Abstract
Circadian variations in acute and subacute neurobehavioural effects of trichloroethylene (TRI: 1.2 g/kg i.p.) were investigated in the rat under a light: dark = 12:12 hr cycle. An acute effect of TRI evaluated by decreased muscle tone was maximal during the early dark phase (21:00). A subacute effect of TRI was evaluated by a continuous recording of spontaneous locomotor activity in the rat. The circadian rhythm in spontaneous locomotor activity was extensively impaired by the injection of TRI for three consecutive days. Spectral analysis of spontaneous locomotor activity showed that ultradian periods became more dominant than the circadian period, and the 1//fluctuation of the spectrum disappeared after the injection of TRI. The effect of TRI on the circadian rhythm in spontaneous locomotor activity was circadian-phase dependent, and the treatment of TRI at 09:00 provoked greater circadian rhythm impairment than that at 21:00. The mechanisms of the time-dependent effect of TRI on neurobehaviour are the subject of further investigation.