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© 1995 Oxford University Press

research-article

Assessment of Offspring Development and Behavior Following Gestational Exposure to Inhaled Methanol in the Rat1,2

MARK E. STANTON*, KEVIN M. CROFTON*, L. EARL GRAY{dagger}, CHRISTOPHER J. GORDON*, WILLIAMS K. BOYES*, M. LEONARD MOLE{dagger}, DAVID B. PEELE{ddagger},3 and PHILIP J. BUSHNELL{dagger}

*Neurotoxicology Division North Carolina, 27711 {dagger}Developmental Toxicology Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park North Carolina, 27711 {ddagger}NSI-Environmenral Sciences, Inc., Research Triangle Park North Carolina 27709

Received November 30, 1993; accepted May 12, 1995

The prospect of widespread human exposure associated with its use as an alternative fuel has sparked concern about the toxic potential of inhaled methanol (MeOH). Previous studies have revealed congenital malformations in rats following inhaled MeOH (Nelson et al. (1985). Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 5,727–736) but these studies did not include postnatal behavioral assessment. In the present study, pregnant Long–Evans rats were placed in exposure chambers containing 15,000 ppm MeOH or air for 7 hr/day on Gestational Days (GD) 7–19. The total alveolar dose of methanol was estimated at about 6.1 g/kg/day, for a total dose of about 42.7 g/kg for the entire study. Maternal body weights were recorded daily and blood methanol concentrations were determined at the end of exposure on GD 7, 10, 14, and 18. Following birth (Postnatal Day 0 [PND 0]), a number of tests were performed at various points in development, including: offspring mortality and body wt (PND 1, 3), motor activity (PND 13–21, 30, 60), olfactory learning (PND 18), behavioral thermoregulation (PND 20–21), T-maze learning (PND 23–24), acoustic startle response (PND 24, 60), reflex modffication audiometry (PND 60), pubertal landmarks (PND 31–56), passive avoidance (PND 72), and visual-evoked potentials (PND 160). Maternal blood MeOH levels, measured from samples taken within 15 mm after removal from the exposure chamber, declined from about 3.8 mg/ml on the first day of exposure to 3.1 mg/ml on the 12th day of exposure. MeOH transiently reduced maternal body wt (4–7%) on GD 8–10, and offspring BW (5%) on PND 1. No other test revealed significant effects of MeOH. Prenatal exposure to high levels of inhaled MeOH appears to have little effect on this broad battery of tests beyond PND 1 in the rat.


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