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    Behavioral and Physiological Consequences of Repeated Daily Intracerebroventricular Injection of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor in the Rat

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    The present study was conducted to investigate the long-term consequences of repeated daily bolus injections of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) intracerebroventricularly (ICV) on ongoing locomotor activity and physiology in the home cage of individually housed rats. For this purpose ovine CRF (1 µg/3 µl) was injected once daily during the early resting phase into the lateral ventricle for a period of 10 days. Changes in daily rhythms in heart rate, body temperature and motor activity were recorded telemetrically before and during the treatment period. Daily central CRF injection delayed the body weight gain, increased adrenal weight, and decreased the weight of the thymus at the end of the experiment. The acute behavioral and physiological responses to CRF did not habituate with repetition of treatment. CRF treatment also failed to affect the long-term regulation of baseline heart rate, body temperature and motor activity during the light phase, as measured during the hour preceding the daily CRF injection. Mean heart rate during the dark phase was, however, significantly decreased in CRF-treated rats during the whole experimental 10-day period, without any sign of habituation. The failure of episodic CRF to affect long-term regulation of baseline body temperature during the light as well as the dark phase was noteworthy because an increased daytime body temperature lasting for several days is a characteristic marker of various behavioral stressors. Since a previous study showed that the temperature response during chronic CRF infusion was similar to the long-term effects of behavioral stress it is hypothesized that chronic but not episodic increases in central CRF levels are related to the induction and persistence of part of the stress-related behavioral and physiological disorders.

    Physiological and Behavioral Effects of Chronic Intracerebroventricular Infusion of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor in the Rat

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    The present study was conducted to investigate the long-term effects of chronic elevation of centrally circulating levels of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) on behavior and physiology. For this purpose ovine CRF was infused continuously for a period of 10 days into the lateral ventricle of rats with the aid of osmotic pumps (calculated CRF delivery was 4.9 µg/day). Changes in daily rhythms in body temperature and home cage motor activity were recorded telemetrically during the infusion period. The most prominent physiological findings were a delayed body weight gain and a long-lasting hyperthermia following CRF infusion. The peptide treatment furthermore increased adrenal weight and suppressed the weight of the thymus at the end of the experiment. Behaviorally, CRF administration elicited a short-lasting increase in activity during the light phase and an increased anxiety in an elevated plus-maze 1 week after the start of infusion. The similarities between the present results and the long-term changes previously described in behaviorally stressed rats indicate that chronically elevated levels of CRF in the brain might play an important role in the induction and persistence of stress-related behavioral and physiological disorders.
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