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Differential effects of upper gastrointestinal fill on milk ingestion and nipple attachment in the suckling rat
Author(s) -
Lorenz Dennis N.,
Ellis Susan B.,
Epstein Alan N.
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
developmental psychobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1098-2302
pISSN - 0012-1630
DOI - 10.1002/dev.420150404
Subject(s) - cannula , ingestion , medicine , endocrinology , body weight , zoology , biology , surgery
Milk intake and nipple attachment behaviors were studied in the natural suckling situation after gastrointestinal preloading. Rat pups, deprived of their dam for 9 hr at 1, 10, or 20 days of age, were preloaded by gavage with volumes ranging from 2 to 16% of their body weight and returned to suckle. Preloads of artificial bitch's milk decreased the intake of mother's milk in a volume‐related manner at all ages. At 1 and 10 days 4% preloads decreased milk intake without affecting attachment behaviors; larger prelods of 8 and 16% decreased intake and reduced the incidence of attachment. At 20 days of age small and large preloads decreased both incidence of attachment and milk intake. Preloads up to 8% of body weight had no effect on latency to attach at any age. Complete subdiaphragmatic bilateral vagotomy increased milk intake of 7–9–day‐old pups fed automatically through an anterior mouth cannula in a nonsuckling situation. Vagotomy combined with spinal cordotomy (T2‐T3) resulted in a synergistic hyperphagia and massive distension of the upper GI tract. The results indicate that suckling rats can control their intake of mother's milk while remaining attached to a nipple as early as 1 day of age. The suppression of ingestion in response to GI filling appears to be mediated by visceral afferent activity. Conversely, attachment behaviors are less affected by GI fill. This suggests that ingestive behaviors and attachment behaviors have different controls during the 1st 10 days of postnatal development.