Social behavior of juvenile rats after in utero exposure to morphine: dose-time-effect relationship
- PMID: 10462133
- DOI: 10.1016/s0028-3908(99)00050-7
Social behavior of juvenile rats after in utero exposure to morphine: dose-time-effect relationship
Abstract
In the present study, the effects of morphine exposure in utero on social behavior in juvenile male rats was investigated. Pinning, a measure for play behavior, and social grooming of the offspring were measured at postnatal day 21. The subjects were offspring of Wistar rat dams given sc. injections of 1 or 10 mg/kg body weight morphine HCl daily from gestational days 8 (GD8)-GD 21 and control dams injected daily with saline. Pinning and social grooming of the morphine-treated offspring were significantly elevated compared to saline controls. The doses of morphine used neither affected the gestation of pregnant mother rats nor sensorimotor development of the juvenile rats. Prenatal exposure to morphine of 10 mg/kg daily increased both pinning and social grooming, prenatal exposure to a lower dose of 1 mg/kg increased pinning behavior but not social grooming in the offspring. To study the importance of the gestational period, offspring of dams given 10 mg/kg body weight morphine HCl from GD8-GD15 and saline from GD16-parturition or morphine from GD16-parturition and saline from GD8-GD15 was tested. Pinning was only increased when morphine exposure occurred during the third week of gestation, social grooming was increased when morphine exposure had been in the second week of gestation. Subcutaneous administration of 1 mg/kg naltrexone 1 h before the test significantly decreased play behavior in control rats, but not in animals prenatally exposed to morphine. From these experiments we conclude that the long term effect of in utero exposure to morphine on play behavior is established by affecting the endogenous opioid system.
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