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Fluoxetine administration to pregnant rats increases anxiety-related behavior in the offspring

Authors :
Judith R. Homberg
Janneke J P M Roelofs
Marloes Jonkers
Gerard J Martens
Floor van Heesch
Jocelien D A Olivier
Amanda J. Kiliaan
Astrid Vallès
Gerdien A.H. Korte-Bouws
Elke Joan Peeters
Jos Dederen
Dirk Schubert
Anthonieke Afrasiab-Middelman
Cognitive Neuroscience
RS: FPN CN 3
Source :
Psychopharmacology, 217, 3, pp. 419-32, Psychopharmacology, 217, 419-32, Psychopharmacology, 217(3), 419-432. Springer
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer, 2011.

Abstract

Fluoxetine (ProzacA (R)) is the most frequently prescribed drug to battle depression in pregnant women, but its safety in the unborn child has not yet been established. Fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, crosses the placenta, leading to increased extracellular serotonin levels and potentially neurodevelopmental changes in the fetus. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the long-term consequences of prenatal fluoxetine in rats. Pregnant rats were injected daily with 12 mg/kg fluoxetine or vehicle from gestational day 11 until birth, and the behavior of the offspring was monitored. Plasma fluoxetine transfer from mother to pup was 83%, and high levels of fluoxetine (13.0 mu g/g) were detected in the pup brain 5 h after the last injection. Fluoxetine-treated dams gave birth to litters 15% smaller than usual and to pups of reduced weight (until postnatal day 7). Furthermore, prenatal fluoxetine exposure significantly increased anxiety in the novelty-suppressed feeding test, the footshock-induced conditioned place aversion test, and the elevated plus maze test (following footshock pre-exposure) during adulthood, and also significantly decreased components of social play behavior at 4 weeks of age, and a strong tendency for increased self-grooming and making less contact in adults. Behavioral despair, anhedonia, and sexual behavior were not different between treatment groups. Finally, the hypothermic response to the 5-HT1A agonist flesinoxan was observed at a lower dose in prenatally fluoxetine-exposed rats than in controls. Prenatal fluoxetine exposure in rats leads to detrimental behavioral outcomes in later life, which may partly be due to altered 5-HT1A receptor signaling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14322072 and 00333158
Volume :
217
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychopharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....284512500dd8383ba7ddd4a6aefc3344