Abstract
To explore possible long-term effects of gestational cocaine exposure in a nonhuman primate model, pregnant rhesus monkeys were treated from about 1 month of gestation until term with either 0 (N = 3), 0.3 (N = 3), 1.0 (N = 3), or escalating doses up to 8.5 (N = 3) mg/kg (IM), three times per day, 5 consecutive days per week. Despite these differences in cocaine exposure, the experimental groups did not differ significantly with respect to the postnatal growth of offspring over an 18-month period following birth. Beginning at 6 months of age, the behavior of offspring was monitored using an operant test battery that included five food-reinforced tasks designed to model aspects of learning, color and position discrimination, time estimation, short-term memory and attention, and motivation. Although the acquisition of each operant behavior by offspring progressed significantly during training between 6 and 18 months of age, this acquisition was not differentially affected by gestational cocaine exposure. It was concluded that, in a rhesus monkey model, chronic cocaine exposure during pregnancy had no significant effect on the offsprings' acquisition of operant behaviors.
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