Abstract
Studies of olfactory deprivation have most frequently used unilateral naris occlusion to effect deprivation. Recent psychophysical evidence suggests that adult rodents with either acute or chronic naris occlusion show little decrement in olfactory ability. In this study the effect of naris occlusion coupled with ipsilateral or contralateral olfactory bulb deafferentation on odor-guided behaviors was tested in neonatal mice. Animals that received bilateral bulbectomy or control manipulation were also included. In Experiment 1, olfactory lesions were produced by bulb aspiration on the second day after birth (P2). Daily weight gain, a reliable measure of suckling success, was recorded until P21. In Experiment 2, olfactory lesions consisted of bulb transection on P2. Daily weights were recorded until subjects were P10. Animals with bilateral bulbectomy had the highest mortality rate and slowest growth rate. Both naris occlusion groups grew more slowly than controls but were not significantly different at P5 or P10. They diverged, thereafter, such that at P20 the group with naris occlusion ipsilateral to bulbectomy was similar to controls, while the contralateral group was similar to the bilateral bulbectomy group. In Experiment 2, the weights of the naris occlusion groups diverged by the day after surgery, with the contralateral group suffering the most arrested growth. Behavioral tests were combined from the two experiments for analysis. Subjects were tested at P5 for their ability to find the nipple, at P8 for their ability to find the nest, and at P10 for unwashed vs. washed nipple preferences. Only the contralateral group had a significantly depressed ability to find the nipple, while all lesion groups had a significant but similar decline in nest-finding ability. Controls and both naris occlusion groups showed significant preferences for unwashed nipples. These results suggest that while naris occlusion produces some deficits in olfactory ability it does not produce complete odor deprivation. It is concluded that the olfactory epithelium in the occluded nasal fossa may gain access to stimuli by a retronasal or internasal route.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.