Abstract
The behavior of albino rats was studied in Watson's maze. 1 Young adult rats were first trained so as to find their way out of the maze by the shortest distance and in the shortest period of time. After the animals have been thoroughly trained anesthetics were administered and the subsequent behavior after recovery from anesthesia was studied. The effects of a single anesthetization and of repeated anesthetizations after several days'intervals of time were noted. The anesthetics studied were nitrous oxide, ether and chloroform. In the different experiments the animals were kept under anesthesia from one to five minutes and observations of their behavior were begun as soon as they were awake and running about.
A difference in the effects of the different anesthetics studied was very early observed. Nitrous oxide, when administered carefully together with sufficient oxygen to prevent asphyxia, produced the least deleterious effects. The animals recovered their normal behavior or intelligence within a few minutes after coming out of anesthesia.
Numerous experiments with ether showed that the rats in this case also were not much affected by the drug. On recovering completely from the anesthesia, about half an hour afterwards, they found their way out of the maze without going astray, but showed occasionally some retardation in the duration of performance. On the following day however the animals were found almost invariably to have recovered completely their intelligence. Even after repeated anesthetizations on different days, or after prolonged single anesthetizations the same results were obtained.
Chloroform was found to be by far the most deleterious anesthetic of those studied. A single administration of the drug for a minute or two was sufficient to impair the intelligence of the animal for that day, and more prolonged anesthesia or repeated anesthetizations produced a greater impairment of intelligence, as manifested by the behavior of the animals in the maze or labyrinth for several days afterwards.
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