Abstract

Effects of cortisone and growth hormone (GH) given singly and in combination were studied in black C57 and albino mice. Following injection of cortisone, after a latent period, serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI) rose progressively during 6–24 hr and remained at high levels, up to 15-fold the normal, for 8–10 days of treatment. Pancreatic IRI, after a delay of 2–6 hr, decreased to 63, 20 and 40 % of normal at 1, 3 and 8 days of treatment, respectively, in C57 mice. There was evidence, in albino mice also, of a tendency for pancreatic IRI to return to near normal late in the cortisone treatment. The early changes in 3 days occurred prior to rise in blood glucose. The results indicated that cortisone caused sustained enhancement of insulin secretion and that the rate of secretion was high relative to the rate of synthesis. Daily injections of bovine GH had no apparent effect on serum IRI or on pancreatic IRI during 10 days. However, when both hormones were injected concurrently, GH depressed the rise in seru...

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