TOXICOLOGY RESEARCH, cilt.13, sa.5, 2024 (SCI-Expanded)
Background The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of baicalin and baicalin-bovine serum albumin nanoparticles against bendiocarb exposure in rats.Methods Eighty male Wistar Albino rats aged 4-6 weeks were used. Corn oil (vehicle) alone was administered to the control group. To other groups, BSA-nanoparticle equivalent to that binding baicalin at a dose of 20 mg/kg.bw, 20 mg/kg.bw baicalin, baicalin-BSA nanoparticle equivalent to that binding baicalin at a dose of 20 mg/kg.bw, 4 mg/kg.bw bendiocarb, combination of 4 mg/kg.bw bendiocarb and 20 mg/kg.bw baicalin, combination of 4 mg/kg.bw bendiocarb and BSA-nanoparticle equivalent to that binding baicalin at a dose of 20 mg/kg.bw and combination of 4 mg/kg.bw bendiocarb and baicalin-BSA nanoparticle equivalent to that binding baicalin at a dose of 20 mg/kg.bw was administered to animals by oral gavage with vehicle for 21 days, after which organs (liver, kidney, brain, testes, heart and lung) and blood samples were collected. Blood/tissue oxidative stress (MDA, NO, GSH, SOD, CAT, GSH-Px, GR, GST, G6PD), serum biochemical (glucose, triglyceride, cholesterol, BUN, creatinine, uric acid, total protein, albumin, LDH, AST, ALT, ALP and pseudocholinesterase) and liver and kidney apoptotic/anti-apoptotic (caspase 3, 9, p53, Bcl-2 and Bax) parameters were evaluated. Body weights/organ weights and plasma/liver bendiocarb analyses were obtained.Conclusion While bendiocarb administered alone caused oxidative stress/tissue damage, baicalin and baicalin-BSA nanoparticle showed a mitigating effect. However, this effect was more pronounced in the baicalin-BSA nanoparticle group. BSA-nanoparticle alone did not have a significant effect in reversing the adverse effect caused by bendiocarb.