Return to search

Effect of Oral Contraceptives on the Rat Brain and Pituitary Opioid Peptides

This study was designed to explore the hormonal regulation of CNS opioid peptide levels in female Sprague Dawley rats. Forty-eight animals were divided into 2 equal groups for acute and chronic studies. Each group was further divided into 4 subgroups, each containing 6 animals. Each rat in the control group received an inert pill (in 0.25 ml corn oil daily by gavage); the second group, 15 μg norethindrone (NE, a potent progestin present in the oral contraceptive Micronor®); the third group, 15 μg NE and 1 μg ethinyl estradiol, EE2 (present in the oral contraceptive Modicon®) and the fourth group, 10 times the dose of the third group. Rats were treated either acutely for 5 days or chronically for 7 weeks. Opioid peptides were estimated by radioimmunoassay. Acute administration of 150 μg NE + 10 μg EE2 decreased the levels of methionine-enkephalin (ME), leucine-enkephalin (LE), dynorphin (DYN) and β-endorphin like immunoreactivity (β-EI) by about 50% in the pituitary. The same dose on chronic administration also decreased DYN, but increased the levels of ME and LE in the pituitary by 331 and 69%, respectively. In the hypothalamus, chronic administration of NE + EE2 increased the level of ME (155%) and LE (87%) as well as of DYN (97%). In the striatum, the levels of LE (33%) and DYN (115%) were elevated during chronic administration. It is concluded that the acute administration of NE + EE2, in general, reduces the levels of ME, LE, DYN and β-EI. The extent of this decrease is about the same in the pituitary, hypothalamus and striatum. Chronic administration of these hormones, however, results in a reversal of this decrease (except for β-EI) and actually can increase the levels of ME, LE and DYN in all three tissues.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ETSU/oai:dc.etsu.edu:etsu-works-14192
Date01 January 1985
CreatorsTejwani, Gopi A., Vaswani, Kuldeep K., Barbacci, Josephine C.
PublisherDigital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
Source SetsEast Tennessee State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
SourceETSU Faculty Works

Page generated in 0.0019 seconds