Abstract

Testosterone propionate (50 mg/kg), administered together with oestradiol, inhibited the oestrogen-induced uterine eosinophilia, deep endometrial oedema and the increase in uterine wet weight, 6 h after treatment. The same dose of the androgen decreased the number of eosinophils in the blood and increased their degranulation, explaining the effect of testosterone in the uterus. The high doses of the androgen used were in the range of the doses reported by others to block selectively the oestrogen-induced increase in uterine peroxidase content but not other responses to oestrogen or the cytosolic oestrogen receptor translocation to the nucleus. The dissociation by high doses of testosterone of the oestrogen-induced uterine eosinophilia, wet weight increase and oedema from other responses to oestrogen in the absence of any measurable effect of testosterone upon cytosolic-nuclear oestrogen receptors supports the idea that uterine eosinophilia and oedema are oestrogenic responses regulated by mechanisms different from those of the genomic responses, and is in agreement with the hypothesis of the mediation of uterine oedema by eosinophils.

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