| Literature DB >> 10880704 |
V Quiñones-Jenab1, L I Perrotti, A Ho, S Jenab, S D Schlussman, J Franck, M J Kreek.
Abstract
Female Fischer rats injected with cocaine in a "binge" pattern (15 mg/kg, IP, three times a day, at 1-h intervals) for 1 day had significantly higher levels of progesterone than saline-treated controls (p < 0.001). When analyzed by the stage of the estrous cycle, animals in proestrus showed significantly higher cocaine-induced progesterone plasma levels than those in other stages of the cycle (p < 0.01). Progesterone plasma levels were also increased after a single dose of cocaine (15 mg/kg). However, 3 h postinjection progesterone plasma levels had returned to normal. Thus, cocaine modulation of progesterone plasma levels appears to be an acute effect. In ovariectomized rats pretreated with estrogen, progesterone, or estrogen + progesterone, no significant differences were observed in progesterone plasma levels after acute "binge" pattern cocaine administration. Thus, acute cocaine induced increases in progesterone plasma levels in intact female rats are probably due to an increase in secretion rates of progesterone rather than an acceleration of its biotransformation. Due to the profound effects of progesterone in the modulation of CNS plasticity, the modulation of progesterone plasma level by cocaine may have implications for reproductive processes and neuronal functions of women. Moreover, cocaine may affect the progesterone levels in women utilizing progesterone-based contraception or steroid replacement treatment after menopause.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10880704 DOI: 10.1016/s0091-3057(00)00213-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Biochem Behav ISSN: 0091-3057 Impact factor: 3.533