Abstract

Following weaning at 24 +/- 1 d of age, crossbred boars were subjected to removal of the cranial cervical ganglia (GX, n = 8) or sham surgery (SHAM, n = 8). At 213 +/- 1 d of age, a catheter was inserted into a jugular vein or vena cava, and all boars were housed in environmentally controlled rooms at 22 degrees C with an equatorial photoperiod. After 2 wk of exposure to this photic environment, samples of plasma and serum were collected at hourly intervals for 24 h. The plasma was assayed for adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and the serum was assayed for cortisol and melatonin by RIA. The time-trends for all three hormones were described by regression models, which were tested for heterogeneity of regression between SHAM and GX treatments. The circadian rhythm of cortisol in serum was similar for SHAM and GX treatments. The profiles of ACTH were also similar between the two treatments, but circadian changes in concentrations of ACTH paralleling those of cortisol were not evident in either treatment. Overall, concentrations of ACTH were reduced (P = .06) for GX boars compared to SHAM boars. The time-trends of melatonin in serum differed (P less than .001) for GX and SHAM treatments, with a nocturnal rise in melatonin evident in some SHAM boars but not in GX animals. Four SHAM boars had profiles of melatonin that obviously entrained to the light-dark cycle. None of the boars in GX treatment had elevated concentrations of melatonin in serum during the dark period, relative to concentrations during the light.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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