The effects of oral administration of alcohol during pregnancy and
lactation on fetal and neonatal development were determined.
Female
Wistar rats were pair-fed nutritionally adequate liquid diets containing either alcohol or isocaloric carbohydrates starting on day 1 of
gestation.
Blood alcohol levels were determined in the pregnant
animals throughout the experiment.
On the day of
parturition the litters were culled to six.
The pups were sacrificed on day 30 and
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (
gamma GTP) activity determined in liver and brain.
gamma GTP activity was determined to be elevated in the alcohol treated
rats in all areas of brain studied except in the cortex and striatum.
Additionally, the alcohol treated
animals were smaller than the controls and exhibited higher serum and liver
gamma GTP activities.
Routine light microscopic plastic sections revealed large vacuolated spaces mainly confined to cortical layer V in the alcoholic
rats.
Golgi studies also revealed a decreased number of
dendritic spines on pyramidal
cell dendrites in the alcohol treated
animals.
These data suggest that exposure to alcohol in utero and in the postnatal period has a dramatic effect on neurons and processes in the cerebral cortex as well as on the
membrane bound enzyme,
gamma GTP.