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Using drinking in the dark to model prenatal binge-like exposure to ethanol in C57BL/6J mice.


ABSTRACT: Animal models of prenatal ethanol exposure are necessary to more fully understand the effects of ethanol on the developing embryo/fetus. However, most models employ procedures that may produce additional maternal stress beyond that produced by ethanol alone. We employed a daily limited-access ethanol intake model called Drinking in the Dark (DID) to assess the effects of voluntary maternal binge-like ethanol intake on the developing mouse. Evidence suggests that binge exposure may be particularly harmful to the embryo/fetus, perhaps due to the relatively higher blood ethanol concentrations achieved. Pregnant females had mean daily ethanol intakes ranging from 4.2 to 6.4 g/kg ethanol over gestation, producing blood ethanol concentrations ranging from 115 to 182 mg/dL. This level of ethanol intake produced behavioral alterations among adolescent offspring that disappeared by adulthood, including altered sensitivity to ethanol's hypnotic actions. The DID model may provide a useful tool for studying the effects of prenatal ethanol exposure in mice.

SUBMITTER: Boehm SL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2574727 | biostudies-other | 2008 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Using drinking in the dark to model prenatal binge-like exposure to ethanol in C57BL/6J mice.

Boehm Stephen L SL   Moore Eileen M EM   Walsh Cherie D CD   Gross Carly D CD   Cavelli Austin M AM   Gigante Eduardo E   Linsenbardt David N DN  

Developmental psychobiology 20080901 6


Animal models of prenatal ethanol exposure are necessary to more fully understand the effects of ethanol on the developing embryo/fetus. However, most models employ procedures that may produce additional maternal stress beyond that produced by ethanol alone. We employed a daily limited-access ethanol intake model called Drinking in the Dark (DID) to assess the effects of voluntary maternal binge-like ethanol intake on the developing mouse. Evidence suggests that binge exposure may be particularl  ...[more]

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