Prenatal exposure to ethanol results in learning deficits and alters physiological response to stress. Neonatal handling and stimulation, on the other hand, produce long-lasting physiological and behavioral changes in response to stress. To determine whether early handling, consisting of daily separation and tactile stimulation for the first 3 weeks, can modify fetal alcohol effects on learning ability of young adult rats, offspring of rats chronically exposed to ethanol throughout pregnancy and control animals were trained in a T-maze to learn a position response and then to reverse the learned response. The nonhandled, ethanol-treated rats were deficient on reversal, but the ethanol-treated rats that were handled during the first 3 weeks of postnatal development showed no deficit in learning to reverse their previously learned responses. Postnatal handling had no effect on acquisition in alcohol-treated rats. Neither reversal nor acquisition was affected by infantile handling in pair-fed or normal control animals. Early handling map have eliminated the reversal deficit in the ethanol-treated offspring by altering their physiological and behavioral reactivity to stress. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.