1994
DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(94)90321-2
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Maternal influences on milk intake in SHR and WKY pups

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Cited by 25 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Despite spending more time with their litters, SHR dams delivered less milk to SHR and WKY pups during the early part of the preweanling phase, compared with WKY dams. This pattern of milk delivery to SHR and WKY pups in the present study is in agreement with the only other, limited, report on pup feeding, which estimated milk delivery on postnatal days 7 and 14 alone ( Rose & McCarty 1994). However, this study had a number of methodological problems, which included fasting of the pups prior to feeding, failure to induce micturition prior to the test feed and repeated disturbance of the litter to weigh the pups, which we have controlled for in the present study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Despite spending more time with their litters, SHR dams delivered less milk to SHR and WKY pups during the early part of the preweanling phase, compared with WKY dams. This pattern of milk delivery to SHR and WKY pups in the present study is in agreement with the only other, limited, report on pup feeding, which estimated milk delivery on postnatal days 7 and 14 alone ( Rose & McCarty 1994). However, this study had a number of methodological problems, which included fasting of the pups prior to feeding, failure to induce micturition prior to the test feed and repeated disturbance of the litter to weigh the pups, which we have controlled for in the present study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…In an analysis of line differences in the 13th generation colony group, High-USV-line pups weighed signi®cantly more than Random-line pups (p`0X05), and tended to weigh more than Low-line pups (p 0X10). This is a trend seen in cross-fostering studies in both mice and rats, in that maternal strain effects seem to be important to pup weight gain, accounted for behaviorally or in terms of milk content (e.g., in mice: Carlier et al, 1982;Ragueneau, 1987;in rats: McCarty, Tong, & Forsythe, 1992;Rose & McCarty, 1994), although differences in these effects are, at least in part, driven by differences in pup characteristics (Cierpal, Murphy, & McCarty, 1990). Taken together, these ®ndings suggest that High-line dams contribute more to the weight gain of their pups than mothers of the other two lines, but only if they are nursing High-line pups (for Low-line pups reared by High-line dams did not weigh more than when fostered in-line).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…10,11 Different maternal nutritional environments may play a role in determining growth rate, BP and subsequent pathophysiology. 12,13 Maternal nursing behavior and nutritional delivery can be factors in SHR rats.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%