Abstract

Circulating levels of growth hormone (GH), insulin, and glucose were measured at hourly intervals during a 24 h period to establish the diurnal rhythm of these hormones in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). There was no statistically significant correlation between circulating GH levels and pituitary GH content. Serum GH appeared to be higher at night in female SHR and higher during day-light hrs in male SHR. GH levels fluctuated considerably, whereas insulin levels showed much less diurnal variation. Although there was no statistically significant correlation between blood glucose and insulin levels, glucose levels rose and fell considerably during the 24 hr period with a definite decline in blood glucose during the nocturnal hyperactivity observed in SHR. These findings are of interest in that SHR have giant-sized islets of Langerhans, develop hyperglycemia spontaneously, and are growth-retarded compared to most normotensive strains of rat.

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