“…Neonatal handling is an experimental procedure involving repeated, brief, maternal separation, and tactile stimulation during the first few days of life. This disruption of the mother–pup relationship is associated with persistent behavioral and neurochemical alterations in the pups over their life course such as decreased fear when exposed to novel environments (Padoin, Cadore, Gomes, Barros, & Lucion, ), decreased corticosterone secretion response to a variety of stressors (Liu, Caldji, Sharma, Plotsky, & Meaney, ; Plotsky & Meaney, ), altered feeding behavior and satiety (Silveira et al, ) and differential social behaviors and fertility in male and female rats (Gomes, Frantz, Sanvitto, Anselmo‐Franci, & Lucion, ; Raineki et al, , ; Raineki, Lutz, Sebben, Ribeiro, & Lucion, ; Reis et al, ). Besides these behavioral and neuroendocrine changes, neonatal handling also alters brain plasticity and neurotrophic signaling in the pups, producing long‐lasting structural changes (Lucion, Pereira, Winkelman, Sanvitto, & Anselmo‐Franci, ; Todeschin et al, ; Winkelmann‐Duarte et al, ).…”