Open Access
EFFECTS OF EARLY PROTEIN MALNUTRITION AND REPEATED TESTING UPON LOCOMOTOR AND EXPLORATORY BEHAVIORS IN THE ELEVATED PLUS-MAZE
Author(s) -
Sebastião de Sousa Almeida,
Ricardo Alexandrino Garcia,
Luiz Marcellino de Oliveira
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
revista brasileira de análise do comportamento
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2526-6551
pISSN - 1807-8338
DOI - 10.18542/rebac.v10i2.3472
Subject(s) - weaning , elevated plus maze , lactation , protein malnutrition , zoology , repeated measures design , medicine , malnutrition , anxiety , physiology , biology , pregnancy , psychiatry , mathematics , statistics , genetics
An elevated plus-maze was used to investigate the effects of repeated testing on the locomotor and exploratory behaviors of malnourished rats. Pup malnutrition was induced during the lactation period (0 to 21 days of age) by feeding the dams a protein-deficient diet (6% protein) and the animals were allowed to recover from weaning to 70 days of age by eating a commercial lab chow diet. Control animals were suckled by dams receiving normal protein diet (16% protein) during the lactation period and were fed a commercial lab chow diet after weaning. At 70 days, malnourished and control animals were placed on the central platform of the elevated plus-maze facing an enclosed arm and allowed to explore for 5 min. This procedure was repeated at 24-h intervals of 6 days. The repeated testing in the elevated plus-maze did not change the total number of arm entries and attempts to enter open arms, but decreased the percentage of open arm entries, time spent in open arms, and total time spent on the central platform. These data suggest an increase in anxiety with repeated testing in the elevated plus-maze. In addition, the malnourished animals showed a large number of these animals as compared to control. The elevated plus-maze proved to be useful animal model to evaluate exploratory behaviors in early protein malnourished animals. Keywords: Early protein malnutrition Elevated plus-maze Impulsiveness Exploration Anxiety Repeated testing