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Congenital Malformations Resulting from Zinc Deficiency in Rats.
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1966
Year
Developmental AnomalyDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental ToxicologyPhysiologyMaternal HealthMorphogenesisZinc ContaminationFetal ComplicationSummarya MildAbnormal DevelopmentFetal NeurodevelopmentZinc DeficiencyMedicinePlacental FunctionEmbryologySpecific Zinc Deficiency
SummaryA mild but specific zinc deficiency was produced in female rats by the use of a purified diet lacking the element and by stringent elimination of sources of zinc contamination from the environment. Almost all of the full-term fetuses produced under such conditions showed gross congenital malformations encompassing a wide variety of organ systems, including skeletal, brain, eye, heart, lung, and urogenital defects. The fetuses from zinc-deficient females contained less zinc than did their controls, suggesting that the congenital anomalies resulted from a direct effect of lack of zinc in the fetal tissues.