The calcium salt of valproic acid (Valontin) has been proposed for use in the treatment of absence, myoclonic, and tonic clonic seizures of the primarily generalized type. The present study was conducted to determine the teratogenic potential of calcium valproate in rabbits. Groups of 20 Dutch-belted rabbits were given oral doses of 50, 150, or 350 mg/kg on days 6-18 of gestation. A reference group was given 350 mg/kg sodium valproate and control groups were untreated or given vehicle alone. Animals were observed daily and body weights were recorded on gestation days 0, 6, 13, 18, and 30. Litter and fetal parameters were evaluated following uterotomies on day 30. No drug-related clinical signs or deaths occurred. Postimplantation loss and the incidence of malformed vertebrae and ribs, rudimentary or absent pollices, and extra vertebrae and ribs were increased at 350 mg/kg with both calcium and sodium salts of valproic acid. At the 150-mg/kg dose level, calcium valproate markedly increased the incidence of supernumerary ribs. No teratogenic or embryotoxic effects were seen with calcium valproate at 50 mg/kg. These data indicate that the sodium and calcium salts of valproic acid exhibit teratogenic potential in rabbits.
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SummaryRat offspring malformed as a result of maternal exposure to a teratogen were cannibalized preferentially to apparently normal offspring. Lack of viability also appeared to be a factor in the cannibalistic tendency, since both normal and malformed dead pups were consumed more frequently than viable pups of either category. Of the 29 cannibalized pups observed, 86 % were cannibalized in the 1st 24 h.
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