Nancy A. Dreschel
Pennsylvania State University
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Featured researches published by Nancy A. Dreschel.
Hormones and Behavior | 2009
Nancy A. Dreschel; Douglas A. Granger
Salivary cortisol has been increasingly used as a measure of stress response in studies of welfare, reaction to stress and human-animal interactions in dogs and other species. While it can be a very useful measure, there are a number of saliva collection issues made evident through studies in the human and animal fields which have not been investigated in the canine species. Collection materials and the volume of saliva that is collected; the use of salivary stimulants; and the effect of food contamination can all dramatically impact cortisol measurement, leading to spurious results. In order to further examine the limitations of the collection method and the effects of collection material and salivary stimulant on salivary cortisol levels, a series of clinical, in vitro and in vivo studies were performed. It was found that there is a large amount of inter- and intra-individual variation in salivary cortisol measurement. Beef flavoring of collection materials leads to unpredictable variability in salivary cortisol concentration. Using salivary stimulants such as citric acid also has the potential to affect cortisol concentration measurement in saliva. Hydrocellulose appears to be a useful collection material for salivary cortisol determination. Recommendations for collection materials and use of salivary stimulants are presented.
Development and Psychopathology | 2001
Douglas A. Granger; Kathryn E. Hood; Nancy A. Dreschel; Eric Sergeant; Andrea Likos
The origins of individual differences in social development are examined in relation to early stress (immune challenge) and social milieu (maternal behavior) in a genetic-developmental analysis using an animal model. Neonatal male mice (5 or 6 days of age) from two lines of mice selectively bred for high versus low levels of inter-male aggressive behavior received a standard immune challenge (i.p. injections of 0.05 mg/kg endotoxin or saline). Animals were reared by their line-specific biological dam or by a foster dam from a line bred without selection. Adult levels of social behaviors were assessed in a dyadic test (age 45-50 days). Mice from the high-aggressive line show more developmental sensitivity to immune challenge than mice from the low-aggressive line, and line differences persist regardless of the early maternal environment. As adults, endotoxin-treated mice from the high-aggressive line have lower levels of aggressive behavior, longer latency to attack, and higher rates of socially reactive and inhibited behaviors compared to saline controls. Developmental effects of endotoxin in the low-aggressive line are minimal: endotoxin increases socially reactive behaviors, compared to saline controls, but only for mice reared by their biological dams. Rearing by foster dams increases social exploration in the low-aggressive line. The findings raise novel questions regarding the openness of behavioral systems to effects of nonobvious but omnipresent features of the environment, such as antigenic load, how these effects are integrated to affect social development and psychopathology, and the nature of intrinsic factors that contribute to individual differences in sensitivity to early stressors.
Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2005
Nancy A. Dreschel; Douglas A. Granger
Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2010
Nancy A. Dreschel
Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2012
Jessica P. Hekman; Alicia Z. Karas; Nancy A. Dreschel
Developmental Psychobiology | 2003
Kathryn E. Hood; Nancy A. Dreschel; Douglas A. Granger
Domestic Animal Endocrinology | 2016
Mia Cobb; Khaled Iskandarani; Vernon M. Chinchilli; Nancy A. Dreschel
Journal of Veterinary Behavior-clinical Applications and Research | 2015
Mary Morrow; Joseph S. Ottobre; Ann Ottobre; Peter Neville; N.R. St-Pierre; Nancy A. Dreschel; Joy L. Pate
Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 2009
K.S. Vanderman; Nancy A. Dreschel; A.M. Swinker; D.M. Kniffen; Rama Radhakrishna; Jacob Werner; E.A. Jedrzejewski
Archive | 2003
Douglas A. Granger; Nancy A. Dreschel; Elizabeth A. Shirtcliff