Title of article :
Acute and Synergistic Toxicity of Drugs in Water by Luminescent Bacteria Assay
Author/Authors :
Ioele, Giuseppina Department of Pharmacy - Health and Nutritional Sciences - University of Calabria - 87036 Rende (CS), Italy , De Luca, Michele Department of Pharmacy - Health and Nutritional Sciences - University of Calabria - 87036 Rende (CS), Italy , Grande, Fedora Department of Pharmacy - Health and Nutritional Sciences - University of Calabria - 87036 Rende (CS), Italy , Ragno, Gaetano Department of Pharmacy - Health and Nutritional Sciences - University of Calabria - 87036 Rende (CS), Italy
Abstract :
The acute toxicity in water of a series of drugs, including antibiotics, antihistamines, antifungals, steroidal and non-steroidal antiinflammatories,
was evaluated through the measurement of bioluminescence from the bacterium Vibrio fischeri. The drugs were spiked in
water at concentration in the range 1.0-50.0 g ml-1, distributed over six concentration levels, and their toxicity evaluated in terms of
response rate calculated along 30 min of incubation. The test was also applied to real river samples previously assayed by the HPLC
method. The parameters LOEC (lowest observable effect concentration) and EC50 (half effective concentration) were calculated.
Chlortetracycline, promethazine, betamethasone, ketoconazole and econazole were found to be very toxic. Diclofenac and ketoprofen
showed toxicity only at the highest concentrations tested. Clindamycin, neomycin and oxatomide induced a decrease in bioluminescence
but below the toxicity limits. In contrast, erythromycin and diphenhydramine showed an increase in bioluminescence, known as hormesis.
The toxicity was amplified in samples containing drug mixtures, demonstrating additive or synergistic activity.
Keywords :
Drug toxicity , Water pollution , Risk assessment , Synergistic effect , Luminescent bacteria test
Journal title :
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry Research