TY - JOUR
T1 - Exposure to ethanol during pregnancy in mice
T2 - Potential importance of dose for the development of tolerance in offspring
AU - Perez, Vernon J.
AU - Gonzalez, Guillermo E.
AU - Smith, Constance J.
N1 - Funding Information:
was supported by a grant from the Graduate School at Texas Tech University.
PY - 1983/3
Y1 - 1983/3
N2 - CD-1 albino mice were given Portagen-10 percent ethanol (ETOH) or isocaloric Portagen-sucrose during pregnancy to determine if tolerance developed in utero and to describe the temporal pattern of its decline postnatally. ETOH mothers did not significantly increase their consumption of ETOH but gained in body weight during pregnancy, showed no signs in the open field of withdrawal from ETOH shortly after delivery and showed less pup-caring behavior than pair-fed controls (PFC). Among offspring 1, 3, 10, 25 and 60 days old, only 25-day old ETOH pups metabolized and cleared an anesthetic dose of ETOH more efficiently than PFC animals, suggesting the absence of Dispositional Tolerance in the other animals. PFC offspring 10 days old took significantly longer to lose the righting reflex than their ETOH counterparts following the anesthetic dose of ETOH, the difference being opposite that which would suggest the occurrence of Adaptive Tolerance. Data are discussed primarily in terms of decreases in dose of ETOH to which mothers and fetuses were exposed during pregnancy.
AB - CD-1 albino mice were given Portagen-10 percent ethanol (ETOH) or isocaloric Portagen-sucrose during pregnancy to determine if tolerance developed in utero and to describe the temporal pattern of its decline postnatally. ETOH mothers did not significantly increase their consumption of ETOH but gained in body weight during pregnancy, showed no signs in the open field of withdrawal from ETOH shortly after delivery and showed less pup-caring behavior than pair-fed controls (PFC). Among offspring 1, 3, 10, 25 and 60 days old, only 25-day old ETOH pups metabolized and cleared an anesthetic dose of ETOH more efficiently than PFC animals, suggesting the absence of Dispositional Tolerance in the other animals. PFC offspring 10 days old took significantly longer to lose the righting reflex than their ETOH counterparts following the anesthetic dose of ETOH, the difference being opposite that which would suggest the occurrence of Adaptive Tolerance. Data are discussed primarily in terms of decreases in dose of ETOH to which mothers and fetuses were exposed during pregnancy.
KW - Adaptive tolerance
KW - Blood ethanol
KW - CD-1 Mice
KW - Dispositional tolerance
KW - Ethanol
KW - Ethanol in pregnancy
KW - Ethanol metabolism
KW - Maternal behavior
KW - Maternal-pup interaction
KW - Neonatal ethanol metabolism
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U2 - 10.1016/0031-9384(83)90156-7
DO - 10.1016/0031-9384(83)90156-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 6867145
AN - SCOPUS:0020965542
SN - 0031-9384
VL - 30
SP - 485
EP - 488
JO - Physiology and Behavior
JF - Physiology and Behavior
IS - 3
ER -