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  • Title: Activation of sexual behavior in male rats by combined subcutaneous and intracranial treatments of 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone.
    Author: Butera PC, Czaja JA.
    Journal: Horm Behav; 1989 Mar; 23(1):92-105. PubMed ID: 2925189.
    Abstract:
    When given peripherally, 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone, the major androgenic metabolite of testosterone, is relatively less effective than testosterone in activating sexual behavior of castrated male rats. In order to test the possible central nervous system effects of dihydrotestosterone more directly, we castrated Long-Evans rats, gave them a behaviorally subthreshold dose of dihydrotestosterone placed subcutaneously in Silastic capsules (ScDHT), and then additionally treated the rats with intracranial implants of crystalline dihydrotestosterone (IcDHT, N = 12), testosterone (IcT, N = 12), or cholesterol (IcCHOL, N = 10) placed in the medial preoptic area. The peripheral ScDHT treatment maintained sexual organ weights of castrated males at levels comparable to those of intact males, but did not in itself significantly activate mating behavior. The addition of IcT or IcDHT to this treatment regimen significantly increased the number of males displaying mounting behavior, intromissions, and ejaculatory behavior (P less than 0.05) compared to males with IcCHOL implants. There were no significant differences between the group given IcT and the group given IcDHT. Results of this study support the hypothesis that the nonaromatizable androgen 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone can act in the rat brain to influence male sexual behavior. In addition, these data lead us to suggest that the relative ineffectiveness of dihydrotestosterone versus testosterone when given systemically may reflect differences in bioavailability of these hormones to the brain following such treatment.
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