Abstract
The role of luteinizing hormone (LH) and LH-releasing hormone (LH-RH) in the maintenance of early pregnancy in rats was studied. Serum levels of progesterone (P) and LH were measured daily in untreated pregnant rats from Day 4 through parturition. Serum levels of P and LH were determined on Days 11 and 15 of pregnancy in animals treated with antisera to LH (LH-A/S) and to LH-RH (LH-RH-A/S) on Days 8-10. Serum levels of P peaked on Days 7 and 16 in untreated animals, after which they declined sharply just before delivery. Serum LH fluctuated between 30-160 ng/ml during pregnancy but did not exhibit any distinctive peaks. Treatment with .2 ml LH-A/S on Days 8-10 reduced serum P to virtually undetectable levels on Day 11, and only a slight recovery was evident on Day 15. Lower doses of LH-A/S had no effect. Administration of 1.3 ml LH-RH-A/S had no effect on serum levels of P or LH, and did not impede fetal development. The results indicate that LH is essential to the luteotropic complex of early pregnancy in the rat, and also that LH-RH-A/S can maintain to some extent basal levels of P and LH during early pregnancy.
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