We studied the effect of prenatal stress (dams were forced to swim in cold water (10°C; 5 min) from day 10 to 16 of gestation) on the behavioral parameters of the offspring in an elevated plus maze on days 21, 30, and 60 of life (suckling, infantile, and juvenile ages, respectively). Females at the suckling age demonstrated suppressed orientation and exploratory activity and increased anxiety, which returned to normal by the infantile and juvenile periods. Prenatally stressed males in juvenile age were characterized by reduced anxiety (assessed by the time spent in the closed and open arms of the plus maze).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParameters of blood cytokine profile in male and female rats subjected to prenatal stress on the model of swimming in cold water (10°C, 5 min, days 10-16 of gestation) were studied. Prenatal stress had no significant effects on the blood levels of IL-6 and IL-10 cytokines. The blood concentration of proinflammatory cytokine TNFα in 60-day-old rats was higher than in age-matched controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpike activity of neurons in the ventromedial nucleus (VMN) of the hypothalamus in adult (6-8 months) and aged (2 years) male rats was studied by the in vivo extracellular method using stereotaxic insertion of microelectrodes. In all animals, firing frequency of most VMN neurons increased in response to glucose administration. However, in aged rats, the mean baseline and glucose-induced spike frequencies of VMN neurons were lower than in adult animals.
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