Horm Metab Res 1977; 9(2): 146-149
DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1093564
Originals

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Effects of Ether and Pentobarbital Anesthesia on Thyroid Function in the Rat[*]

M.  Ohtake , G. A. Bray
  • Department of Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, Harbor General Hospital Campus Torrance, California, USA
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
23 December 2008 (online)

Abstract

Studies were performed to examine the effect of two anesthetic agents, ether and pentobarbital, on the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid function in vivo. In non-anesthetized animals, plasma thyrotropin (TSH) increased rapidly from basal values of 0.1, a peak of 0.49 µg/ml, 25 min after exposure to the cold. Anesthesia with ether during exposure to the cold completely prevented the rise in TSH. During pentobarbital anesthesia, the rise in TSH after exposure to cold was reduced by more than 90%. Even a three minute period of ether anesthesia prior to cold exposure reduced the peak response to cold as well as delayed this response when compared to the untreated group. During two hours of anesthesia with ether, the TSH concentration declined in animals which were fed a low iodine diet at essentially the same rate as in animals on the same diet given an injection of 3 µg of triiodothyronine. Pentobarbital did not suppress TSH at room temperature. The release of thyrotropin after injection of synthetic thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) was greater in animals anesthetized with pentobarbital than in controls and was slightly reduced in ether-anesthetized animals. This difference was observed when thyrotropin was given intraperitoneally or intravenously and the slope of the dose-response curves to TRH showed a flattening of the curve of rats treated with ether and a steeper slope of response in animals anesthetized with pentobarbital. We conclude that pentobarbital inhibited TSH response to cold but did not reduce the resting levels. Ether inhibited the rise of TSH in the cold and lowered the basal levels of TSH in animals at room temperature. Pentobarbital increased the response to TRH and ether may have reduced the response to TRH.

1 Supported in part by Grant Nos. AM 19132 and M 15165.

1 Supported in part by Grant Nos. AM 19132 and M 15165.