A. Malucelli et al., TISSUE DISTRIBUTION AND RESIDUES OF CLENBUTEROL, SALBUTAMOL, AND TERBUTALINE IN TISSUES OF TREATED BROILER-CHICKENS, Journal of animal science, 72(6), 1994, pp. 1555-1560
To examine the tissue distribution and residues after withdrawal of va
rious beta-agonists (i.e., clenbuterol, salbutamol, and terbutaline) 1
60 1-d-old broiler chickens were assigned to four groups. During treat
ment (16 to 35 d), the birds were fed a control diet or a diet contain
ing 1 ppm of clenbuterol, 10 ppm of salbutamol, or 10 ppm of terbutali
ne. After d 35 all groups received the control diet. Five birds of eac
h group were then slaughtered and tissues were collected on d 0, 1, 2,
3, 7, 14, and 43 following withdrawal of beta-agonists from the feed.
Extraction of beta-agonists from the tissues was carried out by a new
method using hetero-bifunctional solid phase extraction. The amount o
f beta-agonists in the extracts was measured by an enzyme immunoassay
(EIA). The highest concentrations of P-agonists were found in feathers
: 224 ng of clenbuterol/g, 1,140 ng of salbutamol/g, and 1,159 ng of t
erbutaline/g. Clenbuterol accumulated above plasma levels in all tissu
es that were investigated (liver, kidney, stomach, muscle, fat, feathe
r, eye). Salbutamol was most concentrated in feather, eye, liver, and
kidney; terbutaline accumulated only in feather, liver, and kidney. Ov
erall, clenbuterol showed the highest accumulation in the tissues anal
yzed. A withdrawal period of greater than 2 wk was required for residu
es in edible tissues to decline below detectable levels.