Abstract

In female neonatal rats, opiate receptor blockade markedly raises serum luteinizing hormone (LH) levels. The LH effect of acute treatment with opiate antagonists is apparently brief in older rats; however, age-related differences in antagonist pharmacokinetics may result in different LH response patterns. The duration of LH response to naloxone (NAL) and naltrexone (NTX) was examined in 5 day-old (d.o.) female rats and compared to the duration of analgesia blockade. The rise in serum LH following opiate receptor blockade in 5 d.o. rats was of similar duration to that previously observed in older animals and much briefer than blockade of analgesia. Furthermore, neonatal rats exhibited a delayed suppression of LH 6 hr following NAL, but not NTX, treatment. Stimulation and later suppression of LH were still observed after five repetitive NAL treatments at 6 hr intervals.

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