β-Endorphin: Analgesic and hormonal effects in humans
- 1 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 76 (10) , 5377-5381
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.76.10.5377
Abstract
The pharmacokinetics and the hormonal, analgesic, and behavioral effects of several doses of human β-endorphin were evaluated after intravenous administration to three patients and intracerebroventricular administration to one patient with pain caused by cancer. These effects were compared to the hormonal effects of intravenously administered morphine sulfate in two patients and an enkephalin analog in two baboons. The mean terminal half-life after intravenous administration of 5 or 10 mg of human β-endorphin to three patients was 37 min; the mean volume of distribution was 178 ml/kg, and the metabolic clearance rate was 3.2 (ml/min)/kg. The half-life of β-endorphin in cerebrospinal fluid after intracerebroventricular administration was 93 min, and the volume of distribution was 0.74 ml/kg. A rapid rise in plasma prolactin followed both intravenous and intracerebroventricular β-endorphin. Intravenous administration did not affect plasma growth hormone, but intracerebroventricular administration suppressed plasma growth hormone. No significant change in plasma growth hormone was noted after intravenous administration of morphine to humans, but plasma growth hormone decreased in one baboon after administration of the enkephalin analog. β-Endorphin-stimulated release of prolactin occurred at doses lower than those required to produce analgesic and other behavioral effects. When both hormonal and analgesic effects were observed (after 7.5 mg were given intracerebroventricularly), the onset of the hormonal response slightly preceded the analgesic and behavioral responses. These studies suggest that the hormonal effects of β-endorphin are species dependent and are similar to those of morphine. Hormonal and analgesic effects of β-endorphin appear to result from the activation of opiate receptors that differ in their locations and characteristics.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stimulation of Human Periaqueductal Gray for Pain Relief Increases Immunoreactive β-endorphin in Ventricular FluidScience, 1979
- HORMONAL AND METABOLIC RESPONSES TO AN ENKEPHALIN ANALOGUE IN NORMAL MANThe Lancet, 1978
- Comparative metabolic clearance rate, volume of distribution and plasma half-life of human β-lipotropin and acthLife Sciences, 1978
- Spectrum of Pituitary Alteration with Mild and Severe Thyroid Impairment* †Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1978
- The analgesic activity of human beta-endorphin in man (1,2,3).1978
- Studies on the Interaction of Endorphins, Substance P, and Endogenous Somatostatin in Growth Hormone and Prolactin Release in Rats*Endocrinology, 1978
- β-Endorphin and Adrenocorticotropin Are Selected Concomitantly by the Pituitary GlandScience, 1977
- STIMULATION IN VIVO OF THE SECRETION OF PROLACTIN AND GROWTH HORMONE BY β-ENDORPHINEndocrinology, 1977
- Endorphins: Profound Behavioral Effects in Rats Suggest New Etiological Factors in Mental IllnessScience, 1976
- [The chemical constitution of the blood pressure decreasing factor in the potato].1952