Cory-Slechta D A
Department of Biophysics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, New York 14642.
Neurotoxicology. 1990 Fall;11(3):427-41.
Short exposures to low Pb concentrations (e.g., 25-50 ppm) have been shown to increase Fixed-Interval (FI) response rates while comparable exposures to higher concentrations (100-1000 ppm) typically decrease response rates. This study was based on the hypothesis that Pb body burden, in addition to Pb exposure concentration, is an important determinant of the nature of Pb-induced changes in Fixed-Interval (FI) response rates. One way to increase Pb body burden is to prolong exposure duration. Thus, by the above hypothesis, prolonging the exposure duration to low Pb concentrations could result in FI response rate decreases previously noted in response to higher concentrations of Pb. To test this contention, rats were exposed to 50 ppm Pb acetate in drinking water for 8 or 11 mon prior to assessment of performance on an FI 1 min schedule of food reinforcement. In contrast to the increased rates of responding previously reported after 1 mon of 50 ppm exposure, the 8-11 mon exposures produced decreased FI response rates relative to control values over 30-40 sessions. The decreased response rates were a function of longer interresponse times and consequently lower running rates; postreinforcement pause times and index of curvature were normal. Differential trends in response rates between control and 8 mon Pb-exposed rats reappeared when reinforcement schedule contingencies were changed from FI-1 min to FI-5 min and, again, when changed from FI-5 min to an FI-5 min clock schedule; no such differences were apparent when the original schedule parameter, FI-1 min, was then reimposed. Adult animals trained on FI schedules and then exposed to 50 or 500 ppm Pb for 3-5 mon showed no consistent subsequent performance changes. Taken together, these studies suggest a Pb-induced delay in the acquistion phase of FI-schedule controlled responding, while learned performance appears less vulnerable. However, a seemingly transient deficit may nonetheless reemerge when the environment imposes a new learning situation or an alteration in reinforcement contingencies. Such effects have important implications for human Pb exposure since behavioral transitions may be mandated throughout life.
短时间暴露于低铅浓度(例如25 - 50 ppm)已被证明会提高固定间隔(FI)反应率,而暴露于较高浓度(100 - 1000 ppm)时,类似的暴露通常会降低反应率。本研究基于这样的假设:铅的身体负担,除了铅暴露浓度外,是固定间隔(FI)反应率中铅诱导变化性质的一个重要决定因素。增加铅身体负担的一种方法是延长暴露持续时间。因此,根据上述假设,延长低铅浓度的暴露持续时间可能会导致之前在暴露于较高浓度铅时所观察到的FI反应率下降。为了验证这一论点,在按照每分钟一次食物强化的固定间隔(FI)程序评估大鼠行为表现之前,让大鼠饮用含50 ppm醋酸铅的水8或11个月。与之前报道的暴露于50 ppm铅1个月后反应率增加相反,在30 - 40个实验环节中,暴露8 - 11个月相对于对照值产生了FI反应率下降。反应率下降是反应间隔时间延长以及因此跑步速度降低的结果;强化后暂停时间和曲率指数正常。当强化程序从FI - 1分钟变为FI - 5分钟时,以及再次从FI - 5分钟变为FI - 5分钟时钟程序时,对照大鼠和暴露于铅8个月的大鼠之间反应率的差异趋势再次出现;当重新采用原来的程序参数FI - 1分钟时,没有明显差异。在固定间隔(FI)程序下训练的成年动物,然后暴露于50或500 ppm铅3 - 5个月,后续行为表现没有一致的变化。综上所述,这些研究表明,铅会导致在固定间隔(FI)程序控制反应的习得阶段出现延迟,而习得的行为表现似乎较不易受影响。然而,当环境出现新的学习情境或强化条件改变时,一个看似短暂的缺陷可能会再次出现。由于行为转变可能贯穿一生,这些影响对人类铅暴露具有重要意义。