This Science News Wire page contains a press release issued by an organization and is provided to you "as is" with little or no review from Science X staff.

Influence of anesthetics of neonatal rat brain

May 20th, 2021 Larisa Busil, Yury Nurmeev
Influence of anesthetics of neonatal rat brain
Evoked optical intrinsic signal in the somatosensory cortex of the neonatal rat. (A) Diagram of the experimental setup for recording evoked OIS in the barrel cortex of the neonatal rat, (B) color-coded density map of the detected OIS contours overlaid on the recorded OIS, seen as a dark spot, (C) example of the temporal profile of the OIS recorded using red light, stimulation period is shown by the grey rectangle, mean OIS dynamic is shown by the red line, the shaded area corresponds to the confidence interval, (D) developmental changes in OIS onset (0 is the start of stimulation), (E) example of OIS area changes during recording is shown by the blue line, the red line is a result of convolution with a Kaiser window of 12 points size, (F) developmental changes in the evoked OIS area, amplitude, rise and decay times. The red dashed line is a linear fit. Grey dots are results from individual experiments. Box plots show median (bold black line), the bottom and top edges of the box indicate the 25th and 75th percentiles, The whiskers extend to the most extreme data points not considered outliers, and the outliers are plotted individually using the ’+’ symbol. Credit: Kazan Federal University

A neurobiological study by young scientists of KFU appeared in Scientific Reports.

Study lead, Research Associate of the Neurobiology Lab Marat Minlebaev explains, "Our brain is a complex mechanism, and it's important to understand how it works. If we understand how our brain functions, we can put forth new treatment methodologies or prevent pathologies, both congenital and acquired."

A number of techniques were used to undertake the research, so, apart from biologists, other scientists were also invited to partake.

"Fourth year students Viktoria Shumkova and Violetta Sitdikova conducted experiments and analyzed their results," says Minlebaev. "To implement the idea, new software was needed. Here, we were helped by Ph.D. student of the Institute of IT and Intelligent Systems Aleksey Leukhin. Senior year student of the Institute of Physics Ildar Reshapov created the necessary device. The merging of knowledge and competence of representatives of different branches of science helps conduct research on an entirely new level."

The paper proved that urethane, a previously widely used anesthetic, dose-dependently changes the cortical rhythms of brain activity and, due to this, is very suitable for experimenting. Another popular anesthetic, isoflurane, doesn't show such properties at the same scale. To conduct experiments, neonatal rats were used, because their developing brain is functionally similar to a human embryo brain during the latter half of intrauterine development. Thanks to a noninvasive technique (also developed by the team) brain activity can be monitored without skull penetration. Optical intrinsic signal imaging helped to register sensory evoked response and local changes in blood flow in the rats' cerebral cortex.

The practical significance of the results is that the data shows how different anesthetics influence brain functioning.

More information:
Effects of urethane and isoflurane on the sensory evoked response and local blood flow in the early postnatal rat somatosensory cortex

www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-88461-8

Provided by Kazan Federal University

Citation: Influence of anesthetics of neonatal rat brain (2021, May 20) retrieved 14 September 2025 from https://sciencex.com/wire-news/382974808/influence-of-anesthetics-of-neonatal-rat-brain.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.