Department of Medicine, University of Padua, Padua, Italy.
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, 12801 E. 17th Avenue, Rm L18-4100, Aurora, CO, USA.
Mol Neurobiol. 2020 Jan;57(1):41-50. doi: 10.1007/s12035-019-01755-x. Epub 2019 Sep 7.
Several animal and emerging human studies suggest an association between an early exposure to general anesthesia (GA) and long-lasting problems with complex social and emotional behaviors such as inattentiveness, impulsivity, anxiogenic tendencies, as well as difficulties engaging in proper social intercourse, with significant increase in attention deficit and hyperactivity-type behaviors. To further investigate these behaviors, and to examine the potential of presently available rodent behavioral models to guide future assessments of long-term socio-emotional impairments in humans, we examined the long-term effects of GA on anxiety/fear and social behaviors. We exposed male and female Sprague-Dawley infant rats at the peak of their synaptogenesis to either GA containing midazolam (9 mg/kg, i.p.), 70% nitrous oxide (NO) and 0.75% isoflurane (Iso) administered in 29-30% oxygen (experimental), or air (with 30% oxygen) plus the vehicle, 0.1% dimethyl sulfoxide (Sham) for 6 h. Behavioral experiments were conducted at adolescence (the open-field test) and young adulthood (the open-field test, the elevated plus-maze and the social novelty test). We report that an early exposure to GA during critical stages of brain development results in long-lasting increase in risk-taking tendencies and significant changes in the anxiety-related behaviors when tested in young adult rats. In addition, we noted novelty-seeking tendencies/less guarded behavior with changes in social discrimination. We conclude that early exposure to anesthesia may have lasting influences on emotional and social development. Importantly, our results show that currently used rodent behavioral models could be a good correlate to assess long-term socio-emotional GA-induced impairments observed in humans.
几项动物和新兴的人类研究表明,早期接触全身麻醉(GA)与注意力不集中、冲动、焦虑倾向以及难以进行适当社交等复杂社交和情绪行为的长期问题之间存在关联,并显著增加了注意力缺陷多动障碍样行为。为了进一步研究这些行为,并检查目前可用的啮齿动物行为模型是否可以指导未来对人类长期社会情感障碍的评估,我们检查了 GA 对焦虑/恐惧和社会行为的长期影响。我们在突触发生高峰期使雄性和雌性 Sprague-Dawley 幼鼠接触 GA,其中包含咪达唑仑(9 mg/kg,腹腔注射)、70%氧化亚氮(NO)和 0.75%异氟烷(Iso),并在 29-30%氧气(实验组)或空气(含 30%氧气)中加入载体,0.1%二甲基亚砜(Sham),持续 6 小时。行为实验在青春期(旷场测试)和成年早期(旷场测试、高架十字迷宫和社交新颖性测试)进行。我们报告说,在大脑发育的关键阶段早期接触 GA 会导致冒险倾向的长期增加,并在年轻成年大鼠测试时导致与焦虑相关的行为发生重大变化。此外,我们注意到寻求新奇的倾向/较少的警惕行为,以及社交辨别力的变化。我们得出结论,早期接触麻醉可能对情绪和社会发展产生持久影响。重要的是,我们的结果表明,目前使用的啮齿动物行为模型可能是评估人类观察到的长期社会情感 GA 诱导损伤的良好相关性。