| Literature DB >> 1356601 |
R Williams1, S F Ali, F M Scalzo, K Soliman, R R Holson.
Abstract
Monoamines may exert a trophic effect on early brain development. To assess the role of dopamine in prenatal neurological development of the rat, haloperidol (HAL) was given in daily 2.5 or 5 mg/kg SC doses to dams over gestational days 6 to 20. This treatment regime did not enhance fetal mortality, but did produce reliable, if modest, stunting of the body and brain weight of offspring. The 5 mg/kg HAL dose consistently reduced offspring brain weight to roughly 90% of controls. This effect was probably permanent, in that it was seen throughout maturation and in adults as late as 140 days of postnatal age. Appropriate controls showed that this effect was not due to drug-induced reductions in food intake, to the presence of HAL in maternal milk, or to behavioral abnormalities in HAL-exposed dams. These effects had, at best, modest regional specificity, in that most brain regions were affected, independently of degree of dopaminergic innervation. Closer investigation of HAL effects on the striatum suggested that this permanent weight reduction was not accompanied by alterations in striatal concentrations of monoamines, monoamine metabolites, amino acids, choline, acetylcholine, DNA, protein, or water. It is concluded that prenatal HAL does stunt growth, but that this effect may not involve a direct drug influence restricted to the fetal dopamine system in the brain.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1356601 DOI: 10.1016/0361-9230(92)90082-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res Bull ISSN: 0361-9230 Impact factor: 4.077