Literature DB >> 24874396

Effect of hydrocortisone on the number of small intensely fluorescent cells in the rat superior cervical ganglion during pre- and postnatal development.

H Päivärinta1, S Soinila, O Eränkö.   

Abstract

During the first postnatal week hydrocortisone causes a massive increase in the number of small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether the number of SIF cells can be increased with hydrocortisone also prenatally and after the first postnatal week. Because it was desirable to apply the same kind of treatment before and after birth, the embryos and neonatal rats were injected only once and were studied 4 days later. Pregnant rats were injected daily during the last 7 days of pregnancy and the superior cervical ganglia of their embryos were studied thereafter. After birth, the effect of 7 daily injections of hydrocortisone was also studied. The number of embryonal brightly fluorescent cells, the probable prenatal precursors of the SIF cells. could not be increased either with a single injection into the embryos, or in embryos of pregnant rats treated with hydrocortisone. A single injection of hydrocortisone into newborn and 4-day-old rats caused a massive increase in the number of SIF cells as studied in 4- and 8-day-old rats, respectively. The increase in the number of SIF cells was smaller but still statistically significant in 12-day-old rats injected with hydrocortisone on postnatal day 8. Daily injections of hydrocortisone for 7 days caused on the second, but not on the third postnatal week, a statistically significant increase in the number of SIF cells. After 7 injections of hydrocortisone. on postnatal days 3-9 or 40-46. no increase in the number of SIF cells was observed in 47-day-old rats, as compared with saline-treated controls of the same age, but 7 injections of hydrocortisone both on days 3-9 and 40-46 resulted in a significant increase in the number of small intensely fluorescent cells on day 47. It is concluded that hydrocortisone-induced increase in the number of SIF cells is limited in vivo to the first two postnatal weeks, while exposure to hydrocortisone at birth restores the responsiveness of these cells to increase in number even later after a second exposure to hydrocortisone.
Copyright © 1984. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Year:  1984        PMID: 24874396     DOI: 10.1016/0736-5748(84)90033-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Dev Neurosci        ISSN: 0736-5748            Impact factor:   2.457


  3 in total

1.  Effect of hydrocortisone on immunohistochemically demonstrable phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase in cultures of embryonic and postnatal superior cervical ganglia.

Authors:  H Päivärinta; S Soinila; O Eränkö; T H Joh
Journal:  Histochemistry       Date:  1984

2.  Fine structure of the small, granule-containing cells in the superior cervical ganglia of hydrocortisone-treated early postnatal and adult rats.

Authors:  H Päivärinta
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1984       Impact factor: 5.249

3.  Survival of both young and aged sympathetic neurons in the adrenal cortex after autotransplantation.

Authors:  J Suhonen; J Koistinaho; A Hervonen
Journal:  Histochemistry       Date:  1990
  3 in total

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