Publication | Closed Access
Mouse Model for Thoracic Congenital Scoliosis
18
Citations
9
References
2001
Year
Occupational Health SciencesSpine DeformityAnatomyDetected AnomaliesOrthopaedic SurgeryEmbryologyReproductive EndocrinologyFetal Developmental ProgrammingBiomechanicsEnvironmental HealthToxicologyPediatric SpinePublic HealthEarly Life ExposureMouse ModelMechanobiologyMouse OffspringDevelopmental ToxicologyMaternal HealthPlacental DiseaseMaternal-fetal MedicineFetal NeurodevelopmentSinal SurgeryPlacental FunctionDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyPregnancyEnvironmental DiseaseScoliosisMedicineDose–response Curve
This study sought to produce a dose–response curve for acute and chronic maternal carbon monoxide (CO) exposure versus vertebral anomalies in mouse offspring and to determine the critical day of exposure. In Part I, pregnant CD-1 mice were exposed to an acute dose of CO at 9 days of gestation. A positive dose–response relationship of acute maternal CO exposure and vertebral anomalies in the offspring was produced. In Part II, pregnant females were exposed to chronic CO for the first 11 days of gestation. Chronic exposure to CO did not produce significant vertebral anomalies. In Part III, pregnant females were exposed to an acute dose of 600 ppm of CO at gestation day 8, 9, or 10. Day 9 in this mouse breed is the critical day for maternal exposure to CO. The detected anomalies were predominately in the thoracic spine.
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