Abstract

We investigated the relationship between the menstrual cycle and hormone levels in cynomolgus monkeys, and developed a sulpiride-induced hyperprolactinemic anovulation model. On this study, we demonstrated the usefulness of the commercial human prolactin immunoradiometric assay kit for the measurement of cynomolgus monkey serum samples. In the normal menstrual cycle of the cynomolgus monkey, serum prolactin concentrations were not significantly different between luteal and follicular phases. However, the serum prolactin concentration tended to elevate at the ovulation stage. And serum progesterone began to increase after an estradiol surge, and then declined before the ensuing preovulatory rise in estradiol. During the luteal phase, the serum concentration of progesterone was elevated. Moreover, we aimed to develop an anovulation model, using sulpiride-induced hyperprolactinemia in the cynomolgus monkey. The serum prolactin level gradually increased during the twice-daily administration of sulpiride, and the drug produced as big a response at 5 mg/kg. In this study, the length of the menstrual cycle was approximately 29 days in normal cynomolgus monkeys. When treatment with sulpiride had been continued for more than one month, serum progesterone and estradiol levels fell to within the range seen in the follicular phase of the normal cycle, and the absence of ovulation was recognized by laparoscopy. Moreover, in this period we found that amenorrhea or anovulatory menstruation in the experimental animals. We could produce an anovulatory model induced by sulpiride repeatedly administered over a long time period. Our findings suggest that the cynomolgus monkey is useful as a endocrinological model that uses prolactin as a parameter and as an anovulatory model; thus, it could be a useful model for the hyperprolactinemic amenorrhea and/or anovulation seen in humans.

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