Pregnant rats were treated orally with aluminum lactate (400 mg Al/kg/day) during three periods of gestation to determine the treatment's influence on mortality, weight gain, neuromotor maturation, and learning abilities of their pups. No effect of treatment on litter size, mortality rate, and weight gain of pups was detected. In the negative geotaxis test, the scores of pups from females treated during the second and third weeks of gestation were diminished. In the locomotor coordination and the operant conditioning tests, significant differences in the comparison of controls vs. the three treated groups were found, indicating long-term effects of early intoxication upon the central nervous system.
The oral treatment of pregnant rats by aluminum chloride or lactate at various doses was applied from day 1 to day 21 of gestation to determine its influence on mortality, weight evolution, and neuromotor maturation of their pups. No effect of treatment on litter size was detected, but an increased mortality appeared during the first week: treatment by aluminum lactate was less active than was an equivalent treatment by aluminum chloride. Weight was transitorily delayed, but the reversal of this effect could be attributed to the decrease of litter size. The neuromotor maturation of surviving pups treated with the two aluminum salts showed an important impairment during the first 2 weeks of postnatal life.
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