55 research outputs found

    Reduction of long-term effects of local heating of the testis by treatment of rats with a GnRH agonist and an anti-androgen

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    Heating the testes of anaesthetized adult rats to 43 degrees C for 30 min in a waterbath was followed by a large decrease in testis and epididymis mass and number of spermatozoa 35 days later. These parameters had recovered to some extent, but not completely, by days 70 and 97 after heating, but had decreased again in rats examined on day 182. There were no consistent effects of heating on androgen status, as determined by the concentrations of testosterone in blood and testis fluids, or by seminal vesicle mass, and interstitial fluid volume was increased in the heated testes. Treatment of rats with an implant of a GnRH agonist and daily injections of an anti-androgen for 14 days (sufficient in itself to cause large temporary decreases in tissue mass, number of spermatozoa and androgen status) did not reduce the initial decrease in testis mass or number of spermatozoa seen after heating, but reduced the later decreases in mass and number of spermatozoa significantly. These findings indicate that, as well as causing damage to spermatocytes and spermatids, as previously reported, heating also reduces the ability of spermatogonia to repopulate the seminiferous tubules at longer intervals after heating. Furthermore, it appears that this effect on the spermatogonia can be reduced by treating the animals with a GnRH agonist and anti-androgen, a treatment similar to that shown by other authors to improve recovery of the testis from irradiation or drug treatment

    Preliminary investigation of the effects of long-term dietary intake of genistein and daidzein on hepatic histopathology and biochemistry in domestic cats (Felis catus)

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    Dietary isoflavones have been hypothesised to play a role in hepatic veno-occlusive disease in captive exotic felids, although empirical evidence is lacking. This study aimed to investigate the effect of long-term (>1 year) dietary genistein and daidzein exposure on the hepatic biochemistry and histology of domestic cats. Individual cats were assessed for hepatic enzyme and bile acid production before and after the removal of isoflavones from their diet in the treatment group (n=4), and at the same times in unexposed control animals (n=7). No significant differences were detectable in hepatic biochemistry between treatment and control groups, and all serum values were within the normal reference ranges for domestic cats. Additionally, treatment animals demonstrated slightly greater areas of fibrosis surrounding hepatic venules than control animals, but this difference was not statistically significant. On the basis of the results presented, dietary isoflavones, at the current dose and duration of exposure do not appear to modulate hepatic enzyme production or histological parameters

    Effect of local heating of rat testes after suppression of spermatogenesis by pretreatment with a GnRH agonist and an anti-androgen

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    Abstract The effects of local heating of rat testes, in which spermatogenesis had been suppressed with injections of a GnRH agonist and an anti-androgen, were examined. Although the detrimental effects of heating were not as marked as those found in the testes of non-injected rats, the testes in which spermatogenesis was suppressed also showed a significant reduction in mass, the number of spermatozoa, tubular diameter and the percentage of normal tubular cross-sections at day 35 after heating. The results indicate that heating has an effect on cells in the testis other than those shown to be most susceptible to heat, namely pachytene spermatocytes and early spermatids, which were absent or markedly reduced in number when spermatogenesis was suppressed. The long-term effects of heating on the above parameters, as reported in a previous study, were also confirmed. However, in testes in which spermatogenesis was suppressed at the time of heating, there appeared to be no or a reduced long-term impairment of spermatogenesis, as determined by testis mass, the percentage of qualitatively normal tubules and epididymal sperm counts.</jats:p

    Reduction in fluid secretion by rat testis by drugs that block potassium channels

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    The effect of two class III antiarrhythmic drugs (Almokalant, Astra-Hässle and Dofetilide, Pfizer) on fluid secretion by rat testes has been examined. Both drugs reduced fluid secretion, whether this was measured by the amount of rete testis fluid that could be collected 22 h after unilateral efferent duct ligation, or by the difference in mass between the ligated and unligated testes, or by the difference in amount of supernatant fluid after the parenchyma of the ligated and unligated testes had been dispersed and centrifuged. The secretion of potassium, calculated from the amount of potassium in the supernatant fluids from the ligated and unligated testes was also reduced by the drugs, whereas the secretion of androgen-binding protein and inositol was unaffected. The concentration of potassium in the secreted fluid, calculated from the amount and composition of the supernatant fluids, was not affected by treatment of the rats with Almokalant, but was increased in rats treated with Dofetilide and, in these, the concentration of sodium was reduced and that of magnesium and inositol was increased and the concentration of total protein was unaffected. The concentration of androgen-binding protein in secreted fluid was increased in rats treated with Almokalant, while the concentration of testosterone was unaffected. Histological examination of testes from treated rats revealed phagocytosis of stage 19 spermatids in tubules at stages VIII-IX after 2 days, at stages IX-XI after 4 days and at stages VIII-XIV after 7 days, apparently owing to an effect on spermiation. It appears that these drugs interfere with potassium-mediated fluid secretion by the testis, leading to the other changes seen
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