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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The neuroendocrine response to L-tryptophan infusion was measured at two stages of the menstrual cycle, premenstrually and postmenstrually, in 13 women with and 13 women without premenstrual
depression
(the MC and NMC groups respectively). Previous studies have shown that in non-depressed women, this challenge test results in an increase in circulating
prolactin
and growth hormone. In depressed women both responses are blunted. In this study the growth hormone and cortisol responses were smaller in the MC group than the NMC group on both occasions. The
prolactin
response was blunted premenstrually compared with postmenstrually in both groups. These findings suggest that women who experience premenstrual
depression
may have neuroendocrine abnormalities throughout the cycle. The neurotransmitter abnormalities reflected in these altered endocrine responses appear to interact with neuroendocrine changes that normally occur premenstrually resulting in a vulnerability to
depression
at that phase of the cycle.
...
PMID:Blunting of neuroendocrine responses to infusion of L-tryptophan in women with perimenstrual mood change. 187 35
We interviewed 33 women with non-puerperal galactorrhea, 5 (15%) of whom had HPRL levels greater than 18 ng/ml and 24 controls, namely women with benign breast lesions. We used a semi-structured interview covering the duration of symptoms, preceding life events and the effect on the relationship of the couple. We also used the Beck
depression
inventory, the Strauss and Appelt body image questionnaire and an 8 item Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Galactorrheic women were more depressive (P less than 0.1), had more prior life events (P less than 0.001), longer duration of symptoms (P less than 0.01), and less fear of their disease (P less than 0.05) than did controls. Both groups had similar results with the body image questionnaire. Within the study group, results were independent of
prolactin
(HPRL) levels or amenorrhea.
...
PMID:Psychosomatic aspects of galactorrhea. 189 23
The effects of protirelin administration on the anterior pituitary release of thyrotropin and
prolactin
were examined in 26 patients with panic disorder and 22 healthy volunteers. There were no differences observed in hormonal responses to protirelin between patients and controls. However, higher Beck
Depression
Inventory scores were associated with smaller baseline-corrected maximal changes in thyrotropin responses. Cardiovascular responses to protirelin did not differ between a subgroup of 15 patients with panic disorder and 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Although protirelin produced robust increases in heart rate and blood pressure, only one patient with panic disorder experienced a panic attack during the infusion. The hormonal findings suggest that the presence of depressive symptoms may have a significant impact on various indexes of neuroendocrine responsivity and should be taken into consideration when looking at biologic measures in patients with panic disorder. The cardiovascular and behavioral findings do not support the hypothesis that all panic-producing stimuli are nonspecific and suggest that the induction of physical stimuli may be insufficient to produce panic attacks even in susceptible individuals.
...
PMID:Endocrine, cardiovascular, and behavioral effects of intravenous protirelin in patients with panic disorder. 189 83
Production of 18, 12-yr-old Angus cows was summarized as the averaged weaning weight deviations of each cow's calves from their like-aged, like-sexed and similarly managed contemporaries. These cows had spent a large part of their productive lives on pastures dominated by endophyte-infected tall fescue, so differences among them in calf production might have been induced partly by differences in susceptibility to fescue toxicosis. Cows were divided randomly into two groups for a 31-d summer feeding trial. In a crossover design, cows were fed 0 or .9 kg per cow per day of endophyte-infected fescue seed. Various traits were monitored to quantify differences among cows in response to the endophyte-infected fescue seed. Baseline serum
prolactin
concentration was depressed by fescue seed feeding, but differences among cows in the amount of
depression
were not related to past calf production. Prolactin release in response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone tended to be depressed by fescue, but the response also was sensitive to factors such as ambient temperature. Serum cholesterol and body weight change did not respond significantly to the fescue challenge. The experiment was not successful in unambiguously differentiating among cows in susceptibility to fescue toxicosis or in relating differential susceptibility to past calf production.
...
PMID:Variation among Angus cows in response to endophyte-infected fescue seed in the diet, as related to their past calf production. 190 Aug 30
A depressive man was evaluated for developing chronic fatigue and cold intolerance, in whom laboratory findings showed decreased thyroid hormone levels (T4, 2.7 micrograms dl-1; T3, 0.76 ng ml-1) with normal blood levels of TSH. A single bolus injection of TRH (500 micrograms) significantly stimulated
prolactin
secretion, but did not cause an increase in blood TSH levels (basal level, 1.2 microU ml-1 vs. 1.3 microU ml-1 30 min after injection). By contrast, TRH-induced TSH stimulation occurred after repeated injection of TRH for 4 consecutive days (basal level, 1.5 microU ml-1 vs. 5.6 microU ml-1 30 min after injection). Blood thyroid hormone concentrations were restored to normal levels after long-term administration of TRH. Other pituitary functions remained unchanged. A diagnosis of central hypothyroidism due to isolated TRH deficiency was made in this case, and the data presented here indicate that partial resistance of pituitary thyrotrophs to TRH may be associated with
depression
.
...
PMID:Central hypothyroidism due to isolated TRH deficiency in a depressive man. 190 Oct 77
Potential biologic and psychosocial causative factors for the postpartum blues were tested in a prospective study of 182 women followed up from the second trimester of pregnancy until postpartum week 9. Personal and family history of
depression
, depressive symptoms, stressful life events, and social adjustment were all assessed during the second trimester. Levels of progesterone,
prolactin
, estradiol, free and total estriol, and free and total cortisol were measured on several occasions during late pregnancy and early puerperium. Obstetric and child-care stressors and the postpartum blues were assessed after delivery. Predictors of the postpartum blues were personal and family history of
depression
, social adjustment, stressful life events, and levels of free and total estriol. Our results support the hypothesis that the postpartum blues is within the spectrum of affective disorders.
...
PMID:Prospective study of postpartum blues. Biologic and psychosocial factors. 192 70
Passive immunization of incubating ring doves with daily injections of sheep anti-chicken vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (cVIP) serum prevented the proliferation of crop sac tissue observed in control doves given nonimmune serum. Daily injections of anti-cVIP serum did not prevent crop sac development in nonbreeding doves simultaneously treated with ovine
prolactin
. The concentrations of plasma
prolactin
were significantly depressed in birds given anti-cVIP serum although this effect became progressively less pronounced during the course of the 7- or 14-day treatment periods. Body weights and weights of regressed reproductive organs were unaffected by treatment with anti-cVIP serum and did not differ significantly from control birds. Doves showing a decreased
prolactin
response to anti-cVIP serum treatment developed an immune response to sheep serum which may have immunoneutralized the administered antibody. Concentrations of plasma LH were not consistently affected by anti-cVIP serum administration and were low throughout the study. The
depression
in plasma LH normally seen in females after their young hatch was not observed in females treated with anti-cVIP serum. No effect of treatment was observed upon the birds' incubation behavior or in their readiness to feed and brood their young. These results suggest that in the ring dove, VIP is the physiological
prolactin
-releasing factor responsible for stimulating
prolactin
secretion and consequently the development of the crop sac, during incubation. They further indicate that increased concentrations of plasma
prolactin
may not be essential for gonadal regression or the maintenance of full incubation and brooding behavior in ring doves under laboratory conditions.
...
PMID:Passive immunization against chicken vasoactive intestinal polypeptide suppresses plasma prolactin and crop sac development in incubating ring doves. 193 23
Fifty-six patients with acromegaly were treated with external irradiation, 50 Gy, after unsuccessful pituitary surgery. A 50% reduction of pre-irradiation growth hormone levels was obtained in 51/56 patients. This level was reached after 26 +/- 14 months in 33 patients with
prolactin
levels less than 25 micrograms/l at diagnosis, after 21 +/- 17 months in 18 patients with
prolactin
greater than or equal to 25 micrograms/l, and after 20 +/- 21 months in 12 patients with
prolactin
greater than 40 micrograms/l at diagnosis. A further 50% decrease of growth hormone levels was obtained in 40/51 patients 42 +/- 22 months after radiotherapy, indicating that in clearly responsive patients, the growth hormone
depression
after radiotherapy follows a first order reaction. Four patients did not reach a 50% reduction of growth hormone levels 48-80 months after radiotherapy. During 10 years of follow-up, the growth hormone
depression
tended to be more pronounced in patients with mixed secretion of growth hormone and
prolactin
. The reduction of growth hormone levels was not correlated with the irradiated volume or the cumulative radiation effect. Within the first year,
prolactin
increased within the normal range in normoprolactinemic patients and remained so during follow-up. In hyperprolactinemic patients,
prolactin
decreased successively but to a lesser extent than growth hormone. Pituitary insufficiencies increased over time and three patients developed GH-insufficiency. Hypothalamic damage as indicated by
prolactin
changes was a regular phenomenon after radiotherapy.
...
PMID:External irradiation of growth hormone producing pituitary adenomas: prolactin as a marker of hypothalamic and pituitary effects. 200 40
Because of its neuroendocrine effects, amphetamine infusion has been used as a probe to investigate neurobiological correlates of depressive illness. In two separate studies, a total of 72 adolescents with major depressive disorder and 66 normal adolescents were given dextroamphetamine, 0.15 mg/kg, intravenously. Their cortisol, growth hormone, and
prolactin
responses were measured. These endocrine responses did not reliably distinguish adolescents with major depressive disorder from those without it, nor did they reliably delineate any specific depressive subgroup. These findings are compared with those from similar studies of adult
depression
.
...
PMID:Hormonal responses to dextroamphetamine in depressed and normal adolescents. 205 77
There is circumstantial evidence that increases in
prolactin
secretion evoked by L-tryptophan infusion involve 5-HT1 receptors, whereas growth hormone responses do not. Propranolol is a beta-adrenoceptor antagonist that also possesses antagonist properties at 5-HT1 receptors. Propranolol (80 mg, PO) failed to attenuate the
prolactin
response to L-tryptophan infusion (100 mg/kg, IV) in seven volunteers; the role of 5-HT1 receptors in this response remains uncertain. The growth hormone response to tryptophan was enhanced by propranolol, consistent with previous reports of an inhibitory beta-adrenoceptor influence on GH secretion. Excessive beta-adrenoceptor function might explain the blunted growth hormone response to tryptophan in
depression
.
...
PMID:Hormonal response to L-tryptophan infusion: effect of propranolol. 208 37
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