Developmental neurotoxicity following premating maternal exposure to hexachlorobenzene in rats. |
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Authors: | E S Goldey D H Taylor |
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Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056. |
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Abstract: | The maternal transfer of hexachlorobenzene (HCB) may place the developing organism at risk. The present study assessed the developmental neurotoxicity of HCB using a battery of behavioral tests. Two weeks prior to breeding, maternal rats were exposed via gavage to either 10 or 100 mg HCB/kg body weight. Behaviors evaluated in pups exposed maternally to HCB included the negative geotaxic reflex on postnatal day (PND) 6, 8, and 10, olfactory discrimination (PND 9-11), and the development of exploratory behavior (PND 15-20). Significant effects in these three tests indicated hyperactivity in HCB-exposed pups. No significant effects on learning (swim T-maze) or motor activity were detected in older offspring (PND 40 and 50 respectively). The acoustic startle response (ASR) revealed apparent age-related effects of maternal HCB exposure. On PND 23 pups from the high treatment group demonstrated significantly reduced ASR amplitude, whereas these same animals, tested on PND 90 (using a reflex modification design), showed elevated ASR amplitude relative to the controls. This work demonstrates that HCB is a behavioral teratogen, and suggests that human fetuses and suckling infants may be at risk from the neurotoxic effects of HCB. |
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