Publication | Closed Access
Subtle Consequences of Methylmercury Exposure: Behavioral Deviations in Offspring of Treated Mothers
215
Citations
6
References
1972
Year
Brain DevelopmentOvert Neurological ImpairmentEpigeneticsTransgenerational EffectPsychologySocial SciencesEnvironmental EpigeneticsToxicologyNeurologyEarly Life ExposureBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceDevelopmental ToxicologyBiobehavioral HealthMaternal HealthNeuropharmacologyFetal NeurodevelopmentExperimental ToxicologyBehavioral DeviationsMethylmercury PoisoningChild DevelopmentPhysiologyForensic ToxicologySubtle ConsequencesBrain WeightNeuroscienceMethylmercury ExposureMedicine
Overt neurological impairment is the endpoint currently used to document a case of methylmercury poisoning. No consideration is given to possible subtle consequences. Offspring from mice exposed to methylmercury on day 7 or 9 of pregnancy were apparently unaffected during postnatal development. However, subtle behavioral differences between treated and control offspring were found when the overtly normal animals were tested in an open field and evaluated in a swimming apparatus at 1 month of age. Brain weight, protein, choline acetyltransferase, and cholinesterase were not significantly altered.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1