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Effects of early life undernutrition in artificially-reared rats. 2. Subsequent behaviour
Authors:J Tonkiss  J L Smart  R F Massey
Institution:Department of Child Health, University of Manchester Medical School.
Abstract:Four groups of rat pups were reared: mother-reared control (well-fed) and undernourished (MRC, MRU) and artificially-reared control and undernourished (ARC, ARU). AR rats were fed expressed rats' milk (days 5-7), mixtures of rats' milk and milk substitute (days 8-16), and milk substitute only (days 17-20) by intermittent infusion via a gastric cannula. Undernutrition, imposed from 5-25 days, was effected initially by underfeeding the mother (MRU) or by infusing restricted quantities of milk (ARU). Weaning was at 21 days and undernutrition from 21-25 days was by restricting the supply of solid food. All rats were fed ad lib from 25 days. From 18 weeks, male rats were subjected to 3 behavioural tests: open field, social behaviour (encounters between rats of like treatment group) and bar-pressing for food (CRF, FR5, VI 1', VI 2' and Extinction). Previously undernourished rats responded at higher rates on FR5, received fewer rewards on VI 2' and displayed more aggression during social interaction. These findings may reflect direct effects of nutrition on brain growth. In the open field and social situations ARU were generally less active than ARC animals, whereas MRU and MRC rats differed little. These results are discussed in terms of MRU pups being maternally "buffered" against the worst effects of undernutrition and ARC rats displaying characteristics of "early stimulated" animals.
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