Abstract
Changes in the brain’s neuroactive steroid levels, behavior in the open field, and the anxious-phobic status of male and female rats in the course of development have been studied. An increase in the motor and exploratory activity and emotionality in rats of both sexes in the pubertal period and a decrease in their values in mature and old animals have been detected. Anxiety has no sexual dimorphism in adult animals; it is significantly higher in males than in females in the prepubertal and pubertal periods of development and is higher in old females than in males of the same age. An increase in the level of corticosterone in some brain structures in maturing and old rats has been found; the testosterone concentration increases in one-month-old and adult animals but decreases in old individuals, while the estradiol concentration in all studied brain structures of male and female rats was low in all periods of postnatal life. Correlation analysis has shown modulation by steroid hormones of the changes in behavioral responses during development.
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