In vivo brain microdialysis was used to characterize the daily pattern of extracellular excitatory amino acids (EAA; glutamate and aspartate), glutamine and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in the region of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in freely behaving male Syrian hamsters. Diurnal variations in the extracellular concentrations of EAA and 5-HIAA observed under 14:10-h light-dark (LD) photoperiod were confirmed by cosinor analysis. Peak levels occurred during the night, with the mean acrophasis for 5-HI-AA concentration preceding that for EAA by 1-2 h. Release of EAA was stimulated by K(+)-induced depolarization in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner and was not affected by tetrodotoxin. In the absence of light cues (constant dim red light, < 0.4 lx; DD) there was a significant time-of-day effect in peak glutamate concentration (occurring during subjective night), but the rhythmic pattern of 5-HIAA output was lost. There was no apparent direct temporal linkage between peaks in extracellular EAA or 5-HIAA and bouts of wheel-running activity under LD or DD. These results are evidence that 1) the daily release pattern of extracellular glutamate, but not 5-HIAA, is circadian in nature; and 2) this rhythm in glutamate is not based on Na+ channel-dependent action potentials. Finally, a discordance in the timing of peak nocturnal extracellular 5-HIAA and EAA concentrations was evident, possibly reflecting an interplay between serotonergic and EAA pathways in the SCN.
This study examined the effects of transfer from long photoperiod (LP) to short photoperiod (SP) on the cessation of ovarian cyclicity and the castration response in inbred LSH/SsLak golden Syrian hamsters. Forty-six 8 to 10-wk-old female hamsters were acclimatized in LP (14L:10D; lights on at 0600 h) during which time animals were monitored for regular ovarian cyclicity. Twenty-six animals were transferred to SP (8L:16D; lights on at 0600 h) and examined daily for vaginal discharges. One day after the day of the first missed ovulation, individual SP-exposed animals were bilaterally ovariectomized; concomitantly, an LP control animal in diestrus I underwent the same procedure. Thirty days after ovariectomy, the hamsters were fitted with intra-atrial silastic cannulae. On the following two postoperative days, 0.6 ml blood samples were collected at 0700, 1200, 1400, and 1600 h for SP animals and at 0700, 1400, 1600 and 1800 h for LP controls. On the third day, the animals were decapitated and sera and pituitaries saved for determination of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and prolactin (PRL) by radioimmunoassay (RIA). All SP-exposed animals displayed their last estrous discharge 14-34 days after transfer to SP (mean = 23.0 +/- 0.8 days). Their ovaries were characterized by the absence of corpora lutea, the presence of large atretic antral follicles, few growing follicles, and interstitium that was stimulated to varying degrees. Total and adjusted pituitary weights were decreased by SP exposure (p less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Twenty-six in-patients with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual version IV (DSM-IV) criteria for opioid dependence were selected at random to receive either a combination of an 11-day low-dose buprenorphine and a 14-day carbamazepine regimen (n = 14) or a combination of an 11-day methadone and a 14-day carbamazepine regimen (n = 12) in a double-blind, randomized 14-day in-patient detoxification treatment. Patients with buprenorphine and carbamazepine showed a significantly better psychological state after the first and second weeks of treatment. Above all, the buprenorphine-treated patients demonstrated a less marked tiredness, sensitiveness and depressive state as well as a more prominent elevated mood during the detoxification process. Seven non-completers (after 7 days: four of 12 = 33.3%; after 14 days: seven of 12 = 58.3%) were treated with methadone and carbamazepine and five non-completers (after 7 days: two of 14 = 14.3%; after 14 days: five of 14 = 35.7%) received buprenorphine and carbamazepine. The difference in the overall dropout rate after day 14 was not significant. The present study supports the hypothesis that the combination of buprenorphine and carbamazepine leads to a better clinical outcome than does a combination of methadone and carbamazepine in the detoxification of opioid addicts with additional multiple drug abuse. The buprenorphine and carbamazepine-regimen provides a more effective short-term relief of affective disturbances than does methadone and carbamazepine. No severe side effects occurred during the treatment period in both groups.
This study was designed to examine the effects of short photoperiod (SP) exposure on gonadotropin and PRL levels in the presence and absence of estrogen treatment in ovariectomized LSH/SsLak hamsters. In experiment I, regularly cycling hamsters maintained in long photoperiod (14L:10D) were ovariectomized and Silastic capsules containing 2.0-mm columns of estradiol benzoate (EB) implanted simultaneously into half of the animals. On the following day, half of the animals in each treatment group were transferred to SP (8L:16D). After 20 days of SP or long photoperiod (LP) exposure, all animals were sacrificed by decapitation and their sera and pituitaries saved for hormonal determinations. The experimental protocol in experiment II was similar, except that two groups in each photoperiod received estrogen treatments; one group received 2.0-mm implants of 17-beta-estradiol (E2), whereas a second group received 10.0-mm E2 implants. SP treatment effected a reduction in serum LH and FSH levels in the absence of steroid replacement treatment. EB treatment depressed serum gonadotropin levels in LP animals, but did not alter levels in SP hamsters. In experiment II, LP- and SP-treated animals showed similar responses to E2 treatment, although different responses were noted in the two dosage groups. Pituitary gonadotropin contents became progressively decreased with increasing steroid levels and in certain groups showed SP-induced reductions. Serum and pituitary PRL levels increased in response to steroid treatment, but were not affected by SP treatment. In summary, 20 days of SP treatment caused gonad-independent reductions in gonadotropin levels and appeared to reduce the steroid feedback sensitivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary axis. PRL levels were not affected by SP exposure in the absence of the ovaries, and the interaction of PRL and estrogen appeared to be similar in both photoperiods.
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