With this study, the researchers hope to find out more about how sunlight impacts organs such as the liver, brain, and heart as well as organs such as the kidney, lung, and ileum. Methods: A total of fourteen female rats weighing 235 g were employed in the investigation, and they were evenly divided into two groups. While the rats in the test groups were maintained in cages in the animal house at an ambient temperature of 26 degrees Celsius for a period of 7 hours daily to provide appropriate exposure to sunshine, the rats in the control groups were housed in cages at an ambient temperature of 26 degrees Celsius.

As soon as all of the animals died on the tenth day of the study, samples of various tissues were taken and preserved in 10 percent neutral buffered formalin before being stained with hematoxylin and eosin, as previously described (H & E). Following were the findings: there was no death. Results revealed that there was no obvious lesion in any of the tissues of the control rats, whereas pathological characteristics such as severe coronary vascular congestion and mild pulmonary congestion, as well as thickening of the alveolar wall, were found in the heart and lung of the sun-exposed rats.

Furthermore, other tissues such as the brain, ileum, kidney, and liver in the sun-exposed rats did not show any apparent signs of damage. As a result, it is possible to conclude from the findings of this study that excessive sun exposure can be fatal in nocturnal animal species, with death arising from damage to numerous organs.

This study’s findings suggest that excessive sun exposure in nocturnal animal species can result in the death of the animals and other organisms, which occurs as a result of multi-organ damage.

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