The effect of acute exposure to ultrawideband (UWB) electromagnetic radiation on the Primate Equilibrium Platform (PEP) task, where the monkey's task is to manipulate a joystick control to compensate for the random perturbations in the pitch plane that are generated by a computer at unpredictable intervals, was examined. The duration of the UWB exposure was 2 min at a pulse repetition rate of 60 Hz (total of 7200 pulses). The bandwidth of the pulse was 100 MHz to 1.5 GHz (peak power between 250-500 MHz) with a peak E-field strength of 250 kV/m. Each monkey was exposed twice. The interval between exposures was 6 days. The exposure to UWB electromagnetic radiation had no effect on PEP performance when tested immediately after exposure.
Dose rates for continuous infusion of pyridostigmine bromide required to inhibit 30% and 60% of normal serum cholinesterase activity in rhesus monkeys were determined. The effects of continuous pyridostigmine infusion at these dose-rates on the behavioral toxicity of 5 daily repeated low-dose exposures to a toxic organophosphate (soman) were determined not be deleterious; in fact, they were slightly (and variably) protective. Relative to controls (5-day soman ED50 = 0.89 micrograms/kg/day), pyridostigmine infusions producing 30% and 60% inhibition produced 5-day ED50s of 1.25 and 1.11 micrograms/kg/day, respectively. Variability in response to the pyridostigmine-soman combinations appeared to be greater than in response to daily soman exposure without pyridostigmine infusion.
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