Dear Colleagues,

The following paper has just been published in Harmful Algae.


http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2012.07.004

Montie, E.W., Wheeler, E., Pussini, N., Battey, T.W.K., Van Bonn, W., Gulland, 
F. Magnetic resonance imaging reveals that brain atrophy is more severe in 
older California sea lions with domoic acid toxicosis. Harmful Algae (2012), 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2012.07.004

ABSTRACT

In 1998, domoic acid (DA) toxicosis was first documented in marine mammals, 
when more than 400 California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) were 
determined to have been exposed to DA through contaminated prey that was linked 
to a bloom of toxin-producing diatoms. Over the last fifteen years, these 
blooms have increased in frequency and distribution, and DA toxicosis has 
become a more complex disease. Evidence with laboratory animals show that DA 
can cause epilepsy, may affect brain development, and may have synergistic 
effects with some pollutants. Detecting these effects in marine mammals 
requires quantitative methods to evaluate brain morphology in live animals. In 
this study, our goal was to employ magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to examine 
the morphologic effects of DA toxicosis on the brain in live, wild California 
sea lions admitted to a rehabilitation center. We performed MRIs and 
volumetrics of brain structures of 53 sea lions that exhibited clinical signs 
of acute or chronic DA intoxication. We found that the volumes of the 
hippocampi and parahippocampal gyri of sea lions with chronic DA toxicosis were 
less than the volumes of these structures in non-DA intoxicated animals. In 
addition, adult sea lions with chronic DA toxicosis had more structural damage 
to the brain than younger animals. This pattern may be explained by one or more 
of the following possibilities: (i) repetitive, sublethal exposure; (ii) 
increased susceptibility of adults to DA compared to younger animals; and/or 
(iii) initial exposure to the toxin followed by the progressive effects of 
ongoing seizure activity. Of these three possibilities, increased 
susceptibility and progressive effects of ongoing seizure activity most likely 
explain why atrophy of the hippocampus and thinning of the parahippocampal 
gyrus is most severe in adults.

Sincerely,
Eric Montie

Eric W. Montie
Assistant Professor of Biology
Department of Natural Sciences
University of South Carolina Beaufort
One University Boulevard
Bluffton, SC 29909

Office Phone: (843) 208-8107
Fax: (843) 208-8294
Email: [email protected]

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