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Research Article

Dose-dependent in-vivo toxicity assessment of silver nanoparticle in Wistar rats

, &
Pages 13-24 | Received 08 Jul 2010, Accepted 12 Sep 2010, Published online: 16 Nov 2010
 

Abstract

This study aims to suggest the limits of silver nanoparticle (AgNP) uses for medicinal purpose and was performed to explore the effect of various doses of silver nanoparticle in rats. Four different doses of AgNP (4, 10, 20, and 40 mg/kg) were injected intravenously. For safety evaluation of injected AgNP, body weight, organ coefficient, whole blood count, and biochemistry panel assay for liver function enzyme (AST, ALT, ALP, and GGTP), comet assay, ROS, and histological parameter were performed; 10–12 week old animals were randomly divided into groups of six individuals each for control, and doses of 40, 20, 10, and 4 mg/kg AgNP injected. Significant changes were observed (p < 0.01) in hematological parameters (WBC count, platelets counts, haemoglobin, and RBC count) in the 40 and 20 mg/kg groups. The changes were non-significant in the other groups (4 and 10 mg/kg group). In the 40 mg/kg group, a significant increase was also found in liver function enzymes like ALT and AST (p < 0.01), ALP (p < 0.01), GGTP (p < 0.01), and bilirubin (p < 0.01). ROS in blood serum increased in the high dose group. Tail migration in single cell gel electrophoresis in the 40, 20, 10, 4 mg/kg, and control groups was 34.9, 29.5, 17.8, 5.8, and 0.0 µm, respectively, which indicated damage in the DNA strand in the high dose group. EDXRF showed a ∼ 10-times increase in silver concentration in the 40 mg/kg group and TEM image also showed particle deposition in the 40 mg/kg group. This study indicates that the AgNP in doses (< 10 mg/kg) is safe for biomedical application and has no side-effects, but its high dose (> 20 mg/kg) is toxic.

Acknowledgements

Authors would like to thank AIRF, JNU staff for help in TEM and ED-XRF analysis.

Declaration of interest

Author (DKT) is thankful to the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India for a fellowship grant during the period of study (award No. 09/263 (0706)/2008/EMR-I). Authors have no conflict of interest.

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