Abstract

Preclinical studies evaluating the effects of gestational sleep restriction on maternal behavior are needed in order to provide information on the background mechanisms underlying this relationship. In this study, 32 female 90 days-old Wistar-Hannover rats were distributed in two groups: Control group (CTRL – n = 13), not subjected to any manipulation during pregnancy; and sleep restriction group (SR – n = 19) – subjected to sleep restriction during the whole pregnancy (21 days). Maternal behavioral analysis was conducted from postpartum day 1 (PPD1) to PPD7, based on observational ethograms. On PPD11 the animals were subjected to the grooming analysis algorithm, followed by the elevated plus maze. Results from an ethogram-based analysis indicated a decrease in self-grooming among sleep-deprived rats (denoting reduced anxiety-like behavior), but no significant differences were found in maternal behavior (except for a slight increase in high arched-back nursing). Controlled analysis detected an impairment in high-arched back nursing in sleep-deprived animals. The grooming microstructure analysis showed an increased frequency of incorrect transitions among sleep restricted animals, indicating increased anxiety-like behavior. No significant differences were observed in the elevated-plus maze. In conclusion, sleep-restricted pregnant rats display an equivalent or slightly increased maternal behavior during the postpartum period, when compared to control animals.

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