• 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 65 (5), 625-636
Abstract
Rat embryos explanted at stages between primitive streak and head-fold were exposed in rotating bottle cultures to glucose levels raised by 3-15 mg/ml either throughout a 66 h culture period, or for shorter intervals near the start of culture (with the rest of the culture period at normal glucose levels). A high proportion of embryos explanted at 8 days 20 h or at 9 days, and exposed to 12 mg/ml exogenous glucose for only the 1st or 2nd 8 h periods of a 66-68 h culture were malformed, whereas embryos exposed for the 3rd 8 h were relatively resistant, and embryos exposed later still were unaffected. There were indications tht embyros at stages of development corresponding to the 2nd 8 h periods in these cultures were particularly susceptible to hyperglycemia. Embryos explanted at 9 days exhibited malformations when exposed to 6-9 mg/ml glucose throughout culture, compared with the 12-15 mg/ml shown previously to be necessary to induce anomalies in embryos explanted 12 h later.