Effects of physiological state on oral habituation in developing rats: Cellular and extracellular dehydration
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Developmental Psychobiology
- Vol. 28 (3) , 131-145
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dev.420280302
Abstract
Hydrational state has been demonstrated to influence intake of various solutions in young rat pups. For instance, both cellular and extracellular dehydration produce an enhancement of intake in pups tested at 6 days of age. However, the behavioral mechanisms that result in increased intake following manipulations of hydrational state have been less extensively studied. The impact of hydrational state on behavioral responsiveness in young rat pups was examined by assessing the pattern of responding to a series of repeated oral infusions of diet. Pups were tested at 6, 12, or 18 days of age following either acute cellular dehydration produced by injection of 1 M NaCl or acute extracellular dehydration produced by injection of 10% polyethylene glycol (PEG). Oral responsiveness to a series of 30 brief infusions of one of four taste solutions (water, 10% sucrose, 0.135 M NaCl, or 1 M NaCl) was measured. Each infusion lasted 3 s and there was 1 min between infusions. The pattern of oral responding to solutions was affected by the developmental age of the pup, the hydrational state of the pup, and the solution offered, with the largest effects of dehydration observed in the youngest animals. In all conditions except one, pups habituated to repeated infusions. The exception was the failure of extracellularly dehydrated 6‐day‐old pups to display habituation to oral infusions of sucrose. These results suggest that, although intake is enhanced by both cellular and extracellular dehydration in very young pups, the behavioral changes responsible for the enhancement of intake after cellular dehydration are different from the behavioral changes resulting from extracellular dehydration. This dissociation of behavioral effects of dehydration in young pups demonstrates that intake measures alone may obscure subtle differences in behavior and argues for the utility of dissection of behavioral components in understanding the neural and physiological control of behavior. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Keywords
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