Rat embryos at 10 days of gestation were exposed to 43°C for 8 minutes by submerging the exteriorized right uterine horn in heated saline solution and then reinserting the uterine horn into the abdominal cavity. At 15 days, the fetuses were removed, and cells from the cerebral hemispheres were dissociated and grown as primary cultures. Embryos from the left uterine horn served as controls. No morphological changes were observed between the cultures of cells from control and heat-exposed embryos at different days in culture. However, exposure of embryos to hyperthermia at 10 days significantly affected the developmental pattern of activities of acetylcholine esterase associated with cholinergic neurons and of 2' ,3'-cyclic nucleotide phosphohydrolase associated with oligodendrocytes and myelin membrane formation. These results suggest that hyperthermia at 10 days of gestation in the rat may lead to an impairment in the development of neurons and oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system.
Ultrasound is used extensively to monitor the growth of ovarian follicles in in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET) programs, as well as to follow the progress of early pregnancy. There have been scattered reports in the literature that exposure to ultrasound may have an adverse effect on reproduction in the rat (Bologne et al: CR Soc Biol 177:381-387, 1983; Demoulin et al: Ann NY Acad Sci 442:146-152, 1985), and also in humans (Demoulin et al: Ann NY Acad Sci 442: 146-152, 1985). We report here that diagnostic levels of pulsed ultrasound did not affect either the number of embryos produced, or the ability to incorporate labelled precursors into DNA and RNA, respectively. Measurements of temperature elevation of ovaries exposed to ultrasound showed that neither controls nor experimental tissue exhibited temperature elevation greater than 1 degree C.
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