Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.

Brain development is a complex process regulated by genetic programs and activity-dependent neuronal connectivity. Anesthetics profoundly alter neuronal excitability, and anesthesia during early brain development has been consistently associated with neuroapoptosis, altered synaptogenesis, and persi...

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Main Authors: Marko Rosenholm, Emmi Paro, Hanna Antila, Vootele Võikar, Tomi Rantamäki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381906?pdf=render
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author Marko Rosenholm
Emmi Paro
Hanna Antila
Vootele Võikar
Tomi Rantamäki
author_facet Marko Rosenholm
Emmi Paro
Hanna Antila
Vootele Võikar
Tomi Rantamäki
author_sort Marko Rosenholm
collection DOAJ
description Brain development is a complex process regulated by genetic programs and activity-dependent neuronal connectivity. Anesthetics profoundly alter neuronal excitability, and anesthesia during early brain development has been consistently associated with neuroapoptosis, altered synaptogenesis, and persistent behavioral abnormalities in experimental animals. However, the depth, and even more the duration and developmental time point(s) of exposure to anesthesia determine the neuropathological and long-term behavioral consequences of anesthetics. Here, we have investigated adulthood phenotypic changes induced by repeated but brief (30 min) isoflurane anesthesia delivered during two distinct developmental periods in male mice. A set of animals were subjected to anesthesia treatments at postnatal days 7, 8 and 9 (P7-9) when the animals are susceptible to anesthesia-induced neuroapoptosis and reduced synaptogenesis. To control the potential influence of (handling) stress, a separate group of animals underwent repeated maternal separations of similar durations. Another set of animals were exposed to the same treatments at postnatal days 15, 16 and 17 (P15-17), a developmental time period when anesthetics have been shown to increase synaptogenesis. Starting from postnatal week 9 the mouse phenotype was evaluated using a battery of behavioral tests that assess general locomotor activity (home cage activity, open field), learning and memory (water maze) and depression- (saccharin preference, forced swim test), anxiety- (light-dark box, stress-induced hyperthermia) and schizophrenia- (nesting, prepulse inhibition) related endophenotypes. Apart from mild impairment in spatial navigation memory, exposure to anesthesia treatments during P7-9 did not bring obvious behavioral alterations in adult animals. Importantly, maternal separation during the same developmental period produced a very similar phenotype during the water maze. Mice exposed to anesthesia during P15-17 showed mild hyperactivity and risk-taking behavior in adulthood, but were otherwise normal. We conclude that significantly longer administration periods are needed in order for early-life repeated exposures to anesthetics to produce behavioral alterations in adult mice.
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spelling doaj.art-873e9b5b06b84d1bb666d22f2070528f2022-12-21T23:32:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017525810.1371/journal.pone.0175258Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.Marko RosenholmEmmi ParoHanna AntilaVootele VõikarTomi RantamäkiBrain development is a complex process regulated by genetic programs and activity-dependent neuronal connectivity. Anesthetics profoundly alter neuronal excitability, and anesthesia during early brain development has been consistently associated with neuroapoptosis, altered synaptogenesis, and persistent behavioral abnormalities in experimental animals. However, the depth, and even more the duration and developmental time point(s) of exposure to anesthesia determine the neuropathological and long-term behavioral consequences of anesthetics. Here, we have investigated adulthood phenotypic changes induced by repeated but brief (30 min) isoflurane anesthesia delivered during two distinct developmental periods in male mice. A set of animals were subjected to anesthesia treatments at postnatal days 7, 8 and 9 (P7-9) when the animals are susceptible to anesthesia-induced neuroapoptosis and reduced synaptogenesis. To control the potential influence of (handling) stress, a separate group of animals underwent repeated maternal separations of similar durations. Another set of animals were exposed to the same treatments at postnatal days 15, 16 and 17 (P15-17), a developmental time period when anesthetics have been shown to increase synaptogenesis. Starting from postnatal week 9 the mouse phenotype was evaluated using a battery of behavioral tests that assess general locomotor activity (home cage activity, open field), learning and memory (water maze) and depression- (saccharin preference, forced swim test), anxiety- (light-dark box, stress-induced hyperthermia) and schizophrenia- (nesting, prepulse inhibition) related endophenotypes. Apart from mild impairment in spatial navigation memory, exposure to anesthesia treatments during P7-9 did not bring obvious behavioral alterations in adult animals. Importantly, maternal separation during the same developmental period produced a very similar phenotype during the water maze. Mice exposed to anesthesia during P15-17 showed mild hyperactivity and risk-taking behavior in adulthood, but were otherwise normal. We conclude that significantly longer administration periods are needed in order for early-life repeated exposures to anesthetics to produce behavioral alterations in adult mice.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381906?pdf=render
spellingShingle Marko Rosenholm
Emmi Paro
Hanna Antila
Vootele Võikar
Tomi Rantamäki
Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
PLoS ONE
title Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
title_full Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
title_fullStr Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
title_full_unstemmed Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
title_short Repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice.
title_sort repeated brief isoflurane anesthesia during early postnatal development produces negligible changes on adult behavior in male mice
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381906?pdf=render
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