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1 Neuroscience Program, Surgical Metabolism and Nutrition Laboratory, Department of Surgery, University Hospital, State University of New York Health Science Center, Syracuse, New York 13210; 2 Department of Metabolic Care and Gerontology, Charles University, Czech Republic; and 3 Department of Clinical Medicine, University "La Sapienza," 00185 Rome, Italy
Because
food intake is a function of meal number and meal size and because
gender-related hormones are involved in feeding regulation, we explored
effects of orchiectomy and testosterone replacement on the relationship
between meal number and size and changes in resulting feeding patterns
in adult male rats, randomized into orchiectomy and sham-operation
groups. A rat eater meter measured feeding indexes for 1 wk before and
2 wk after castration and during 8 days of testosterone replacement.
Orchiectomy leads to an immediate change in the meal number-to-size
relationship, resulting in 1) change
in pattern of feeding; 2) a
significant decrease in dark-phase meal number;
3) a significant increase in
dark-phase meal size, but insufficient to offset decrease in meal
number, so total food intake significantly decreased during dark phase;
4) no significant change in
light-phase meal number; and 5) an
increase in meal size leading to an increased food intake during light
phase, which offset decreased food intake in dark cycle and resulted in
no net significant change in food intake after orchiectomy.
Testosterone replacement acutely reversed effects of orchiectomy on
meal number-to-meal size relationship, restoring feeding pattern. Data
suggest that androgens immediately influence the meal number-to-meal
size relationship. The speed of onset seen after orchiectomy suggests
that the influence of testosterone on food intake may also occur
partially via a nongenomic effect.
male Fischer rats; food intake; rat eater meter
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