Effects of aminoglutethimide phosphate on litter size and birth weight in superovulated rats
1992
Ishibashi, I. | M, Abe | Ikeda, I. | Watanabe, T.
In this study, litter sizes, birth weights and survival rates of neonates in superovulated rats treated with amino-glutethimide phosphate (AGP), were studied. Young (8- to 9-week old) and adult (14- to 16-week old) rats were treated with 20 or 40 IU PMSG between 1100 and 1300 hours on the day of early diestrus, followed by identical doses of hCG 52 to 54 hours later. These rats received 10 mg AGP on Days 0 to 2 of pregnancy (AGP rats). The duration of pregnancy in the AGP-treated and control rats was about the same. Mean live litter sizes in young and in adult AGP rats treated with 20 IU PMSG and 20 IU hCG were significantly higher (15.5 and 15.4; P < 0.01) than in the control rats (11.5 and 12.6). When AGP was given to young and adult rats pretreated with 40 IU PMSG and 40 IU hCG, they produced means of 17.7 and 17.3 live neonates, respectively. The birth weights for young (5.55 to 5.88 g) and adult (5.89 to 5.96 g) AGP rats were smaller than those of respective control rats (6.44 and 6.40 g; P < 0.05-0.01). When the number of neonates was adjusted to 8 per dam for nursing and rearing, all of them were alive at 5 weeks after birth and showed normal growth. However, body weight gains of the progeny of AGP dams were lower than those of controls. These results indicate that rats treated with large doses of gonadotropins and AGP produce larger litter sizes than nontreated controls.
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