Maternal Hyperoxia Greatly Reduces the Incidence of Phenytoin-Induced Cleft Lip and Palate in A/J Mice
- 8 May 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 212 (4495) , 671-672
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.7221553
Abstract
The A/J mouse has been used to study the teratogenic affects of phenytoin. The developmental abnormalities produced in offspring of this model are similar to some of the malformations observed in cases of human "fetal hydantoin syndrome." Placing pregnant A/J mice in a hyperoxic chamber after phenytoin injection greatly reduces the incidence of phenytoin-induced cleft lip and palate. These results suggest that phenytoin may affect embryonic development indirectly by altering maternal physiology. This maternally mediated mechanism, and the protection against it afforded by hyperoxia, has general implications for the effects of maternal toxicity on teratogenesis.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential embryonic cardiovascular responses to acute maternal uterine ischemia: An in vivo microscopic study of rabbit embryos with either intact or clamped umbilical cordsTeratology, 1980
- Cardiovascular alterations in rabbit embryos in situ after a teratogenic dose of hydroxyurea: An in vivo microscopic studyTeratology, 1980
- Phenytoin (dilantin)‐induced cleft lip and palate in a/j mice: A scanning and transmission electron microscopic studyThe Anatomical Record, 1979
- Interpretation of isolated agenesis of the pituitaryTeratology, 1979
- Measurement of Salivary LysozymeJournal of Dental Research, 1978
- Tables of gehan's generalized Wilcoxon test with fixed point censoringJournal of Statistical Computation and Simulation, 1974
- Teratogenic Effects of Diphenylhydantoin in Swiss-Webster and A/J MiceExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1968
- Role of the tongue in producing cleft palate in mice with spontaneous cleft lipDevelopmental Biology, 1963
- SODIUM DIPHENYL HYDANTOINATE IN THE TREATMENT OF CONVULSIVE DISORDERSJAMA, 1938