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Endocrinology, Vol 106, 458-462, Copyright © 1980 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Effect of electrical stimulation of mammary nerve upon pituitary and plasma prolactin concentrations in anesthetized lactating rats

F Mena, P Pacheco and CE Grosvenor

A 50-70% depletion in the anterior pituitary concentration of PRL occurred within 5 min of electrical stimulation of a single abdominal mammary nerve of urethane-anesthetized lactating rats previously nonsuckled for 6-8 h. The stimulus parameters were: 1-msec pulses, 10- 20/sec at 5-30 V applied 5 sec on and 10 sec off. The anterior pituitary concentration of PRL remained low for another 15-30 min after depletion, then repleted to prestimulus levels by the 90th min. The same pattern of depletion-repletion occurred when mammary nerve stimulation was applied for 5 min as when it was applied for 180 min. In other experiments, plasma PRL concentration rose swiftly and attained a maximal level, 4- to 5-fold in Wistar rats and 8- to 10-fold in Holtzman rats, above basal concentrations within 10-15 min of mammary nerve stimulation. The maximal level was sustained throughout the time the nerve was stimulated and for 45 min after the stimulation was stopped, i.e. the sustained secretion of PRL into the plasma occurred at the same time that depleted PRL was repleting. Ligation of both adrenals or iv injection of the beta-adrenergic blocker, propranolol, before stimulation of the nerve had no effect upon the plasma PRL profile in response to mammary nerve stimulation. These data indicate that mammary nerve stimulation mimics that of suckling upon depletion, repletion, and the release of PRL into the circulation and add further support to the hypothesis that these phases are independent processes.





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