Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior

An animal model (Rattus norvegicus) was employed to study the effects of chronic prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and on the functional efficacy of pup vocalizations on the maternal behavior of the dam. Subjects were 72 dams and their litters. Dams were matched by weight and assigned to...

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Main Author: Ness, James William
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76024
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-760242020-09-29T05:43:12Z Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior Ness, James William Psychology LD5655.V855 1984.N477 Fetal alcohol syndrome Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Psychological aspects -- Experiments Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Animal models An animal model (Rattus norvegicus) was employed to study the effects of chronic prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and on the functional efficacy of pup vocalizations on the maternal behavior of the dam. Subjects were 72 dams and their litters. Dams were matched by weight and assigned to either an Ethanol (EtOH), a Pair-fed (PF), or an Untreated Control (UC) group. Ethanol dams received 15% ethanol as their sole source of fluid throughout the experiment. Pair-fed dams were fed isocalorically to EtOH dams. Untreated Control dams received food and water ad libitum. Dam's retrieval behavior was assessed in a runway choice situation when pups were 3, 5, 7, and 9 days old. Developmental measures were taken on pups from ages 0 through 13 days. Blood ethanol concentrations were also analyzed for dams and pups. The data showed that the BEC of EtOH dams was .1% and that EtOH pups showed a negligible BEC postpartum. Prenatal alcohol exposure was shown to have a direct pharmacological and indirect nutritional effect on pup development. Ethanol dams retrieved a reliably smaller percentage of pups and retrieved reliably more slowly than did controls. Pair-fed pups showed a higher rate of calling than did other pups and tended to be chosen more often by UC and PF dams than were EtOH or UC pups. Ethanol dams tended to chose UC pups more often than other pups. These findings suggest that chronic prenatal alcohol exposure produces altered behavior and responsiveness in the dam and the pup. This altered behavior and responsiveness may have a synergistic effect on the interaction between the dam and the pup. Master of Science 2017-03-09T21:35:18Z 2017-03-09T21:35:18Z 1984 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76024 en_US OCLC# 12680562 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xi, 102 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1984.N477
Fetal alcohol syndrome
Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Psychological aspects -- Experiments
Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Animal models
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1984.N477
Fetal alcohol syndrome
Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Psychological aspects -- Experiments
Alcoholism in pregnancy -- Animal models
Ness, James William
Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
description An animal model (Rattus norvegicus) was employed to study the effects of chronic prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and on the functional efficacy of pup vocalizations on the maternal behavior of the dam. Subjects were 72 dams and their litters. Dams were matched by weight and assigned to either an Ethanol (EtOH), a Pair-fed (PF), or an Untreated Control (UC) group. Ethanol dams received 15% ethanol as their sole source of fluid throughout the experiment. Pair-fed dams were fed isocalorically to EtOH dams. Untreated Control dams received food and water ad libitum. Dam's retrieval behavior was assessed in a runway choice situation when pups were 3, 5, 7, and 9 days old. Developmental measures were taken on pups from ages 0 through 13 days. Blood ethanol concentrations were also analyzed for dams and pups. The data showed that the BEC of EtOH dams was .1% and that EtOH pups showed a negligible BEC postpartum. Prenatal alcohol exposure was shown to have a direct pharmacological and indirect nutritional effect on pup development. Ethanol dams retrieved a reliably smaller percentage of pups and retrieved reliably more slowly than did controls. Pair-fed pups showed a higher rate of calling than did other pups and tended to be chosen more often by UC and PF dams than were EtOH or UC pups. Ethanol dams tended to chose UC pups more often than other pups. These findings suggest that chronic prenatal alcohol exposure produces altered behavior and responsiveness in the dam and the pup. This altered behavior and responsiveness may have a synergistic effect on the interaction between the dam and the pup. === Master of Science
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Ness, James William
author Ness, James William
author_sort Ness, James William
title Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
title_short Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
title_full Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
title_fullStr Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
title_full_unstemmed Effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
title_sort effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on pup development and vocalization behavior and on dam retrieval behavior
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76024
work_keys_str_mv AT nessjameswilliam effectsofprenatalalcoholexposureonpupdevelopmentandvocalizationbehaviorandondamretrievalbehavior
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