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Changes in selected blood component values of rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri Richardson, following the blocking of the cortisol stress response with betamethasone and subsequent exposure to phenol or hypoxia
Authors:D. J. Swift
Affiliation:Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research, Fisheries Laboratory, Lowestoft, Suffolk NR33 OHT, U.K.
Abstract:Cortisol was undetectable in rainbow trout plasma 24 h after the fish had been injected with betamethasone. This drug is known to suppress ACTH release and, consequently, cortisol production in teleosts. The blood glucose, chloride, sodium, potassium and total protein concentrations were not significantly affected by betamethasone. However, significantly increased blood packed cell volume values were found.
Betamethasone-injected fish when exposed to hypoxia or phenol had a pattern of blood component changes similar to those found in sham-injected fish also exposed to the pollutants. These changes in turn were similar to those found in exposed but uninjected and unhandled fish. Suppression of rainbow trout plasma cortisol concentrations with betamethasone apparently has no effect on the fish's short-term blood component responses to pollutants under the conditions used in these experiments, but does prevent a stressormediated increase in plasma cortisol concentrations.
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