Mann D R, Gould K G, Collins D C
Department of Physiology, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30310-1495.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1990 Jul;71(1):105-10. doi: 10.1210/jcem-71-1-105.
This study examined the potential use of the GnRH agonist-treated female monkey as a model for bone loss after medical oophorectomy or the onset of menopause in women. Three female rhesus monkeys (13-16 yr of age) were treated continuously for 10 months with 25 micrograms/day GnRH agonist using osmotic minipumps. All three animals exhibited normal menstrual cycles before treatment. Within 5 weeks of the beginning of GnRH agonist treatment, serum progesterone and estradiol concentrations had fallen to low values and did not rise significantly during the remaining treatment period. The decline in ovarian steroidogenesis was correlated with a reduction in bone mineral density (BMD; bone mineral content/bone width) of the caudal vertebrae and humerus. The reduction of BMD of the caudal vertebrae occurred gradually. The downward trend was evident during the first 3 treatment months, but did not fall significantly below pretreatment levels until 9 months of GnRN agonist treatment. The overall decline in BMD for the caudal vertebrae was approximately 14% after 9 months of GnRH agonist treatment. The measured decline in BMD of the humorous was 11%. Serum osteocalcin levels rose more than 10-fold above pretreatment values between 4 and 7 months of GnRH agonist treatment before declining to levels that approached pretreatment concentrations between 8 and 10 months of treatment. Menstrual cycles were reinitiated within 4 weeks after the termination of treatment, as shown by luteal phase increases in serum progesterone concentrations. BMD of the humerus and caudal vertebrae remained subnormal 2 months posttreatment, but by 5 months had recovered to near-pretreatment values. These data suggest that ovarian hormone deprivation induced by GnRH agonist administration is associated with a decline in BMD in female monkeys, and that this animal model may be an excellent model for postmenopausal bone loss or bone reduction resulting from medical oophorectomy. The GnRH agonist-treated monkey also has the potential to be developed as a model for type I postmenopausal osteoporosis.
本研究考察了经促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)激动剂处理的雌性猕猴作为医源性卵巢切除术后或女性绝经后骨质流失模型的潜在用途。三只雌性恒河猴(13 - 16岁)使用渗透微型泵以每天25微克的剂量连续接受GnRH激动剂治疗10个月。所有三只动物在治疗前月经周期均正常。在GnRH激动剂治疗开始后的5周内,血清孕酮和雌二醇浓度降至低值,并且在剩余的治疗期间未显著升高。卵巢类固醇生成的下降与尾椎骨和肱骨的骨矿物质密度(BMD;骨矿物质含量/骨宽度)降低相关。尾椎骨BMD的降低是逐渐发生的。在前3个治疗月中下降趋势明显,但直到GnRH激动剂治疗9个月时才显著低于治疗前水平。GnRH激动剂治疗9个月后,尾椎骨BMD的总体下降约为14%。测得的肱骨BMD下降为11%。在GnRH激动剂治疗的4至7个月期间,血清骨钙素水平比治疗前值升高了10倍以上,然后在治疗的8至10个月期间降至接近治疗前浓度的水平。治疗终止后4周内月经周期重新开始,表现为黄体期血清孕酮浓度升高。治疗后2个月,肱骨和尾椎骨的BMD仍低于正常水平,但到5个月时已恢复至接近治疗前的值。这些数据表明,给予GnRH激动剂诱导的卵巢激素剥夺与雌性猕猴BMD的下降有关,并且该动物模型可能是绝经后骨质流失或医源性卵巢切除术后骨质减少的极佳模型。经GnRH激动剂处理的猕猴还有潜力被开发为I型绝经后骨质疏松症的模型。