Impacts of Oral Florfenicol Medication and Residues on the Kidney and Liver of Nile Tilapia Oreochromis niloticus (L.)
Avishek BardhanThangapalam Jawahar AbrahamJasmine SinghaRavindran RajishaEdaparambil Krishnappan Nanitha KrishnaSatyen Kumar PandaPrasanna Kumar PatilPublished in: Veterinary sciences (2023)
Florfenicol (FFC), an approved aquaculture antibiotic, is administered in feed at doses of 10-15 mg kg biomass -1 day -1 for 10 successive days. In this study, healthy Oreochromis niloticus were fed with 0-10 times the therapeutic dose of 15 mg kg biomass -1 day -1 for 10 days and tracked for 43 days post dosing. Assessments of residue accrual and depletion, oxidative stress, serum biochemistry, histopathology and extent of kidney and liver damages were made. FFC dosing reduced the feed intake significantly. The therapeutic dose produced no mortalities on day 10. Dose-dependent alterations in serum biochemistry were noted upon dosing. Several histopathological alterations were observed in the kidney and liver, which vindicated the toxic potentials of FFC. The residual FFC and florfenicol amine (FFA) accrual, depletion and oxidative stress responses, such as increased malondialdehyde, total nitric oxide, ferric reducing antioxidant power and reduced glutathione S-transferase activity, were documented. The dietary FFC persuaded the physiological state of O. niloticus , the effects of which normalized sparsely with time upon cessation of dosing at the higher doses. The study provided a brief outlook on the physiological responses upon oral FFC administration, which should be kept in mind during its application for fish health safety purposes.