Abstract

Female Sprague-Dawley rats were either ovariectomized or sham-operated prior to puberty. As adults, they were maintained on a cholesterol-supplemented diet and subjected to either predictable, controllable shock; unpredictable, uncontrollable shock; or no shock for 30 days (51-min daily sessions). Sham-operated rats had higher plasma cholesterol levels than ovariectomized rats, but neither group showed an effect of stress treatments. For both groups, serum triglyceride and aortic cholesterol levels were lower in stressed than nonstressed rats. Additionally, the ovariectomized rats had higher levels of serum triglycerides than sham-operated controls.

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