2010
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-010-1922-8
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Early maternal deprivation affects dentate gyrus structure and emotional learning in adult female rats

Abstract: RationaleStress elicits functional and structural changes in the hippocampus. Early life stress is one of the major risk factors for stress-related pathologies like depression. Patients suffering from depression show a reduced hippocampal volume, and in women, this occurs more often when depression is preceded by childhood trauma. However, the underlying mechanisms that account for a reduced hippocampal volume are unknown.ObjectiveWe examined the effects of maternal absence on structure and function of the hip… Show more

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Cited by 120 publications
(123 citation statements)
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“…For MD, the mother was placed in a separate cage; the pups went back in the home cage and were placed on a heating pad (32°C) in a separate room. MD litters were kept in this room for 24 h before being placed back with the dam, as described elsewhere (Oomen et al, 2011). No animals died during the MD procedure.…”
Section: Experimental Procedures Animalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For MD, the mother was placed in a separate cage; the pups went back in the home cage and were placed on a heating pad (32°C) in a separate room. MD litters were kept in this room for 24 h before being placed back with the dam, as described elsewhere (Oomen et al, 2011). No animals died during the MD procedure.…”
Section: Experimental Procedures Animalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adult male rats that were subjected to 24-h MD at PND 3 demonstrate reduced neurogenesis, impaired spatial memory but enhanced memory formation under stressful learning conditions . The behavioral phenotype in female rats appeared to be more subtle and confined to amygdala-dependent learning paradigms (Oomen et al, 2011). Literature on cognitive performance in adult females exposed early in life to this or other types of ELS is generally less extensive than literature on males.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…From the developmental perspective, Rudolph et al (2010) present a study showing how individual differences in stress sensitivity shape the clinical response to peer victimization in children. This is mirrored in the preclinical arena, with findings that animals exposed to ELS are affected in their response to drugs of abuse (Rodrigues et al 2010), cognitive function (Hedges and Woon 2010;Oomen et al 2010), anxiety-related behaviors (Peleg-Raibstein and Feldon 2010), depression-and psychosis-related behaviors (Markham and Koenig 2010), stress sensitivity and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function (Claessens et al 2010), and sleep (Pryce et al 2010), as well as in the brain-gut axis (modeling aspects of irritable bowel syndrome) (O'Mahony et al 2010). Certainly, limitations to these models do exist (Schmidt et al 2010;Van Waes et al 2010), reflecting a variety of individual differences (Claessens et al 2010), including whether animals are tested during adolescence or adulthood (Peleg-Raibstein and Feldon 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The neuroanatomical (Oomen et al 2010;Pryce et al 2010), electrophysiological (Ali et al 2010) and neurochemical alterations following ELS that lead to these behavioral changes are increasingly well understood. O'Malley et al (2010) link alterations in central corticotrophin-releasing factor receptors to altered stress sensitivity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%