Abstract

In Exp. 1A, hybrid mice (N = 10) were provided with food and 25% (v/v) ethanol as the only source of liquid for 72 h, beginning at the detection of the copulatory plug (08:00 h, Day 1). Control mice received food and tap water. Food consumption (P less than 0.001) but not total caloric intake (P greater than 0.05) was less for the alcohol-treated mice than the controls. Ethanol-derived calories averaged 35% of caloric intake during the 72 h of treatment. Alcohol-treated animals showed a dramatic weight loss until Day 5 while controls gained weight (P less than 0.05). Ethanol consumption did not influence pregnancy rate, litter size or litter weight. In Exp. 1B, animals were treated as in Exp. 1A, but were killed at various times between 24:00 h, Day 1, and 08:00 h, Day 4. Trunk blood was used to determine haematocrit and serum to determine alcohol concentration. Haematocrit was greater (P less than 0.05) for all alcohol-treated mice than for controls at all time periods sampled except one. Dehydration was therefore probably responsible for the weight loss seen in Exps 1A and 1B. Average blood alcohol concentrations fluctuated with time of day and day of treatment. Average maximum concentration was 91.4 mg ethanol/100 ml serum. In Exp. 2, hybrid mouse 2-cell embryos were cultured in vitro in 0 or 0.1% ethanol (Exp. 2A) and 0 or 1.0% ethanol (Exp. 2B) for 8 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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