1. Progesterone and norethisterone have different effects on tachykinin-like immunoreactivity in rat cortex and striatum.
- Author
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Rugarn O, Hammar M, and Theodorsson E
- Subjects
- Animals, Delayed-Action Preparations, Estradiol pharmacology, Female, Hippocampus metabolism, Neurokinin A immunology, Neurokinin A metabolism, Neuropeptide Y immunology, Neuropeptide Y metabolism, Neurotensin immunology, Neurotensin metabolism, Norethindrone administration & dosage, Ovariectomy, Progesterone administration & dosage, Progesterone Congeners administration & dosage, Radioimmunoassay, Rats, Substance P immunology, Substance P metabolism, Tachykinins immunology, Cerebral Cortex metabolism, Neostriatum metabolism, Norethindrone pharmacology, Progesterone pharmacology, Progesterone Congeners pharmacology, Tachykinins metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of progesterone and the most commonly prescribed synthetic progestogen, norethisterone, on regional immune-like reactivity of neuropeptide Y (NPY), substance P (SP), neurokinin A (NKA) and neurotensin (NT) in brains of female ovariectomized estradiol-substituted rats., Results: Norethisterone+estradiol-treated rats had 44% lower SP levels compared with estradiol-only-treated in frontal cortex and 20% lower NKA levels in comparison with progesterone+estradiol-treated in frontal cortex. Progesterone+estradiol-treated rats had 66% lower SP levels in striatum in comparison with both estradiol-only-treated and norethisterone+estradiol-treated. No significant results were found for NPY and NT., Conclusion: Progesterone and the synthetic progestogen, norethisterone, have different effects on SP- and NKA-like immunoreactivity in rat cortex and striatum. The effects of NET on SP- and NKA-like immunoreactivity in frontal cortex may contribute to the mood effects ascribed to this progestogen in clinical usage.
- Published
- 2001
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