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Undernutrition of rats during early life does not affect the total number of cortical neurons

โœ Scribed by K. S. Bedi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
996 KB
Volume
342
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9967

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Undernutrition during early life is known to cause deficits and distortions in brain structure. However, it remains uncertain whether this includes a diminution of the total numbers of neurons. Recent advances in stereological techniques have made it possible to obtain unbiased estimates of total numbers of cells in wellโ€defined biological structures. Rats were undernourished from day 16 of gestation to 30 postnatal days of age by standardized procedures. These rats and wellโ€fed control rats were anaesthetized and killed by intracardiac perfusion with fixatives at 70 days of age. The left cerebral hemisphere from each animal was embedded in Paraplast and serially sectioned. The sections were analyzed via the Cavalieri principle to obtain the total cortical volume and by the โ€œdisectorโ€ method to estimate the numerical density of neurons in the cortex. These values were later used to compute estimates of the total number of cortical neurons for each animal. Wellโ€fed control rats had 26.9 million cortical neurons, while the previously undernourished animals had 24.8 million. The difference between these two groups was not statistically significant. It therefore appears that undernutrition of rats during early postnatal life does not affect the total numbers of neurons in the cerebral cortex. ยฉ 1994 Wileyโ€Liss, Inc.


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## Abstract We previously showed that 16โ€dayโ€old rats exposed to a relatively high dose of ethanol at 10โ€15 postnatal days of age have fewer neurons in the hilus region of the hippocampus compared with controls. Dentate gyrus granule cell numbers, however, showed no statistically significant change