dicrotophos exposure produced plasma cholinesterase activity that was not significantly different from reference and pre-exposure values, confounding the diagnosis of anticholinesterase exposure in dehydrated, dicrotophos-exposed quail. A method to adjust plasma cholinesterase activities for the confounding effects of dehydration and enable the diagnosis of anticholinesterase exposure in dehydrated, dicrotophos-exposed quail was developed. Clinicians and practitioners responsible for the diagnosis of anticholinesterase exposure in birds are cautioned that dehydration, commonly observed in sick wildlife, may mask the effect of anticholinesterases on plasma cholinesterase activity.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
EXPERIMENTAL DISEASE|
July 01 2012
COMBINED EFFECT OF SHORT-TERM DEHYDRATION AND SUBLETHAL ACUTE ORAL DICROTOPHOS EXPOSURE CONFOUNDS THE DIAGNOSIS OF ANTICHOLINESTERASE EXPOSURE IN COMMON QUAIL (COTURNIX COTURNIX) USING PLASMA CHOLINESTERASE ACTIVITY
James Heffernan;
James Heffernan
3
1 Toxicology Centre, University of Saskatchewan, 44 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5B3, Canada
3 Corresponding author (email: jwh168@mail.usask.ca)
Search for other works by this author on:
Pierre Mineau;
Pierre Mineau
2 Science and Technology Branch, Environment Canada, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0H3, Canada
Search for other works by this author on:
Ramona Falk;
Ramona Falk
1 Toxicology Centre, University of Saskatchewan, 44 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5B3, Canada
Search for other works by this author on:
Mark Wickstrom
Mark Wickstrom
1 Toxicology Centre, University of Saskatchewan, 44 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5B3, Canada
Search for other works by this author on:
J Wildl Dis (2012) 48 (3): 695–706.
Article history
Received:
August 29 2011
Accepted:
January 10 2012
Citation
James Heffernan, Pierre Mineau, Ramona Falk, Mark Wickstrom; COMBINED EFFECT OF SHORT-TERM DEHYDRATION AND SUBLETHAL ACUTE ORAL DICROTOPHOS EXPOSURE CONFOUNDS THE DIAGNOSIS OF ANTICHOLINESTERASE EXPOSURE IN COMMON QUAIL (COTURNIX COTURNIX) USING PLASMA CHOLINESTERASE ACTIVITY. J Wildl Dis 1 July 2012; 48 (3): 695–706. doi: https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-48.3.695
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
EVALUATION OF THE EFFECT OF HYDRATED LIME ON THE SCAVENGING OF FERAL SWINE (SUS SCROFA) CARCASSES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR MANAGING CARCASS-BASED TRANSMISSION OF AFRICAN SWINE FEVER VIRUS
Courtney F. Bowden, James Grinolds, Gregory Franckowiak, Lorna McCallister, Joseph Halseth, Matthew Cleland, Travis Guerrant, Michael Bodenchuk, Robert Miknis, Michael C. Marlow, Vienna R. Brown
Fatal Systemic Haemosporidiosis in a Free-ranging Greater Sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)
Deborah L. A. Chong, Brittany McHale, Kayla B. Garrett, Michael J. Yabsley
Tacheng Tick Virus 1 and Songling Virus Infection in Great Gerbils (Rhombomys opimus) in Northwestern China
Na Ji, Nan Wang, Gang Liu, Shanshan Zhao, Zhiqiang Liu, Wenbo Tan, Shiyi Wang, Jinjiang Sheng, Fengshi Li, Yuanzhi Wang
Disease Surveillance of Cougars (Puma concolor) in Utah, USA
Annette Roug, Kristin Engebretsen, Arnaud van Wettere, Julie K. Young
Trypanosoma cruzi Survey in Poached Pichis (Zaedyus pichiy; Mammalia, Cingulata) from Mendoza, Argentina
Melisa E. Morales, Catalina Muñoz-San Martín, Pedro E. Cattan, Mariella Superina