Neonatal amphetamine exposure and hippocampus-mediated behaviors |
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Authors: | Andrew M. Smith Wei-Jung A. Chen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychiatry (STS, SFS, MAD, RS, CFR), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA;2. University Center for Social and Urban Research, Pittsburgh, PA;3. Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, University of Pittsburgh (SMA), Pittsburgh, PA;2. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;3. Wannan Medical College, Anhui, China;2. Faculty of Public Health, Lebanese University, Fanar, Lebanon;3. CERIPH, Center for Research in Public Health, Pharmacoepidemiology Surveillance Unit, Faculty of Public Health, Lebanese University, Fanar, Lebanon;4. INSPECT-LB, Institut National de Santé Publique, Epidémiologie Clinique et Toxicologie, Faculty of Public Health, Lebanese University, Fanar, Lebanon |
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Abstract: | Previous studies linking amphetamine use during pregnancy to changes in the behavioral development of affected infants have greatly increased society’s level of concern regarding amphetamine use by women of reproductive age. The aim of this study was to investigate whether exposure to d-amphetamine sulfate during the brain growth spurt, the most dynamic period of brain development, alters hippocampus-mediated behaviors during both pre-adolescence and young adulthood. Sprague–Dawley rat pups were intragastrically administered a milk formula containing 0, 5, 15 or 25 mg/kg/day of amphetamine from postnatal day (PD) 4–9. Following weaning, the effects of neonatal amphetamine exposure on hippocampus-mediated behaviors were assessed using the open-field, the water maze, and the conditioned taste aversion behavioral tasks. Results from these behavioral tests revealed that while amphetamine exposure during the brain growth spurt alters behaviors in open-field testing, it does not interfere with performance in either the water maze or the conditioned taste aversion paradigm. These results offer speculation that the effects of neonatal amphetamine exposure on hippocampus-mediated behaviors may be related to interactions between the “temporal” (time of drug exposure) and “regional” (different regions of the hippocampus) vulnerability issues. |
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