Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Physiol Behav. 1993 Aug;54(2):229-36.

    DMBA-induced mammary tumor growth in rats exhibiting increased or decreased ability to cope with stress due to early postnatal handling or antidepressant treatment.

    Hilakivi-Clarke L, Wright A, Lippman ME.

    Lombardi Cancer Research Center, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20007.

    Depression and an ability to cope with stress are suggested to play a role in the vulnerability to breast cancer. In rats, neonatal clomipramine administration induces subsequent behavioral abnormalities that closely resemble those seen in human endogenous depression. Early postnatal handling, on the other hand, improves subsequent ability to cope with stress in rodents. The present study examined whether early clomipramine treatment or handling influences the growth of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA)-induced mammary tumors in female Sprague-Dawley rats. Between postnatal days 5 and 20, rat pups were injected daily with 25 mg/kg clomipramine, handled either by holding them in a hand (H-handling) or by giving them a saline injection (I-handling), or left nonhandled. During these manipulations, but not later, body weight gain was lower in the I-handled and clomipramine-treated pups than in the H-handled rats. As adults, the time spent immobile in the swim test, a model of depressive behavior and an ability to cope with stress, was significantly lengthened in the clomipramine-treated female rats, and shortened in the handled females. Measurement of plasma 17-beta-estradiol (E2) did not reveal any significant differences between the groups. The percentage of animals developing mammary tumors was significantly higher, and the length of survival shorter among the clomipramine-treated rats than among the I-handled rats. However, both groups exhibited less tumors and longer survival than the nonhandled controls. There were no differences in mammary tumor incidence or survival between the nonhandled and H-handled rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

    PMID: 8372115 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read

    Patient drug information

    • Estrogen (Cenestin®, Enjuvia®, Estrace®, ...)

      Estrogen is used to treat hot flushes ('hot flashes'; sudden strong feelings of heat and sweating) in women who are experiencing menopause ('change of life', the end of monthly menstrual periods). Some brands of estrogen...

    • Estrogen Injection (Delestrogen®, DEPO-Estradiol®, Premarin Intravenous®)

      The estradiol cypionate and estradiol valerate forms of estrogen injection are used to treat hot flushes (hot flashes; sudden strong feelings of heat and sweating) and/or vaginal dryness, itching, and burning in women wh...

    • Clomipramine (Anafranil®)

      Clomipramine is used to treat people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (a condition that causes repeated unwanted thoughts and the need to perform certain behaviors over and over). Clomipramine is in a group of medicati...