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Effects of undernutrition and handling during suckling on shuttle avoidance and footshock escape behavior and on plasma glucose levels of young rats

✍ Scribed by Joao B. T. Rocha; Deusa Vendite


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
706 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0012-1630

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✦ Synopsis


The present report examined the effects of undernutrition and handling on shuttle and footshock escape avoidance behavior of female rats. Rats were undernourished by feeding their dams a 7% casein diet from birth until 23 days of life. During this period rats were separated from their dams for 4 to 10 min. On days 23 and 24 after delivery, young rats were subjected to sessions in a two-way shuttle avoidance task. The results demonstrated that nonstimulated and stimulated undernourished and stimulated well-nourished rats escape faster than nonstimulated well-nourished animals from footshock during the first session of shuttle avoidance. Further, undernutrition interacted with early stimulation, disrupting the shuttle avoidance behavior of female rats. These results suggest that both undernutrition and early handling can change the footshock behavior of young rats. Undernourished rats presented lower basal glucose levels than well-nourished animals, but responded to shuttle avoidance testing in the same way as do normal rats, increasing the glucose levels.

The effects of early undernutrition on avoidance behavior of adult rats have been extensively examined. The results of these studies demonstrated that undernutrition may or may not improve the performance in avoidance tasks (De Oliveira