4.6 Article

Characterization and quantification of chlordecone elimination in ewes

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.etap.2021.103698

Keywords

Chlordecone; Ruminants; Depuration; Chlordecol; Faeces

Funding

  1. CLD National Plan III
  2. research program INSSICCA PITE
  3. MESRI (Ministere de l'En-seignement superieur, de la Recherche et de l'Innovation, France)

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The study found that the major route of excretion for chlordecone in contaminated ewes is through feces, accounting for 86% of the administered dose, with 51% as chlordecone and 35% as chlordecol.
To reduce the exposure of the French West Indies population to the organochlorine insecticide chlordecone (Kepone; CLD), the contamination of currently consumed foodstuffs must be reduced. Depuration of contaminated animals before slaughter could be a strategy to obtain safe animal products. The aim of this study was to characterize and quantify CLD elimination in contaminated ewes during depuration process. Experiments A and B consisted in a single intravenous (i.v.) administration of CLD (n = 5) and CLDOH (chlordecol; n = 3) followed by a 84-d and 3-d depuration period respectively with collection of blood, faeces and urine samples. After CLD administration, CLD and conjugated-CLDOH (CLDOH-C) were quantified in serum and urine and CLD and CLDOH were quantified in faeces. Based on calculations of faecal, urinary and body clearances of CLD and CLDOH-C, faeces appeared as the major route of CLD excretion with 86 % of the CLD administered dose eliminated in faeces, either as CLD (51 %) or as CLDOH (35 %).

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