Measurement of cortisol, cortisone, 11-deoxycortisol and corticosterone in foetal sheep plasma during the perinatal period. |
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Authors: | S J Thomas D W Wilson C G Pierrepoint E H Cameron K Griffiths |
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Abstract: | A method is described for the resolution and individual quantitation of cortisol, cortisone, 11-deoxycortisol and corticosterone in foetal sheep plasma. The steroids were extracted by solvent partition and separated by LH-20 Sephadex column chromatography. Radioimmunoassay was used for the measurement of 11-deoxycortisol and cortisone and competitive protein-binding for corticosterone and cortisol. The relative levels of these steroids in the plasma of chronically catheterized sheep foetuses from 12 days before birth to term and then in the newborn lamb until 2 days of age are recorded. Cortisol gradually increased from a basal concentration of between 0 - 5 and 3 - 0 mug/100 ml plasma between days 12 and 5 pre partum, and then rose rapidly to 10 mug/100 ml plasma during the last 5 days of pregnancy to reach a maximum during or just after birth. Two days post partum the levels had fallen to approximately 3 mug/100 ml plasma. The mean value for 11-deoxycortisol between days 8 and 3 pre partum was 0 - 4 mug/100 ml plasma and increased in the final days before delivery to 1 - 0 mug/100 ml. Corticosterone initially showed slightly higher levels (approximately 1 - 5 mug/100 ml) in the earlier period of investigation but then fell during the immediate pre-partum period to 0 - 8 mug/100 ml. Cortisone was not detected at any stage of the investigations. The relationship between levels of cortisol and 11-deoxycortisol in foetal plasma and myometrial contractility is shown. An increase in uterine activity was seen to occur at the time that cortisol levels were at their maximum. The 11-deoxycortisol values throughout this particular study remained low. The results are discussed in relation to recorded levels in the adult and to previous studies in vitro with regard to changing steroid biosynthetic enzyme activity. |
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