Abstract

Intense magnetic fields have been shown to affect memory-related behaviours of rodents. A series of experiments was performed to investigate further the effects of a 50 Hz magnetic field on the foraging behaviour of adult, male C57BL/6J mice performing a spatial learning task in an eight-arm radial maze. Exposure to vertical, sinusoidal magnetic fields between 7.5 microT and 7.5 mT for 45 min immediately before daily testing sessions caused transient decreases in performance that depended on the applied flux density. Exposure above a threshold of between 7.5 and 75 microT significantly increased the number of errors the animals made and reduced the rate of acquisition of the task without any effect on overall accuracy. However, the imposition of a 45-minute delay between exposure at 0.75 mT and behavioural testing resulted in the elimination of any deficit. Similarly, exposure to fields between 7.5 microT and 0.75 mT for 45 min each day for 4 days after training had no amnesic effects on the retention and subsequent performance of the task. Overall, these results provide additional evidence that 50 Hz magnetic fields may cause subtle changes in the processing of spatial information in mice. Although these effects appear dependent on field strength, even at high flux densities the field-induced deficits tend to be transient and reversible.

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