Urinary cortisol analysis for monitoring adrenal activity in elephants

被引:47
作者
Brown, JL [1 ]
Wemmer, CM [1 ]
Lehnhardt, J [1 ]
机构
[1] DEPT MAMMALS,WASHINGTON,DC
关键词
urine; cortisol; ACTH; adrenal activity;
D O I
10.1002/zoo.1430140606
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
Cortisol was measured in dichloromethane-extracted elephant urine using an I-125 solid-phase radioimmunoassay (RIA). The cortisol RIA was validated by demonstrating 1) parallelism between dilutions of pooled urinary extracts and the standard curve, 2) significant recovery of exogenous cortisol added to elephant urine, and 3) a relationship between changes in peripheral and urinary cortisol after an adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) challenge. One African (Loxodonta africana) and one Asian (Elephas maximus) elephant were given three injections of ACTH (1.25 mg) at 2 h intervals. Serum cortisol increased four- to eightfold within 30 min after the first injection and peaked (nine- to twelvefold increase) after the second injection. Serum concentrations began to decline 2-3 h after the last injection but were still approximately fourfold higher than baseline at the end of the collection period (hour 8). In the urine, cortisol concentrations were increased in the first sample postinjection (1.5-4 h) and peaked twenty- to fortyfold by similar to 6 h. Urinary cortisol remained elevated at 8 h, but returned to baseline the following morning. Analysis of high performance liquid chromatography fractions of extracted urine revealed that immunoactivity was associated with free cortisol (similar to 90% of total immunoactivity) and a more polar, unidentified metabolite. A method for preserving urine was developed to allow storing unfrozen samples. One pool of urine from each of one African and two Asian elephants was divided into aliquots, placed in tubes containing absolute ethanol (10%), sodium azide (0.1%) or distilled water (control), acid frozen after 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, and 24 weeks of storage at similar to 25 degrees C. In unpreserved samples, cortisol concentrations were reduced 46% by 2 weeks and 95% by 24 weeks. In contrast, ethanol- and sodium azide-preserved samples retained 100 and 95% of cortisol immunoactivity through 8 weeks and 93 and 85% of activity through 12 weeks, respectively. We infer from these data that changes in urinary cortisol excretion in the elephant reflect fluctuations in adrenal activity and may be a useful indicator of stress. Additionally, urine samples can be collected and stored unfrozen for at least 2 months before any appreciable loss in cortisol immunoactivity occurs, a finding potentially useful to field application of this technique. (C) 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.*
引用
收藏
页码:533 / 542
页数:10
相关论文
共 29 条
  • [1] Axelrod J., Reisine T.D., Stress hormones:Their interaction and regulation, Science, 224, pp. 452-453, (1984)
  • [2] Berman D.G., Johnson D.E., Phillips R.W., Barry W.P., Physiology and urinary metabolite responses to cold shock and confinement of sheep, Journal of Animal Science, 50, pp. 713-718, (1980)
  • [3] Brown J.L., Schoenemann H.M., Chakraborty P.K., Basal and pulsatile cortisol secretion in sheep after surgical manipulation, Journal of Animal Science, 71, (1993)
  • [4] Brown J.L., Lehnhardt J.
  • [5] Carlstead M.K., Brown J.L., Monfort S.L., Killens R., Wildt D.E., Urinary monitoring of adrenal responses to psychological stressors in domestic and nondomestic felids, Zoo Biology, 11, pp. 165-176, (1992)
  • [6] Carlstead K., Brown J.L., Seidensticker J., Behavioral and adrenocortical responses to environmental changes in leopard cats (Felis bengalensis), Zoo Biology, 12, pp. 321-331, (1993)
  • [7] Crockett C.M., Bowers C.L., Sackett G.P., Bowden D.M., Urinary cortisol responses of long‐tailed macaques to five cage sizes, tethering, sedation, and room change, American Journal of Primatology, 30, pp. 55-74, (1993)
  • [8] Elvidge H., Challis J.R.G., Robinson J.S., Roper C., Thorburn G.D., Influence of handling and sedation on plasma cortisol in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta), Journal of Endocrinology, 70, pp. 325-326, (1976)
  • [9] Fulkerson W.J., Tang B.Y., Ultradian and circadian rhythms in the plasma concentration of cortisol in sheep, Journal of Endocrinology, 81, pp. 135-141, (1979)
  • [10] Fulkerson W.J., Sawyer G.J., Gow C.B., Investigations of ultradian and circadian rhythms in the concentration of cortisol and prolactin in the plasma of dairy cattle, Australian Journal of Biological Science, 33, pp. 557-561, (1980)