Abstract

The intravenous (iv) administration of thyrotrophin releasing hormone (TRH, at 1.0 or 10.0 μg/kg) or human pancreatic growth hormone-releasing factor (hpGRF(1–44)NH 2, at 10 μg/kg) markedly increased the growth hormone (GH) concentration in the plasma of immature or adult cockerels anaesthetized by sodium pentabarbitone (30 mg/kg, iv). A second injection of either TRH or hpGRF failed to increase the GH concentration in immature chicks when administered 15, 30, or 60 min after the first injection. However, significant GH responses to TRH or hpGRF were observed when the interval between injections was either 120 or 240 min. The magnitude of the GH responses to TRH were, however, diminished by 83.3 and 26.7% when given 120 or 240 min after the initial TRH injection, and the responses to hpGRF were similarly reduced by 68.3 and 33.6%. A similar period of GH refractorines to TRH or hpGRF stimulation was also observed in adult birds, although the recovery of GH responsiveness occurred earlier. While a second injection of hpGRF was ineffective in increasing the plasma GH concentration if given within 30 min of the first, it was fully effective when the interval between injection was >60 min. In response to a second injection of TRH, the GH concentration was elevated when the interval between injections was >120 min, after which the magnitude of the response evoked was greater than that induced by the initial injection. Growth hormone secretion in immature and adult fowl is therefore refractory to repeated provoactive stimuli, although the mechanism involved is unknown.

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