Mendelson W B, Sitaram N, Wyatt R J, Gillin J C, Jacobs L S
J Clin Invest. 1978 Jun;61(6):1683-90. doi: 10.1172/JCI109089.
We have examined the effects of cholinergic blockade with 0.5 mg methscopolamine bromide, intramuscularly, on sleep-related and insulin-induced growth hormone (GH) secretion. 17 normal young men were studied; 8 had sleep studies, and 12 (including 3 who also had sleep studies) had insulin tolerance tests (ITT) with 0.1 U/kg of regular insulin. After an adjustment night in the sleep laboratory, saline control night and methscopolamine night studies were done in random sequence; study procedures included electroencephalographic, electromyographic, and electrooculographic recordings, and blood sampling every 20 min for hormone radioimmunoassays. Prolactin levels were also measured during sleep. For methscopolamine night studies, the mean overall control GH level of 2.89+/-0.44 ng/ml and the mean peak control GH level of 11.09+/-3.11 ng/ml were dramatically reduced to 0.75+/-0.01 and 1.04+/-0.25 ng/ml, respectively (P<0.0001 and <0.001). Despite virtual absence of GH secretion during the night in every study subject, no measured sleep characteristic was affected by methscopolamine, including total slow-wave sleep (12.1+/-2.6% control vs. 10.3+/-2.5% drug, P>0.2). Sleep prolactin levels were not changed by methscopolamine. In contrast to the abolition of sleep-related GH secretion, administration of methscopolamine had only a marginal effect on the GH response to insulin hypoglycemia. None of nine time points differed significantly, as was also the case with peak levels, mean increments, and areas under the curves (P>0.2). Analysis of variance did, however, indicate that the lower GH concentrations achieved during ITT after methscopolamine (average 31.7% below control) were significantly different than control concentrations. We conclude that the burst of GH secretion which normally occurs after sleep onset is primed by a cholinergic mechanism which does not influence slow-wave sleep. Cholinergic mechanisms do not appear to play an important role in sleep-related prolactin secretion. The contrast between the complete suppression of sleep-related GH release and the relatively small inhibitory effect on ITT-induced GH secretion suggests that the neurotransmitter mechanisms, and presumably the pathways, which subserve sleep-related GH secretion in man may be different from those which mediate the GH response to pharmacologic stimuli such as insulin.
我们研究了肌肉注射0.5毫克溴甲东莨菪碱进行胆碱能阻滞对睡眠相关及胰岛素诱导的生长激素(GH)分泌的影响。对17名正常青年男性进行了研究;8人进行了睡眠研究,12人(包括3名也进行了睡眠研究的人)接受了0.1 U/kg正规胰岛素的胰岛素耐量试验(ITT)。在睡眠实验室度过适应夜后,随机依次进行生理盐水对照夜和溴甲东莨菪碱夜研究;研究程序包括脑电图、肌电图和眼电图记录,以及每20分钟采集一次血样用于激素放射免疫测定。睡眠期间也测量了催乳素水平。对于溴甲东莨菪碱夜研究,平均总体对照GH水平2.89±0.44 ng/ml和平均对照GH峰值水平11.09±3.11 ng/ml分别显著降至0.75±0.01和1.04±0.25 ng/ml(P<0.0001和<0.001)。尽管在每项研究对象的夜间几乎没有GH分泌,但溴甲东莨菪碱并未影响所测量的睡眠特征,包括总慢波睡眠(对照为12.1±2.6%,药物为10.3±2.5%,P>0.2)。溴甲东莨菪碱未改变睡眠催乳素水平。与睡眠相关GH分泌的消除相反,溴甲东莨菪碱对胰岛素低血糖诱导的GH反应仅有轻微影响。九个时间点中无一有显著差异,峰值水平、平均增量和曲线下面积也是如此(P>0.2)。然而,方差分析表明,溴甲东莨菪碱后ITT期间达到的较低GH浓度(平均比对照低31.7%)与对照浓度有显著差异。我们得出结论,睡眠开始后正常发生的GH分泌激增由一种胆碱能机制引发,该机制不影响慢波睡眠。胆碱能机制似乎在睡眠相关催乳素分泌中不发挥重要作用。睡眠相关GH释放的完全抑制与对ITT诱导的GH分泌相对较小的抑制作用之间的对比表明,在人类中,参与睡眠相关GH分泌的神经递质机制以及大概的途径可能与介导GH对诸如胰岛素等药理刺激反应的机制不同。