Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2785966 International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We investigated the role of dose of prenatal ethanol on offspring behavioral development.•Prenatal ethanol impairs locomotor activity and attention in rodents.•Prenatal ethanol results increase of omission errors in the 5-CSRTT.

RationaleDecline of attentional performance as a function of time engaged on a task and hyperactivity are features shared by children and adults with fetal alcohol syndrome or attentional deficit and hyperactivity disorders.ObjectiveTo investigate the effects of prenatal exposure to two doses of ethanol on developmental milestones, locomotor activity and attention.MethodsWistar rats born from dams exposed to one of four maternal treatments during pregnancy were used: A35 – liquid diet with 35% ethanol-derived calories; A10 – liquid diet with 10% ethanol-derived calories; control – ethanol-free liquid diet; chow – laboratory chow and water.ResultsA35 performed worse in grip strength than control and chow (postnatal day – 14, p < 0.05) but not in negative geotaxis (postnatal days 7–10); A35 also showed more locomotor activity than control and A10 (p < 0.05). Regarding attention, acquisition of the five choice reaction time task was similar between groups, but, the percentage of omission errors from A35 group was greater than other groups at baseline parameters, at shorter (2 s) and longer (7 s) inter-trial intervals and at a shorter stimulus duration (0.5 s) (p < 0.05). The percentage of omissions was larger in A35 as the blocks progressed in sessions with either longer or shorter inter-trial intervals (group × block p < 0.05). Animals from A10 group did not show any impairment in the tasks performed.ConclusionsOur study demonstrates that as well as developmental impairments, prenatal ethanol can produce deficits associated with an increase in attentional demand in rodents, analogous to those observed in fetal alcohol syndrome and attentional deficit and hyperactivity disorders.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Developmental Biology
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