A 6-day intracerebroventricular infusion of the growth hormone-releasing peptide KP-102 stimulates food intake in both non-stressed and intermittently-stressed rats

H Kuriyama, M Hotta, I Wakabayashi, T Shibasaki - Neuroscience letters, 2000 - Elsevier
H Kuriyama, M Hotta, I Wakabayashi, T Shibasaki
Neuroscience letters, 2000Elsevier
The effects of a 6-day intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of KP-102, a growth hormone-
releasing peptide (GHRP), on food intake and body weight gain were observed in free-
feeding rats that were or were not subjected to intermittent electric footshock stress during
the 6 days. Food intake and body weight were significantly lower in rats exposed to a 60-min
period of footshock twice a day for 6 days compared to non-stressed rats. A 6-day, icv
infusion of KP-102 significantly and steadily increased food intake and body weight in free …
The effects of a 6-day intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) infusion of KP-102, a growth hormone-releasing peptide (GHRP), on food intake and body weight gain were observed in free-feeding rats that were or were not subjected to intermittent electric footshock stress during the 6 days. Food intake and body weight were significantly lower in rats exposed to a 60-min period of footshock twice a day for 6 days compared to non-stressed rats. A 6-day, i.c.v. infusion of KP-102 significantly and steadily increased food intake and body weight in free-feeding non-stressed rats compared to control rats receiving saline i.c.v. In rats exposed to intermittent footshock stress during the 6-day infusion, KP-102 treatment stimulated feeding behavior and resulted in significantly higher body weight compared to stressed rats that received i.c.v. infusion of saline. These results indicate that during a 6-day continuous i.c.v. infusion of GHRP, KP-102, food intake and body weight steadily increased without attenuation of the GHRP effect in both non-stressed rats and those subjected to intermittent stress.
Elsevier