• Life sciences · Jan 2001

    The effect of ketamine hydrochloride anesthesia on basal and N-methyl-D,L-aspartate induced plasma prolactin secretion in the adult male rhesus monkey.

    • S S Rizvi, S Altaf, A A Naseem, M Asif, Z Rasul, and M Qayyum.
    • Pakistan Science Foundation, Islamabad. Shakeel_raza@hotmail.com
    • Life Sci. 2001 Jan 19; 68 (9): 1083-93.

    AbstractThe excitatory amino acids (EAAs), glutamate and aspartate, acting predominantly on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, have been shown to be involved in the central regulation of the secretion of several anterior pituitary hormones including prolactin (PRL), whereas ketamine hydrochloride (KH), a widely used anesthetic, has been reported to antagonize a variety of NMDA receptor mediated actions of these EAAs. In the present study, the effect of KH on basal PRL levels as well as on N-methyl-D,L-aspartate (NMA), an agonist of NMDA receptor, induced plasma PRL secretion was investigated in the adult male rhesus monkey. The values were compared to those obtained from the same animals restrained in primate chairs. The plasma PRL concentrations were higher in animals receiving KH administered either intramuscularly (2.5 mg/kg BW at 30 min intervals) or intravenously (10 mg/kg BW) as compared to those observed in the unanesthetized chair-restrained monkeys. NMA induced an unequivocal increase in plasma PRL concentrations in both conscious chair-restrained and KH anesthetized monkeys, but the response was greater in anesthetized animals than the conscious monkeys. The present findings suggest that KH has stimulatory effects on both basal and NMA induced plasma PRL secretion.

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