PROLACTIN RELEASE AND LACTOGENESIS AFTER OVARIECTOMY IN PREGNANT RATS: EFFECT OF OVARIAN HORMONES
- 1 October 1974
- journal article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 63 (1) , 13-20
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.0630013
Abstract
SUMMARY Ovariectomy of rats on day 19 of pregnancy induced a rapid rise in serum prolactin. Levels were significantly increased 4 h after removal of the ovaries and continued to rise up to 24 h. A transient fall occurred at 32 h, but serum prolactin concentration was still raised after 36, 48 and 58 h. Similar increases of serum prolactin occurred after ovariectomy on days 17 and 18 of pregnancy. Lactogenesis occurred 24·8 or 28·2 h after ovariectomy on days 19 or 17–18 of pregnancy respectively. Rats ovariectomized on day 17 or 18 delivered on day 21 and rats ovariectomized on day 19 delivered on day 22 of pregnancy. Ovariectomy impaired parturition in all groups. Treatment with oestrogen immediately after the operation did not prevent the rise in serum prolactin levels 4, 8 and 12 h after ovariectomy, but 24 h after ovariectomy, prolactin values were not significantly different from those in sham-operated control rats. When oestrogen was injected 12 h after ovariectomy, serum prolactin was markedly increased 12 h later. Lactogenesis occurred about 22·9 h after oestrogen treatment and all animals delivered on day 21 of pregnancy. Progesterone treatment prevented the rise in prolactin levels observed 4 and 8 h after ovariectomy, but at 12 h levels had risen and were similar to those observed in untreated ovariectomized rats. Progesterone prevented lactogenesis for 14 h (around 37.5 h after ovariectomy) and induced a delay in the onset of parturition. The results indicate that the decrease of progesterone in the blood after ovariectomy in pregnant rats may induce a release of prolactin and lactogenesis. Oestrogen seems to be effective in raising prolactin levels at low blood concentrations of progesterone.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: