Literature DB >> 9202567

Effects of castration on adrenergic, cholinergic and nonadrenergic, noncholinergic responses of isolated corpus cavernosum from rabbit.

M K Yildirim1, S Yildirim, T Utkan, Y Sarioglu, Y Yalman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects of castration and testosterone on the constricting effect of phenylephrine and endothelium-dependent and -independent relaxing effects of different agonists in the corpus cavernosum of male rabbits.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty rabbits were castrated and 10 received testosterone replacement for 1 month after castration; 10 further rabbits underwent a sham operation and acted as controls. One month after operation the rabbits were killed and their penises excised. Strips of corpus cavernosum were used for isometric tension measurements in organ chambers; concentration-response relationships for phenylephrine, carbachol, adenosine and sodium nitroprusside were obtained by adding the reagent cumulatively to the bath.
RESULTS: The phenylephrine-induced contractions were markedly lower, with no change in the pD2 values (i.e. the negative logarithm of the concentration for half-maximal response), in cavernosal strips obtained from castrated rabbits than in those from controls. Endothelium-dependent relaxation elicited by carbachol increased in the castrated group but the relaxation induced by sodium nitroprusside did not change and those elicited by adenosine were strongly depressed when compared with controls. There were no significant changes in the pD2 values of agonist-induced relaxation responses in all groups. The relaxation elicited by electrical-field stimulation at lower frequencies increased in strips from castrated rabbits but at higher frequencies were unchanged when compared with controls. Castration-induced changes in the relaxation response of cavernosal strips were significantly restored by in vivo testosterone replacement but those induced by phenylephrine were not.
CONCLUSION: The lack of testosterone has an effect on the reactivity of the corpus cavernosum, indicating that testosterone has an important role in erectile function by a pre- or post-synaptic action on the corpus cavernosum.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9202567     DOI: 10.1046/j.1464-410x.1997.00175.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Urol        ISSN: 0007-1331


  2 in total

1.  Penile apoptosis in association with p53 under lack of testosterone.

Authors:  Hiroto Yamamoto; Shoichi Sasaki; Hiroyuki Tatsura; Yukihiro Umemoto; Hiroki Kubota; Hiroyuki Kamiya; Tetsuya Kawai; Kiho Kang; Kenjiro Kohri
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2003-12-18

2.  Functional and structural changes in internal pudendal arteries underlie erectile dysfunction induced by androgen deprivation.

Authors:  Rh Ure Alves-Lopes; Karla B Neves; Marcondes Ab Silva; Vânia C Olivon; Silvia G Ruginsk; José Antunes-Rodrigues; Leandra Nz Ramalho; Rita C Tostes; Fernando Silva Carneiro
Journal:  Asian J Androl       Date:  2017 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.285

  2 in total

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