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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 58, 578-581, Copyright © 1984 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

The effects of naloxone on hot flashes and gonadotropin secretion in postmenopausal women

J DeFazio, C Verheugen, R Chetkowski, T Nass, HL Judd and DR Meldrum

Hot flashes have a close temporal relationship with the initiation of LH pulses, suggesting that factors stimulating gonadotropin release are involved in the mechanism of this disturbance. It has been reported that the opiate antagonist naloxone acutely blocked subjective hot flashes, a seemingly paradoxical effect, since the use of this agent in premenopausal women increases the magnitude and frequency of LH pulses. We, therefore, studied the effects of naloxone in 16 postmenopausal women with frequent hot flashes using continuous recordings of finger temperature and skin resistance as objective indices of flushing and perspiration, respectively. After baseline recordings, the subjects were randomized into equal groups, and the recordings were repeated during 8-h infusion of either saline or naloxone (22 micrograms/min). Serum gonadotropin levels were measured at 15-min intervals before and during the last 4 h of the infusion. Naloxone did not change the rate of objectively measured hot flashes, mean serum LH or FSH levels, or the frequencies or amplitudes of gonadotropin pulses. These data suggest that there is a very low input of endogenous opiates on gonadotropin secretion in postmenopausal women and that opioid peptides do not play a role in the initiation of the postmenopausal hot flash.


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C. D. Foradori, L. M. Coolen, M. E. Fitzgerald, D. C. Skinner, R. L. Goodman, and M. N. Lehman
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