Abstract
Changes in latencies of the visual evoked response (VER) during early post-natal development were examined in protein-deprived (PD) rats. The evoked response to light-flash stimulation was recorded in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) and on the surface of the visual cortex. In control rats, latencies of the cortical VER decreased rapidly up to 20 days and slowly thereafter. In PD rats, the latencies of the cortical VER were increased by 10-15 ms at 17 days; the developmental decrease was delayed by approximately 3 days. After 20 days, PD rats also went into a phase with slow decrease of the latencies, and the onset latency of the cortical VER was still increased by some 10 ms at 26/27 days. At this age, PD rats showed an increase in the latencies of the VER in the dLGN which was of similar magnitude to that in the cortical VER, indicating that alterations were more marked in the peripheral parts of the visual system at this stage of development. The findings are in agreement with previous studies indicating that there is a delay of visual system development in PD rats before 20 days. A maturational event which turns rapid into slow development at approximately 20 days in both C and PD rats turns this delay into a distortion of development. The delays and distortions of visual system development may be one causative factor for the functional deficit present in the visual cortex of adult PD rats.
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