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Spontaneous perseverative turning in rats with radiation-induced hippocampal damage.
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References
1989
Year
NeuropsychologyDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain MechanismRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureSpontaneous BowlRadiation BiologySocial SciencesRadiation MedicineGranule Cell LayerBehavioral SciencesBrain StructureBehavioral NeuroscienceCortical RemodelingRadiation EffectsSpontaneous Perseverative TurningSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceMedicine
This study found a new behavioral correlate of lesions specific to the dentate granule cell layer of the hippocampus: spontaneous perseverative turning. Irradiation of a portion of the neonatal rat cerebral hemispheres produced hypoplasia of the granule cell layer of the hippocampal dentate gyrus while sparing the rest of the brain. Radiation-induced damage to the hippocampal formation caused rats placed in bowls to spontaneously turn in long, slow bouts without reversals. Irradiated subjects also exhibited other behaviors characteristic of hippocampal damage (e.g., perseveration in spontaneous exploration of the arms of a T-maze, retarded acquisition of a passive avoidance task, and increased horizontal locomotion). These data extend previously reported behavioral correlates of fascia dentata lesions and suggest the usefulness of a bout analysis of spontaneous bowl turning as a measure of nondiscrete-trial spontaneous alternation and a sensitive additional indicator of radiation-induced hippocampal damage.
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