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Beta-endorphin secretion at the Time of Sudden Death Due to Cardiac or Respiratory Failure

NCJ Number
139822
Journal
Japanese Journal of Legal Medicine Volume: 46 Issue: 3 Dated: (June 1992) Pages: 182-188
Author(s)
K Tsunoda; K Douge; Y Akiya; T Watanabe
Date Published
1992
Length
7 pages
Annotation
The pituitary response to sudden death resulting from cardiac failure or respiratory failure was studied in male and female Wistar rats by analyzing the variation in pituitary immunoreactive-beta-endorphin levels determined by radioimmunoassay after death and in circulating beta- endorphin levels during periods of agony.
Abstract
The sudden death was induced by an intravenous injection of KCl and succinylcholine chloride (SCC). The agony period was the time from the administration of the substance to final cardiac arrest. In both sexes, the immunoreactive-beta-endorphin level was significantly lower in respiratory failure than in cardiac failure. No variation in plasma immunoreactive-beta-endorphin was noted during short periods of agony in cardiac failure, but it markedly increased during long periods of agony in respiratory failure. The highest elevation at 2 or 4 minutes after SCC administration was about 3 times the pre-administration value for immunoreactive-beta-endorphin in males. But elevation in females was lower than in males. The rise in the plasma beta-endorphin during the agony of sudden death from respiratory failure is regarded to be of pituitary origin due to dexamethasone treatment. Results indicated that the pituitary responded more to the fatal agony in respiratory failure than in cardiac failure. Tables, figures, and 13 references (Author abstract modified)