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A Proposed Working Definition for the Novel Concept of Neurobehavioral Hormesis
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A Proposed Working Definition for the Novel Concept of Neurobehavioral Hormesis

Marni Y.V. Bekkedal, Glenn D. Ritchie, Kenneth R. Still and John Rossi
Human and ecological risk assessment, Vol.8(7), pp.1815-1823
10-01-2002

Abstract

exposure standards inverted U-shaped curve JP-8 non-linearity
It is proposed that a novel concept, neurobehavioral hormesis, be considered for integration into the field of toxicology. Hormesis results in a non-linear dose response where low dose exposures to toxicants cause beneficial effects, and detrimental effects at higher doses. Hormesis has not been systematically incorporated into traditional risk assessment methodologies, yet there is recent evidence that this pattern of results is relatively prevalent. In this paper, hormesis is applied to neurobehavioral toxicology, and an operational definition is proposed for application to putative examples of neurobehavioral hormesis. The two primary criteria used for the operational definition are: (1) performance is enhanced with low dose exposure and denigrated at higher doses, and (2) the change in behavior persists following a recovery period. In recent research from our laboratory it was reported that rats exposed to JP-8 jet fuel vapor demonstrated such a pattern of neurobehavioral performance on tests of learning and memory. Specifically, animals with long-term exposure to low concentrations of jet fuel demonstrated enhanced performance on specific operant tasks as compared both to controls and to animals exposed to higher concentrations. The effect was most apparent during complex versus simple operant tests, and was observed months following the last exposure to jet fuel. The effects meet both criteria for the proposed working definition of neurobehavioral hormesis, and thus provide evidence of the validity for considering neurobehavioral hormesis in published and future research, and suggests a more systematic investigation of existing literature may be warranted. Also, it provides additional support for the overall proposal to include hormetic effects in formal risk assessment paradigms.

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