Exposure to common anesthetic agents alters pup-retrieval response in lactating rats

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Abstract

This study investigated the lactating stage of rats to determine the effect on maternal behavior of a single exposure to general anesthetic. Lactating Wistar rats were treated with anesthetic doses of pentobarbital (PENT) or ketamine (KET) on day 3 or 9 of lactation, and their behavioral responses were evaluated during a 50-min nursing period, after a 4-h mother-pup separation, on day 12. Exposure to KET on day 9 led to a significantly longer latency to pup-retrieval than that of the control. Duration of pup-retrieval in mothers treated with KET on day 3 and 9 was significantly longer than in the control. Other components of maternal behavior did not differ between the groups. The present findings suggested that general anesthetics have an impact upon pup-retrieval activities, which indirectly represent maternal motivation. Copyright © 2005 Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science.

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Yamamuro, Y. (2005). Exposure to common anesthetic agents alters pup-retrieval response in lactating rats. Experimental Animals, 54(4), 369–372. https://doi.org/10.1538/expanim.54.369

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