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Effects of bromocriptine on corticotrophin, melanotrophin and corticosteroid secretion in dogs with pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism

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1988

Year

Abstract

Dogs with spontaneous pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism were divided into two groups, one with normal plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH (normal alpha-MSH dogs, n = 26) and the other with high plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH (high alpha-MSH dogs, n = 14), on the presumption that high alpha-MSH concentrations indicated a parent cell of pars intermedia origin. The urinary corticoid/creatinine ratios of the high alpha-MSH dogs were significantly higher than those of the normal alpha-MSH dogs. The percentage decrease of the corticoid/creatinine ratios following dexamethasone administration was significantly higher in the normal alpha-MSH dogs than in the high alpha-MSH dogs. Dexamethasone resistance occurred in both the normal alpha-MSH dogs (4 out of 26) and the high alpha-MSH dogs (7 out of 14), indicating a relative rather than an absolute difference. The short-term effect of orally administered bromocriptine, at a dose (10 micrograms/kg body weight) known to be effective in lowering prolactin concentrations in dogs, was investigated by measuring concentrations of cortisol, ACTH and alpha-MSH in plasma at 4, 6 and 8 h after administration. Significant decreases were observed for cortisol in both groups and for alpha-MSH only in the high alpha-MSH dogs. The effect of 5 days of bromocriptine administration (10 micrograms at 12-h intervals) was assessed by measurements of urinary corticoid/creatinine ratios. Considering both groups as a whole, only the corticoid/creatinine ratios of the high alpha-MSH dogs decreased significantly on the first day of treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)