Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1988; 91(2): 149-154
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1210737
Original

© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Corticosteroid Feedback: II. Role of Hypothalamus and Hypophysis

A. A. Filaretov, Yu. G. Balashov, N. I. Yarushkina, T. T. Podvigina
  • I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad/USSR
Further Information

Publication History

1987

Publication Date:
16 July 2009 (online)

Summary

The role of the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus and the hypophysis in ensuring the corticosteroid feedback of the pituitary-adrenocortical system (PACS) in rats was characterized by administration of increasing doses of hydrocortisone. The doses 100, 300 and 1200 µg/100 g b.w. of hydrocortisone were administered intraperitoneally. The injection of hydro-cortisone in the dose of 1200 µg/100 g b.w. reduces the pituitrin-induced rise of ACTH content in plasma. The reduction of pituitary reactivity to pituitrin was not observed with the injection of smaller doses of hydrocortisone. The involvement of the hypothalamus in ensuring the corticosteroid feedback was estimated by the suppression of the stress-induced PACS reaction in animals with bilateral PVN lesions. The inhibition of the stress-induced corticosteroid rise did not occur in animals with the PVN lesion if they were treated with hydrocortisone in the dose of 100 and 300 µg/100 g b.w. At the dose of 1200 µg/100 g b.w. the inhibition of the stress-induced reaction is observed but it is less pronounced as compared to the control. The conclusion is made that at small, close to physiological doses of hydrocortisone (100 and 300 µg/100 g b.w.) the PACS inhibition is ensured by PVN involvement into the feedback pathways.

At supraphysiological doses of hydrocortisone (1200 µg/100 g b.w.) the inhibition of PACS reaction is performed due to not only the hypothalamic PVN but the reduction in the pituitary reactivity.

Corticosteroid Feedback: I. General Characteristics, Role of Adrenal Cortex