Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of administering an opiate receptor antagonist, naltrexone (NALT) on the decline in pituitary thyrotropin (TSH) release induced by both acute and chronic stress, and to determine whether norepinephrine (NE) is involved in the mechanism by which opiate receptor blockade counteracts inhibition of TSH release during stress. Administration of NALT, a specific opiate receptor antagonist, significantly attenuated the decrease in plasma TSH observed after acute exposure to ether or restraint stress. The ability of NALT to prevent suppression of circulating TSH in ether-stressed rats was blocked by pharmacological suppression of NE activity induced by pretreatment with diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) or phenoxybenzamine (PB), both NE antagonists. In chronically stressed rats, thrice daily injections of NALT attenuated the sustained decline in circulating TSH, and resulted in a significant elevation in plasma TSH when compared with stressed, saline-treated animals. Pretreatment with DDC prior to NALT injection abolished this stimulatory effect of NALT. These observations indicate that opiate/receptor interaction is prerequisite for the decrease in circulating TSH release during both acute and chronic stress, and support the hypothesis that endogenous opioid peptides (EOPs) mediate the suppressive effect of stress on TSH release. The finding that uninterrupted NE function is necessary for NALT's action on TSH release during stress suggests that the suppressive effect of stress on TSH and its reversal by opiate antagonists involves alterations in hypothalamic NE activity.

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