1. Toxicity of ultrasound in mice: neonatal studies.
- Author
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Stolzenberg SJ, Torbit CA, Pryor GT, and Edmonds PD
- Subjects
- Animals, Birth Weight, Female, Humans, Male, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Mice, Organ Size, Pregnancy, Animals, Newborn, Fetal Growth Retardation etiology, Ultrasonics adverse effects
- Abstract
Pregnant mice were exposed to ultrasound (continuous wave, 2 MHz) on Day 8 of gestation to determine effects on the progeny. The most significant finding was a decrease in mean uterine weight of the female progeny. The thresholds for this effect were 140 s at 0.5 W/cm2 and 60 s at 1 W/cm2, which were below the thresholds previously reported for other effects in mice. We suggest that this indicates a delay or impairment of maturation of the mice exposed in utero. Exposure of the dams to spatial average intensity of 1 W/cm2 for 40 and 60 s had no effect on body weight of the progeny, compared with sham-treated controls. In this experiment the body weights of progeny from sham-treated controls were significantly lower than those from untreated controls on Days 10, 17, and 25 of age. After exposure in utero to 0.5 W/cm2 for 180 s, statistically significant decreases in mean body weights of the neonates were observed, but only on Day 25 of age, in both sexes compared with sham-treated controls. At necropsy at Day 25 of age, neonatal organ weights relative to body weights were not significantly affected for the thymus in either sex or for the seminal vesicles and tests ion comparison with sham-treated controls.
- Published
- 1980
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