Enriched but not depleted uranium affects central nervous system in long-term exposed rat-
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- Categories : Miscellaneous research domains , Publications - ID: 411

Authors
P. Houpert , P. Lestaevel , C. Bussy , F. Paquet , P. Gourmelon.


Lab
Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire, Direction de la Radioprotection de l'Homme--Service de Radiobiologie et d'Epidémiologie, Laboratoire de Radiotoxicologie Expérimentale, Pierrelatte, France.

Journal
Neurotoxicology

Abstract
Uranium is well known to induce chemical toxicity in kidneys, but several other target organs, such as central nervous system, could be also affected. Thus in the present study, the effects on sleep-wake cycle and behavior were studied after chronic oral exposure to enriched or depleted uranium. Rats exposed to 4% enriched uranium for 1.5 months through drinking water, accumulated twice as much uranium in some key areas such as the hippocampus, hypothalamus and adrenals than did control rats. This accumulation was correlated with an increase of about 38% of the amount of paradoxical sleep, a reduction of their spatial working memory capacities and an increase in their anxiety. Exposure to depleted uranium for 1.5 months did not induce these effects, suggesting that the radiological activity induces the primary events of these effects of uranium.

BIOSEB Instruments Used:
Infrared Actimeter (LE8815)

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