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1 Departments of
Physiology/Pharmacology, Southern
Illinois University School of Medicine,
Carbondale, Illinois
2 Division of
Statistics and Measurement, Southern
Illinois University School of Medicine,
Springfield, Illinois
To characterize the effects of testosterone (T) pretreatment on the response of pituitary LH secretion to exogenous gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), intact
male dogs were injected subcutaneously with either oil
or 500 µg/kg of T in oil at 1, 3, 6, 12, or 24 hours prior to
intravenous GnRH administration (50 ng/kg). The
pre-GnRH levels of plasma LH were reduced in all
groups of T-treated dogs except in animals given T 1 hour
before GnRH. The concentrations of plasma LH during
both the peak-response period and the recovery period
following GnRH administration in animals injected
with T did not differ from those in animals injected
with oil. These results indicate that T pretreatment has
no effect on the ability of the pituitary to respond to
exogenous GnRH at all time periods tested, and imply
that direct feedback of T on the pituitary may not be
acutely involved in steroid negative feedback in the
male dog. Unexpectedly, however, there was some indication that the time of injection of either oil or T
could affect the response of the pituitary to GnRH, and
this may represent a stress phenomenon.
Key words: GnRH, LH-response, testosterone, dog
Submitted on May 1, 1981
Revised on June 8, 1981
Accepted on September 24, 1981
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