We investigated the effect of 10 months ovariectomy and a correction therapy, 2 weeks before the rats were killed, of oestradiol, progesterone or their combination on NMDA and AMPA receptor binding in the hippocampus, dentate gyrus, striatum, nucleus accumbens and frontal cortex of the rat brain as well as on amino acid levels in frontal cortex. NMDA and AMPA binding densities were assayed by autoradiography using, respectively, L-[3H]glutamate and [3H]AMPA; amino acid concentrations were measured by high performance liquid chromatograhy (HPLC) coupled with UV detection. Ovariectomy was without effect on NMDA and AMPA binding density in all brain regions assayed except in the hippocampal CA1 region and dentate gyrus where it decreased NMDA binding density compared to intact rats values. Oestradiol restored and increased NMDA binding density in the CA1 subfield and the dentate gyrus of ovariectomized rats but, by contrast, it decreased binding density in the striatum and in the frontal cortex while having no effect in the CA2/3 subfield of the hippocampus and in the nucleus accumbens. Oestradiol was without effect on AMPA binding density in the hippocampus and the dentate gyrus but it reduced AMPA binding density in the striatum, the frontal cortex and the nucleus accumbens. Progesterone, and oestradiol combined with progesterone, decreased NMDA but not AMPA binding density in the frontal cortex of ovariectomized rats, and they were without effect on these receptors in the other brain regions assayed. Amino acid concentrations in the frontal cortex were unchanged after ovariectomy or steroid treatments. The effect of oestradiol in the hippocampus confirmed in the present study and our novel findings in the frontal cortex, striatum and nucleus accumbens may have functional significance for schizophrenia and neurodegenerative diseases.
We assessed recent temporal trends in the registration of stillbirths in Canada, with particular regard to stillbirths < 500 g. Data from the Statistics Canada live birth and stillbirth databases for the period 1985-95 were used for the study. The primary analysis was restricted to data from 10 of the 12 provinces and territories of Canada. Data from Newfoundland were excluded because birthweight distributions were not available prior to 1990, and data from Ontario were excluded because of concerns about data quality. The proportion of stillbirths < 500 g increased by 47% [95% confidence interval (CI) 32, 63%], from 12.7% of stillbirths with known birthweight in 1985-7 to 18.7% in 1993-5. Similarly, the rate of stillbirths < 500 g increased by 36% [95% CI 21, 53%], from 7.2 to 9.8 per 10,000 total births from 1985-7 to 1993-5. Similar increases in stillbirth rates were not observed in other low birthweight categories. Live births < 500 g increased 53% [95% CI 33, 77%], from 4.6 to 7.0 per 10,000 live births. Some provinces and territories had low rates of stillbirths < 500 g and no increasing trend, whereas other provinces showed higher rates and increases over time. These regional differences were consistent with differences in stillbirth definitions across the provinces and territories of Canada. Spatio-temporal comparisons of crude stillbirth rates are likely to be compromised unless differences and changes in birth registration practices are addressed.
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