Summary. Treatment of 4 adult male rhesus monkeys for 8–12 months with 100–400 μg of a GnRH antagonist/day by means of using osmotic minipumps led to suppressed serum concentrations of LH and testosterone followed by various degrees of recovery toward pretreatment values. The serum LH response to a challenge of native GnRH was reduced by 30–75% during antagonist treatment. The serum testosterone response to GnRH was exaggerated above the response in the pretreatment period, suggesting hypersensitivity of the testis to gonadotrophin. Antagonist administration under these conditions did not alter body weight or abolish ejaculatory response. Antagonist infusion caused a 96% decrease in sperm counts. Spermatozoa recovered during the final month of antagonist treatment showed a reduced ability to penetrate denuded hamster ova. Testicular biopsies performed at the end of antagonist treatment revealed persistent spermatogenesis. However, the cellularity of the seminiferous tubules was decreased below that of pretreatment biopsies. The results of this study suggest that the amount of testosterone needed to maintain normal spermatogenesis is greater than that needed to maintain electroejaculatory response in monkeys.
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