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Predicting cycle time distributions with aggregate modelling of work areas in a real-world wafer fab
Hyperactivity in the Gunn rat model of neonatal jaundice: age-related attenuation and emergence of gait deficits
Background
Neonatal jaundice resulting from elevated unconjugated bilirubin (UCB) occurs in 60β80% of newborn infants. Although mild jaundice is generally considered harmless, little is known about its long-term consequences. Recent studies have linked mild bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction (BIND) with a range of neurological syndromes, including attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder. The goal of this study was to measure BIND across the lifespan in the Gunn rat model of BIND.
Methods
Using a sensitive force plate actometer, we measured locomotor activity and gait in jaundiced (jj) Gunn rats versus their non-jaundiced (Nj) littermates. Data were analyzed for young adult (3β4 months), early middle-aged (9β10 months), and late middle-aged (17β20 months) male rats.
Results
jj rats exhibited lower body weights at all ages and a hyperactivity that resolved at 17β20 months of age. Increased propulsive force and gait velocity accompanied hyperactivity during locomotor bouts at 9β10 months in jj rats. Stride length did not differ between the two groups at this age. Hyperactivity normalized and gait deficits, including decreased stride length, propulsive force, and gait velocity, emerged in the 17β20-month-old jj rats.
Conclusions
These results demonstrate that, in aging, hyperactivity decreases with the onset of gait deficits in the Gunn rat model of BIND
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