scholarly journals Milk-ejection response following administration of posterior pituitary extract in rabbits

1955 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 95-96
Author(s):  
A. YOKOYAMA ◽  
K. IMAI
1959 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 839 ◽  
Author(s):  
I McCance

Yield was measured by hand milking following injection of posterior pituitary extract (PPE) to obtain milk ejection. Lambs put with ewes hand milked after 2 doses of 5 i.u. of PPE could obtain little or no milk. Yield depended on the interval between milkings, the rate of secretion being apparently faster in the first 2 hr. The effect was less marked as lactation declined. Yields were independent of time of day and speed of milking. When successive yields were used to rank ewes in order of performance, the rankings were always significantly concordant. Earlier applications of the method had no detectable effect on later lactation. It is concluded that the method provides a simple means of obtaining useful estimates of milk production.


1953 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. CROSS

1. Emotional inhibition of the milk-ejection reflex in rabbits is described. 2. Injection of 5–50 μg adrenaline intravenously into does before nursing interfered with milk ejection, as shown by the failure of the young to withdraw more than three-quarters of the normal yield of milk. Injection of 150 mU (=milliunits) 'Pitocin' immediately after the adrenaline did not restore normal milk ejection. 3. Intravenous injection of 5 μg adrenaline suppressed the milk-ejection response to 50 mU posterior pituitary extract in anaesthetized rabbits with cannulated teats, provided the injection of adrenaline preceded that of the posterior pituitary extract. The inhibitory effect had not entirely disappeared in 2 min. 50μg adrenaline prevented the occurrence of milk ejection for 3½ min. 4. Intravenous doses of 5 μg adrenaline, but not smaller amounts, inhibited the milk-ejection response to electrical stimulation of the supraoptico-hypophysial tract, if injected before stimulation or during the latent period of the response. When injected after the commencement of milk ejection 5 μg adrenaline was without effect, but 50 μg abolished the response. 5. Electrical stimulation of the posterior hypothalamus produced inhibition of the milk-ejection response to injected oxytocic extract, together with pupillary dilatation and exophthalmos. The inhibition closely resembled that resulting from injection of adrenaline. 6. It is concluded that one mechanism involved in the emotional inhibition of milk ejection is an activation of the sympathetico-adrenal system, resulting in antagonism of the action of the neurohypophysial milk-ejection hormone on the contraction process within the mammary gland.


1952 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 148-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. CROSS ◽  
G. W. HARRIS

1. Nursing and suckling behaviour of rabbits is described, and evidence given that an active process of milk ejection ('let-down') occurs in this as in other species. 2. Intravenous injection of posterior pituitary extracts in anaesthetized rabbits resulted in ejection of milk from a cannulated teat duct. The threshold dose was about 5 mU. and maximal responses were produced by 200 mU. of extract. Whole posterior pituitary extract was more effective than the oxytocic fraction, which was in turn more effective than the vasopressor fraction. 3. Stimulation of the supraopticohypophysial (s.o.h.) tract in anaesthetized rabbits also resulted in ejection of milk from a cannulated duct. Kymographic records of this response were similar to those obtained after injection of appropriate doses of posterior pituitary extract. 4. Lesions in the s.o.h. tract in lactating rabbits caused a marked diminution in the quantity of milk obtained by their litters in standard suckling tests, and incomplete evacuation of the mammary glands. Intravenous injection of posterior pituitary extract (30–200 mU.) into the does immediately before nursing gave a marked increase in the amount of milk obtained by the young and complete evacuation of the mammary glands. Stimulation of the region of the s.o.h. tract in these animals failed to elicit milk ejection from cannulated teat ducts. 5. Rabbits with hypothalamic lesions that did not involve the s.o.h. tract showed a normal milk-ejection reflex when suckled by their young, and a milk-ejection response after electrical stimulation of the s.o.h. tract.


1958 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 677-684
Author(s):  
P. J. BENTLEY ◽  
A. K. LEE ◽  
A. R. MAIN

1. Ability to take up water in response to dehydration and injection of posterior pituitary extract was measured in two genera of frogs, Heleioporus and Neobatrachus, that live in areas of varying aridity in south-west Australia. 2. Species of Neobatrachus from dry areas took up water more rapidly than those from less dry ones. No such correlation could be seen in the species of Heleioporus. 3. No differences could be seen in the ability of any of the animals to withstand desiccation. 4. These findings are discussed in relation to the animals' behaviour in its natural environment.


Hepatology ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Barbare ◽  
Raoul Poupon ◽  
Patrice Jaillon ◽  
Philippe Bories ◽  
Michele Aussanaire ◽  
...  

1954 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 600-603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstanty Kowalewski

Large doses of histamine cause gastric hyperacidity and ulceration in guinea pigs. Colchicine prevents the hyperacidity but not the ulceration; posterior pituitary extract prevents the ulceration but not the hyperacidity. These findings suggest that the vascular component of the gastric response to histamine is more important than the secretory component for the genesis of histamine ulcers.


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