HYPOGLYCEMIA-INDUCED INHIBITION OF LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SECRETION IN THE RHESUS-MONKEY IS NOT MEDIATED BY ENDOGENOUS OPIOID-PEPTIDES

Citation
Le. Heisler et al., HYPOGLYCEMIA-INDUCED INHIBITION OF LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SECRETION IN THE RHESUS-MONKEY IS NOT MEDIATED BY ENDOGENOUS OPIOID-PEPTIDES, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 76(5), 1993, pp. 1280-1285
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism
ISSN journal
0021972X
Volume
76
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
1280 - 1285
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-972X(1993)76:5<1280:HIOLSI>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
A role for endogenous opioid peptides in stress-induced inhibition of LH secretion has been suggested based on the observation in rats, huma ns, and nonhuman primates that LH inhibition in response to a variety of different stresses could be blocked by the administration of opiate antagonists. In the present study, we have examined in rhesus monkeys whether suppression of LH secretion by insulin-induced hypoglycemia i s prevented by administration of the opiate antagonist naloxone. The a dministration of 1.0 U insulin/kg to chair-restrained ovariectomized m onkeys (n = 6) decreased blood glucose levels from 4.98 +/- 0.17 to 2. 08 +/- 0.05 mmol/L and increased cortisol levels from 1279 +/- 205 to 2191 +/- 475 nmol/L. LH levels declined to 62% of the levels observed in the pretreatment control period (P < 0.05). Infusion of naloxone (2 -mg bolus plus 2 mg/h or 10-mg bolus plus 10 mg/h) did not reverse the effects of insulin-induced hypoglycemia on LH concentrations. The adm inistration of 1.0 U insulin/kg to nonrestrained monkeys produced a si milar hypoglycemic state. Blood glucose levels declined from 4.08 +/- 0.11 to 2.45 +/- 0.05 mmol/L, while cortisol concentrations increased from 577 +/- 53 to 1324 +/- 294 nmol/L. However, LH concentrations did not decline in response to hypoglycemia. These data indicate that hyp oglycemia-induced inhibition of LH secretion in chair-restrained ovari ectomized monkeys is not mediated by endogenous opiates, since naloxon e failed to reverse this effect. The observation that hypoglycemia inh ibited LH levels only during a period of restraint suggests either an additive or synergistic effect of these two stresses on LH secretion.