Rats were trained in six sessions to locate a submerged platform in a circular water maze. They were exposed to pulsed 2450-MHz microwaves (pulse width 2 ms, 500 pulses/s, average power density 2 mW/cm 2 , average whole body specific absorption rate 1.2 W/kg) for 1 h in a circular waveguide system i
Acute exposure to a 60 Hz magnetic field affects rats' water-maze performance
β Scribed by Henry Lai; Monserrat A. Carino; Itsuko Ushijima
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 143 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
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β¦ Synopsis
Rats were trained in six sessions to locate a submerged platform in a circular water-maze. They were exposed to a 1 mT, 60 Hz magnetic field for one hour in a Helmholtz coil system immediately before each training session. In addition, one hour after the last training session, they were tested in a probe trial during which the platform was removed and the time spent in the quadrant of the maze in which the platform was located during the training sessions was scored. Control animals were sham-exposed using the exposure system operating with the coils activated in an anti-parallel direction to cancel the fields. A group of ''non-exposed'' control animals was also included in the study. There was no significant difference between the magnetic field-exposed and control animals in learning to locate the platform. However, swim speed of the magnetic field-exposed rats was significantly slower than that of the controls. During the probe trial, magnetic field-exposed animals spent significantly less time in the quadrant that contained the platform, and their swim patterns were different from those of the controls. These results indicate that magnetic field exposure causes a deficit in spatial ''reference'' memory in the rat. Rats subjected to magnetic field exposure probably used a different behavioral strategy in learning the maze.
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