Prenatal exposure to low concentrations of carbon monoxide alters habituation and non-spatial working memory in rat offspring

Giustino, A; Cagiano, R; Carratu, MR; Cassano, T; Tattoli, M; Cuomo, V

HERO ID

11538

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1999

Language

English

PMID

10536278

HERO ID 11538
In Press No
Year 1999
Title Prenatal exposure to low concentrations of carbon monoxide alters habituation and non-spatial working memory in rat offspring
Authors Giustino, A; Cagiano, R; Carratu, MR; Cassano, T; Tattoli, M; Cuomo, V
Journal Brain Research
Volume 844
Issue 1-2
Page Numbers 201-205
Abstract Inhalation of low concentrations (75 and 150 ppm) of carbon monoxide (CO) by pregnant rats from days 0 to 20 of gestation leads to alterations in habituation and working memory in young adult male offspring subjected to the novel exploration object test. In particular, lack of habituation upon the second presentation of the objects and failure in the ability to discriminate between the novel and the familiar object were found in CO (75 and 150 ppm)-exposed offspring. These alterations were not accompanied by changes in spontaneous motor activity (open field test). The subtle behavioral deficits observed in the present study have been produced by prenatal exposure to CO levels resulting in maternal blood carboxyhaemoglobin (HbCO) concentrations equivalent to those observed in human cigarette smokers.
Doi 10.1016/S0006-8993(99)01832-6
Pmid 10536278
Wosid WOS:000083391400024
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments ECRIB. Breve over u in Carratu.Brain Res. 844: 201-205.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword carbon monoxide; prenatal exposure; working memory; habituation; rat offspring
Is Qa No