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Journal Article

Citation

Seke Etet PF, Farahna M, Khayr MAM, Omar KM, Deniz ÖG, Mustafa HN, Alatta NO, Alhayani A, Kaplan S, Vecchio L. J. Microsc. Ultrastruct. 2017; 5(4): 206-215.

Affiliation

Department of Basic Health Sciences, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Qassim University, 51452 Buraydah, Saudi Arabia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Wolters Kluwer-Medknow)

DOI

10.1016/j.jmau.2017.05.005

PMID

30023256

PMCID

PMC6025781

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Short morning exposure to high illuminance visible electromagnetic radiations termed as artificial daylight is beneficial for the mental health of people living in geographical areas with important seasonal changes in daylight illuminance. However, the commercial success of high illuminance light sources has raised the question of the safety of long hour exposure.

METHODS: We have investigated the effect of the replacement of natural daylight by artificial daylight in Swiss mice raised under natural lighting conditions. Mice were monitored for neurotoxicity and general health changes. They were submitted to a battery of conventional tests for mood, motor and cognitive functions' assessment on exposure day (ED) 14 and ED20. Following sacrifice on ED21 due to marked signs of neurotoxicity, the expression of markers of inflammation and apoptosis was assessed in the entorhinal cortex and neurons were estimated in the hippocampal formation.

RESULTS: Signs of severe cognitive and motor impairments, mood disorders, and hepatotoxicity were observed in animals exposed to artificial daylight on ED20, unlike on ED14 and unlike groups exposed to natural daylight or conventional lighting. Activated microglia and astrocytes were observed in the entorhinal cortex, as well as dead and dying neurons. Neuronal counts revealed massive neuronal loss in the hippocampal formation.

CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that long hour exposure to high illuminance visible electromagnetic radiations induced severe alterations in brain function and general health in mice partly mediated by damages to the neocortex-entorhinal cortex-hippocampus axis. These findings raise caution over long hour use of high illuminance artificial light.


Language: en

Keywords

Behavior; Bright visible light; Entorhinal cortex; Hippocampus; Mood disorder; Mouse

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