## Abstract In repeated short‐term tests (four sessions, each of 45‐minute duration), and one longer test (a 23.5‐hour session), behavior of rats was evaluated in a long, narrow shuttlebox. One side of the box was exposed to an electric field at various strengths, while a visually identical opposit
Endocrinological effects of strong 60-Hz electric fields on rats
✍ Scribed by Michael J. Free; William T. Kaune; Richard D. Phillips; Hsien-Chen Cheng
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 908 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Adult male rats were exposed or sham‐exposed to 60‐Hz electric fields without spark discharges, ozone, or significant levels of other secondary variables. No effects were observed on body weights or plasma hormone levels after 30 days of exposure at an effective field strength of 68 kV/m. After 120 days of exposure (effective field strength = 64 kV/m), effects were inconsistent, with significant reductions in body weight and plasma levels of follicle‐stimulating hormone and corticosterone occurring in one replicate experiment but not in the other. Plasma testosterone levels were significantly reduced after 120 days of exposure in one experiment, with a similar but not statistically significant reduction in a replicate experiment. Weanling rats, exposed or sham‐exposed in electric fields with an effective field strength of 80 kV/m from 20 to 56 days of age, exhibited identical or closely similar growth trends in body and organ weights. Hormone levels in exposed and sham‐exposed groups were also similar. However, there was an apparent phase shift between the two groups in the cyclic variations of concentrations of hormones at different stages of development, particularly with respect to follicle‐stimulating hormone and corticosterone. We concluded that 60‐Hz electric fields may bring about subtle changes in the endocrine system of rats, and that these changes may be related to alterations in episodic rhythms.
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