ABSTRACT
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of a synthetic, opioid-related hexapeptide, growth-hormone-releasing peptide-6 (GHRP-6), on stimulation of eating by rats and to correlate this aspect of feeding behavior with the peripheral plasma growth hormone (GH) response to the administered peptide. GHRP-6 dissolved in 5 microL of saline was injected into the lateral ventricles of sated, adult, male, Sprague-Dawley rats in doses from 0 pmol (saline only) to 1000 pmol. For 1 hour after injection, the occurrence of eating was noted, and specimens of arterial blood were collected at 0, 15, 30, and 60 minutes. The plasma was assayed for GH. A nearly linear, statistically significant (p < 0.01) dose-response relationship between the dose of GHRP-6 and the incidence of eating was noted. The mean change from baseline of plasma GH during the 60 minutes after injection was not dose-related (p > 0.2, p > 0.1, and p > 0.1 at 15, 30, and 60 minutes, respectively). We conclude that GHRP-6 given intracerebroventricularly to sated, adult, male, Sprague-Dawley rats stimulates eating and suggest that it does so by some mechanism that is independent of its GH-releasing property.
Subject(s)
Feeding Behavior/drug effects , Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone/pharmacology , Growth Hormone/blood , Oligopeptides/pharmacology , Animals , Hypothalamus/drug effects , Injections, Intraventricular , Male , Oligopeptides/administration & dosage , Rats , Rats, Sprague-DawleyABSTRACT
Six cases of pancreatitis following spinal cord injury are presented. No single, etiologically accepted mechanism already postulated to cause pancreatitis can account for all the cases reported. The authors hypothesize that spinal cord disruption may produce pacreatitis by sympathetic-parasympathetic nervous system imbalance resulting in over-stimulation of the sphincter of Oddi. This may lead to stasis of secretions with absorption of amylase into the systemic circulation, and structural pancreatic damage. Pancreatitis in those with cord injuries is easily overlooked because abdominal pain is usually absent and fever is usually attributed to more frequently occurring pulmonary or urinary tract infections. Recognition of this complication is important in order to decrease the morbidity and mortality that follows spinal cord damage.
Subject(s)
Pancreatitis/etiology , Spinal Cord Injuries/complications , Adult , Amylases/urine , Diagnosis, Differential , Humans , Lung Diseases/diagnosis , Male , Middle Aged , Pancreatitis/diagnosis , Urinary Tract Infections/diagnosisABSTRACT
Case reports of two patients with metastatic melanoma of the brain who presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage are described. The importance of considering metastatic melanoma to the brain in the differential diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage is emphasized.