Thread: I need help
View Single Post
Old 07-16-2006, 05:11 AM   #6
R.B.
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,843
Useful and thought provoking summary giving an idea as to how interlinked and complex it all as -

Fats are high density fuels as well as having a host of other roles in the body

RB



http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...t_uids=1630733

1: Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 1992 Summer;16(2):235-72.Click here to read Links
Metabolic fuels and reproduction in female mammals.

* Wade GN,
* Schneider JE.

Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 01003.

A complete reproductive cycle of ovulation, conception, pregnancy, and lactation is one of the most energetically expensive activities that a female mammal can undertake. A reproductive attempt at a time when calories are not sufficiently available can result in a reduced return on the maternal energetic investment or even in the death of the mother and her offspring. Numerous physiological and behavioral mechanisms link reproduction and energy metabolism. Reproductive attempts may be interrupted or deferred when food is scarce or when other physiological processes, such as thermoregulation or fattening, make extraordinary energetic demands. Food deprivation suppresses both ovulation and estrous behavior. The neural mechanisms controlling pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and, consequently, luteinizing hormone secretion and ovarian function appear to respond to minute-to-minute changes in the availability of metabolic fuels. It is not clear whether GnRH-secreting neurons are able to detect the availability of metabolic fuels directly or whether this information is relayed from detectors elsewhere in the brain. Although pregnancy is less affected by fuel availability, both lactational performance and maternal behaviors are highly responsive to the energy supply. When a reproductive attempt is made, changes in hormone secretion have dramatic effects on the partitioning and utilization of metabolic fuels. During ovulatory cycles and pregnancy, the ovarian steroids, estradiol and progesterone, induce coordinated changes in the procurement, ingestion, metabolism, storage, and expenditure of metabolic fuels. Estradiol can act in the brain to alter regulatory behaviors, such as food intake and voluntary exercise, as well as adenohypophyseal and autonomic outputs. At the same time, ovarian hormones act on peripheral tissues such as adipose tissue, muscle, and liver to influence the metabolism, partitioning and storage of metabolic fuels. During lactation, the peptide hormones, prolactin and growth hormone, rather than estradiol and progesterone, are the principal hormones controlling partitioning and utilization of metabolic fuels. The interactions between metabolic fuels and reproduction are reciprocal, redundant, and ubiquitous; both behaviors and physiological processes play vital roles. Although there are species differences in the particular physiological and behavioral mechanisms mediating nutrition-reproduction interactions, two findings are consistent across species: 1) Reproductive physiology and behaviors are sensitive to the availability of oxidizable metabolic fuels. 2) When reproductive attempts are made, ovarian hormones play a major role in the changes in ingestion, partitioning, and utilization of metabolic fuels.

PMID: 1630733 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
R.B. is offline   Reply With Quote