Abstract

Pharmacological doses of melatonin—low (0.5 mg/kg body wt.) and high (1.0 mg/kg body wt.) doses were administered chronically for 45 days to Wistar rats, and 24 h rhythms of adrenocorticotrophic hormone, cortisol, growth hormone, prolactin and melatonin were studied under semi-natural conditions. Exogenous melatonin administration caused delays in the acrophases of growth hormone and melatonin rhythm itself, whereas advances in the acrophases of adrenocorticotrophic hormone, cortisol and prolactin were observed, thus indicating that chronic administration of melatonin could alter the characteristics of endocrine rhythms. Alterations in the amplitude and mesor values of these endocrine rhythms were also observed during melatonin administration. Modulation of melatonin rhythmicity (due to exogenous administration) could influence the hormonal rhythms as a modulated internal zeitgeber and could simulate/mimic the conditions of altered photoperiod in the animal; this could be the reason for altered acrophase values in the melatonin treated groups. Significant dose-dependent effects of melatonin were absent in the present study. It remains to be proven how exogenous administration of melatonin could influence the hormonal rhythms investigated in the present study.

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