Beta
61488

Effect of Visfatin on Testosterone Hormone Level in Chronic Restraint Male Albino Rats

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

Subjects

-

Tags

-

Abstract

Abstract
Background: Stress has been linked in many studies with infertility and hormonal irregularities. Visfatin is a novel adipocytokine which has been proven to decrease in chronic stress in rats.
Aim of Study: This study aimed at evaluation of the effect of visfatin in modulation of the complications of chronic restraint on gonadal functions.
Material and Methods: 32 male albino rats randomly allocated to four equal groups, group (I): Included rats fed a normal diet (control group) group (II): Included rats fed a normal diet for 2 months then received a single intraperitoneal 500pmol visfatin injection group (III): Included immobilized rats (4hr/day) for 2 months and group (IV): Included immo-bilized rats (4hr/day) for 2 months then received a single intraperitoneal visfatin injection at a dose of 500pmol. After the last visfatin dose blood samples were collected and exam-ined for testosterone, LH and FSH. Then laparotomy was conducted to dissect the right testis for histopathological studies.
Results: The restraint stress has inhibitory effects on male testosterone, LH, FSH and testicular tissues in rats, marked deterioration of gonadal functions in immobilization stress group (group III), a significant decrease (p<0.001) in serum testosterone, LH, sperm count and right testicular weights, marked deterioration in the gonadal histoarchitecture, but, there was a non-significant change in serum FSH. Exogenous visfatin administration in (group IV) significantly increased serum testosterone (p<0.01), LH (p<0.001), FSH (p<0.01), and sperm count (p<0.001) than group III, and markedly improved the gonadal histoarchitecture. Group II demonstrated results similar to group III when compared to the control group.
Conclusion: Visfatin plays a protective role against chronic stress-induced gonadal dysfunction via maintaining testicular steroidogenesis of Leydig cells.

DOI

10.21608/mjcu.2018.61488

Keywords

Visfatin – Chronic stress – Testicular function

Authors

First Name

RADWA M. AL-SAYED, M.D.;

Last Name

SAFYA E. ESMAEEL, M.D.

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

The Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

86

Article Issue

December

Related Issue

9163

Issue Date

2018-12-01

Receive Date

2017-11-25

Publish Date

2018-12-01

Page Start

3,733

Page End

3,741

Print ISSN

0045-3803

Online ISSN

2536-9806

Link

https://mjcu.journals.ekb.eg/article_61488.html

Detail API

https://mjcu.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=61488

Order

44

Type

Original Article

Type Code

263

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Medical Journal of Cairo University

Publication Link

https://mjcu.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

-

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023