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Are early and young life stages of fish affected by paroxetine? A case study with Danio rerio
Summary
Researchers tested how the antidepressant paroxetine affects zebrafish at different life stages, finding it caused spinal deformities and reduced swimming activity at environmentally relevant concentrations. Importantly, the behavioral impairment persisted even after a 21-day clean-water recovery period, suggesting that pharmaceutical pollution from treated wastewater may cause lasting harm to wild fish populations.
Paroxetine (PAR) is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant increasingly detected in surface waters worldwide. Its environmental presence raises concerns about the potential detrimental effects on non-target organisms. Thus, this study aimed to increase knowledge on PAR's potential environmental impacts, assessing the effects of commercial formulation (PAR-c) and active ingredient (PAR-a) on fish. Therefore, the short-term exposure effects of PAR-c and PAR-a were assessed on zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos/larvae to determine the most toxic formulation [through median lethal (LC<sub>50</sub>) and effective concentrations (EC<sub>50</sub>)]. PAR-c and PAR-a induced morphological abnormalities (scoliosis) in a dose-dependent manner from 96 hours post-fertilization onwards, suggesting the involvement of a fully functional biotransformation system. As PAR-c exhibited higher toxicity, it was selected to be tested in the subsequent stage (juvenile stage), which was more sensitive (lower LC<sub>50</sub>). PAR-c significantly decreased fish swimming activity and disrupted fish stress response. Overall, the results highlight the ability of PAR-c to adversely affect fish swimming performance, an effect that persisted even after exposure ceases (21-day depuration), suggesting that PAR-c may impair individual fitness.
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