Teratogenic effects of a single oral administration of methylmercuric chloride in mice

Abstract
The teratogenic effects of methylmercuric chloride (MMC) given orally as a single dose to pregnant ICR mice on day 10 of gestation were examined. The doses tested were 25, 20, 15 and 10 mg/kg. Controls received distilled water orally. Each group consisted of 20 females. Fetuses were taken on day 18 of gestation for teratological study. The number of resorbed or dead embryos was moderately increased in the 25 mg/kg group. Fetuses from dams given 25, 20 and 15 mg/kg MMC weighed significantly less than those in the control group. Many fetuses with malformations were observed in the treated groups; cleft palate occurred in 100, 58.6 and 28.0% of fetuses from dams given 25,20 and 15 mg/kg MMC, respectively (statistically significant). Hydronephrosis appeared in 23.8 and 18.5% of fetuses from dams given 25 and 20 mg/kg MMC, respectively (statistically significant). Skeletal variations, incomplete ossification of sternebrae, for example, were also observed in the treated groups. These results indicate that MMC is teratogenic so far as cleft palate is concerned and embryotoxic in ICR mice.

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