Caesarean-delivered rat pups tested before any suckling experience show oral grasp responses after stimulation with an artificial nipple. Manipulating the sensory stimuli present at the time of testing alters behavioral responses to the nipple. Specifically, when the nipple is warm, when pups are te
Oral grasping of a surrogate nipple by the newborn rat
โ Scribed by William P. Smotherman; Dena Goffman; Evgeniy S. Petrov; Elena I. Varlinskaya
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 202 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-1630
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Newborn rat pups exhibit oral appetitive behaviors when presented with an artificial nipple. These behaviors include mouthing and licking movements and expression of a stereotyped oral grasp response. Caesarean-delivered pups show increased responding to the nipple over the first 5 hr after birth that is independent of experience with the nipple. Mimicking maternal licking by stimulating the anogenital region of the newborn rat with a soft paintbrush increases responses to the nipple. Pups tested after 24 hr of normal suckling experience respond to the artificial nipple when tested immediately after separation from the mother. However, oral grasping of the nipple is more frequent in 1-day-old pups tested 3 or 5 hr after separation from the mother. Study of behavioral responses to the artificial nipple promises to provide information about sensory and neurochemical controls of the initial suckling episode.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Although born blind and deaf, newborn rats exhibit a remarkable capacity to recognize and gain access to the nipples of the lactating mother. However, it is well-known that full-term rat neonates will not attach to an artificial nipple. In the present study, an artificial nipple fashioned from soft