首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Effects of spreading depression on stress-induced changes in plasma prolactin and LH.
Authors:J A Colombo  C H Sawyer
Abstract:Female rats rendered "pseudopregnant" by treatment with PMS and hCG and ovariectomized rats injected with estradiol and progesterone (OVX-E2-P) were subjected to cortical spreading depression (SD). Within 7-10 min under ether anesthesia in a stereotaxic instrument a frontal craniotomy was performed and a cotton ball saturated with physiological saline (control) or 25% KCl was applied to the exposed dura, covered with dental cement and skin sutured. The animals were then placed in separate containers in an isolated room and decapitated for collection of trunk blood at 0, 15, 30, or 60 min after surgery. In PMS-hCH saline-treated control animals, prolactin levels had dropped by 15 and 30 min when compared with the zero-time values but by 60 min had increased significantly above the 30-min level. At that time (60 min), prolactin values in the KCl group were significantly lower than in the controls. Corticosterone levels were high at both 15 and 60 min in control and KCl groups. In OVX-E2-P control animals, plasma prolactin levels also rose at 60 min compared with 15- and 30-min samples and at 60 min were significantly higher than in the KCl group. In control animals, LH levels were lower at 15 and 60 min than at zero time, but they remained unchanged in the KCl group. The dato are interpreted as indicating that cortical SD suppresses the stress responses observed in saline-treated control animals.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号