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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve depressed adolescents and 12 controls matched for age, sex, Tanner stage, time of menstrual cycle (females), weight, and time of year assessed were studied over 3 nights. Measurements for cortisol, thyroid stimulating hormone, and growth hormone were made on serum collected at 10 P.M., 12 midnight, 1 A.M., 2 A.M., 3 A.M., 4 A.M., and 6 A.M. in eight pairs and every 20 minutes from 8 P.M. to 7 A.M. in four pairs.
Cortisol
secretion did not significantly differentiate the groups. Thyroid stimulating hormone secretion was significantly elevated in the depressed group at one time point. Growth hormone secretion significantly differentiated the two groups at most time points, and the depressed adolescents significantly hypersecreted growth hormone (area under the curve). Implications for the diagnosis, etiology, and treatment of adolescent
depression
are discussed.
...
PMID:Nocturnal cortisol, thyroid stimulating hormone, and growth hormone secretory profiles in depressed adolescents. 178 55
The relationships between mood change, obstetric experience and alterations in plasma cortisol, beta-endorphin (beta-EP) and corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) were examined in a prospective study of 97 primiparous Australian women. Psychological measures were administered between the 28th week of pregnancy and the 3rd postnatal month, including the Profile of Mood States (POMS) and the Montgomery Asberg Depressive Rating Scale (MADRS). Blood samples were collected for cortisol, beta-EP and CRH assay on most of these occasions and during labour. Factor analysis was used to identify key subsets of psychological variables for use in the subsequent analyses. 'Mood disturbance' and 'tiredness' factors peaked at 38 weeks' gestation, while 'difficulty falling asleep' was greatest around the time of birth.
Cortisol
, beta-EP and CRH concentrations rose significantly as pregnancy advanced and peaked at birth; plasma CRH correlated with plasma cortisol (r = 0.54) and beta-EP (r = 0.32). Women with the highest 'mood disturbance' and MADRS
depression
scores at 28 weeks' gestation received significantly more pain relief during labour. Those women whose mood deteriorated from 38 weeks' gestation to postnatal day 2 had larger falls in plasma beta-EP after delivery (p less than 0.01) than those women whose mood improved or remained constant. Women in this mood-deteriorated subgroup also had significantly higher MADRS
depression
scores at 3 months (p less than 0.01). Mild antenatal
depression
(MADRS greater than 13) occurred in 5.2% of women and mild postnatal depression in 4.7%. Overall, these data suggest a role for circulating CRH in the regulation of maternal cortisol secretion and significant relationships between maternal postnatal mood states and beta-EP and between antenatal mood states and obstetric events.
...
PMID:Mood changes, obstetric experience and alterations in plasma cortisol, beta-endorphin and corticotrophin releasing hormone during pregnancy and the puerperium. 213 27
Cortisol
binding has been identified in cytosols prepared from rainbow trout liver. Binding is of high affinity (kD = 5.1 +/- 0.2 nM, n = 23) low capacity (Nmax = 197 +/- 12 fmol mg-1 protein, n = 23), and high specificity, only dexamethasone, cortisol, and Ru38486 being efficient in displacing bound [3H]cortisol. Binding is not due to contamination by blood because plasma displayed no affinity for cortisol under the assay regime employed here and, although whole blood cytosol does specifically bind cortisol, the degree of contamination is demonstrably too low to account for the levels of binding detected in liver cytosol. No specific binding of [3H]cortisol could be detected in liver nuclear extracts, although the simultaneous assay for nuclear estradiol-binding sites was positive. Rainbow trout stressed by confinement displayed a significant reduction in cytosolic [3H]cortisol-binding capacity (with no concomitant detectable appearance of binding within nuclear extracts), 96-hr confinement eliciting a 40%
depression
in binding capacity relative to unstressed fish. The administration of cortisol via intraperitoneal implants also reduced, significantly, the number of hepatic-binding sites. The results are discussed with reference to anomalies in reported characteristics of teleost glucocorticoid receptors and the phenomenon of down-regulation observed in some mammalian systems.
...
PMID:The effect of stress and exogenous cortisol on receptor-like binding of cortisol in the liver of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. 219 91
Basal serum cortisol level was measured in patients with primary degenerative dementia. The diagnosis of primary degenerative dementia was made by the DSM-III-R criteria, and the severity of dementia was measured by use the Rosen et. al. scale. Additionally, the presence of depressive and paraphrenia syndromes was evaluated. The Hamilton scale was used for the evaluation of
depression
severity.
Cortisol
level was measured by radioimmune assay. Sixty three patients, 39 female and 24 male, were evaluated. The mean age for women was 69.54 and for men 71 years. Patients were divided into 3 groups: I--simple dementia, II--dementia with
depression
, III--dementia with paraphrenia. Positive correlation was found between basal cortisol level and the severity of dementia only in group I. Mean cortisol level in patients from group II and III was significantly different than in group I. Among female patients with
depression
the negative correlation between cortisol level and severity of dementia was found; no other correlations were proved. No correlation was found between the cortisol level and severity of dementia in Hamilton's scale.
...
PMID:[Dependence on serum cortisol level or the severity of intellectual impairment in primary degenerative dementias]. 228 55
To investigate the relationships between dexamethasone (DEX) and post-DEX cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) levels, the authors measured DEX at 8.00 a.m. and post-DEX cortisol and ACTH levels at 8.00 a.m. and 4.00 p.m. in 72 depressed patients categorized according to DSM-III.
Cortisol
non-suppressors exhibited significantly (P = 0.0006) decreased levels of DEX compared to suppressors. DEX levels at 8.00 a.m. explained 21.1% of the variance in the post-DEX cortisol values at 8.00 a.m. and 34.5% of those at 4.00 p.m. DEX levels were not significantly different among minor depressives (300.40, 309.00), major depressives without melancholia (296.X2) or with melancholia and/or psychotic features (296.X3, 296.X4). In the latter the post-DEX cortisol was significantly increased compared to all other depressives and these differences remained significant even after adjusting for the variations in DEX (by means of regression analysis). Also the diagnostic performance of the post-DEX cortisol values for major depression with associated features versus minor
depression
was not substantially affected when the DEX levels were accounted for. ACTH levels after DEX were shown to correlate significantly (P less than 0.05) and negatively with DEX. Although post-DEX ACTH levels did not differ among the DSM-III diagnostic categories, cortisol non-suppressors averaged significantly (P = 0.0004) higher ACTH levels than suppressors.
...
PMID:The influences of dexamethasone levels on the predictive value of the DST for unipolar major depression and the relationships between post-dexamethasone cortisol and ACTH levels. 254 36
The effects of 2-day and 7-day cortisol treatment on immunoreactive corticotropin (ACTH) and beta-endorphin concentrations were measured in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, hypothalamus, and cerebellum in male rats. Plasma ACTH, beta-endorphin, corticosterone, and cortisol levels were also measured in parallel.
Cortisol
administration by osmotic minipumps (25 mg/kg/day) maintained a constant, moderately high concentration (23.0 +/- 2.7 micrograms/100 ml) of this glucocorticoid in plasma. Two-day cortisol treatment suppressed the plasma concentration of ACTH and corticosterone, and also decreased, to a lesser degree, concentrations of beta-endorphin. ACTH and beta-endorphin levels in the brain remained unchanged after 2 days of cortisol treatment. After 7-day treatment, however, plasma concentrations of ACTH and beta-endorphin further decreased, while ACTH and beta-endorphin concentrations in the cortex and beta-endorphin concentrations in the cerebellum were also significantly decreased. Peptide concentrations in other brain areas did not change significantly with either 2-day or 7-day cortisol treatment. These data suggest that there are delayed effects of glucocorticoids on pro-opiomelanocortin peptide secretion and/or metabolism in the central nervous system. These findings are consistent with the impaired cognitive functions of patients with diseases, such as Cushing's syndrome and
depression
, that have long-lasting elevated cortisol secretion.
...
PMID:Delayed effects of chronic cortisol treatment on brain and plasma concentrations of corticotropin (ACTH) and beta-endorphin. 254 10
The effects of chronic cortisol treatment on neuroendocrine and behavioral responses to serotonin1 (5-HT1) receptor agonists were studied in conscious, freely moving rats. Seven-day cortisol treatment (25 mg/kg/day with osmotic minipumps) markedly suppressed basal plasma corticotropin (ACTH) and corticosterone concentrations, indicating a suppression of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis.
Cortisol
also decreased body weight, food intake, plasma norepinephrine (NE), and epinephrine (E) levels. In the drug challenge studies, we used two 5-HT1 agonists, the 5-HT1B and 5-HT1C agonist, m-chlorophenylpiperazine (m-CPP), and the 5-HT1A agonist, 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino) tetralin (8-OHDPAT), to examine the effect of cortisol on their behavioral and neuroendocrine effects. After 7-day cortisol treatment, plasma prolactin responses to both m-CPP and 8-OHDPAT were significantly decreased. While the plasma NE, E, and food intake responses to m-CPP were also significantly reduced by cortisol treatment, these same responses to 8-OHDPAT were unchanged. The effect of m-CPP on locomotor activity was also decreased. Since only the responses to m-CPP and 8-OHDPAT previously shown to be antagonized by pretreatment with the 5-HT1/5-HT2 antagonist, metergoline, were significantly attenuated after cortisol treatment, these changes may be specific to 5-HT receptors. These data indicate that chronic exposure to high glucocorticoid levels alters 5-HT1 receptor-mediated functions and provides additional evidence relevant to the contribution of glucocorticoid elevation to the symptoms of
depression
.
...
PMID:Long-term cortisol treatment impairs behavioral and neuroendocrine responses to 5-HT1 agonists in the rat. 255 39
The influence of glucocorticoid administration and limited nursing on piglet carbohydrase enzyme development and subsequent growth was examined in three experiments using 371 piglets. Treatments in the first two experiments were formed by the factorial arrangement of hydrocortisone (-HYD or +HYD) and limited nursing (-LN or +LN) imposed form d 14 to weaning (d 28).
Hydrocortisone
was replaced by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in the third experiment. Growth rates were severely depressed by HYD (P less than .01), LN (P less than .001) and to a lesser extent (P less than .06) by ACTH during the last 2 wk of lactation. During the first 14 d postweaning, piglets continued to grow more slowly following HYD treatment (P less than .01), whereas LN piglets grew more rapidly than those allowed to suckle normally. Although piglets were smaller at weaning after HYD injection (P less than .01), relative weights of liver, pancreas and small intestine were increased (P less than .05). Only adrenal weights were increased by ACTH (P less than .09). Pancreatic and intestinal amylase activities were increased two- to three-fold by HYD injection (P less than .05) but were unaffected by ACTH or LN (P greater than .10). Sucrase and maltase activity increased linearly with age (P less than .001). This rate of increase was numerically enhanced by glucocorticoid treatment and LN. The normal decrease in lactase activity was accelerated by LN and HYD injection, with the greatest
depression
caused by the combination of LN and either HYD or ACTH administration (P less than .05). Glucocorticoid administration to nursing piglets can evoke premature elevation of the carbohydrase enzymes necessary for initiating the hydrolysis of starch.
...
PMID:Effect of glucocorticoids and limiting nursing on the carbohydrate digestive capacity and growth rate of piglets. 255 55
Eleven patients with major depression and 12 control subjects were administered corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), aqueous arginine vasopressin (AVP), and insulin hypoglycaemia (IH) to test for differences in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function. Patients with major depression demonstrated lower ACTH responses to CRH when compared with controls, and a trend toward such after administration of AVP. Despite lower ACTH responses in patients with
depression
, there were no differences in cortisol responses to these stimuli. In the CRH and AVP tests, there was no correlation between the basal cortisol and ACTH responses in either controls or patients, but in the IH test there was a negative correlation between these responses for both groups. The ACTH responses to CRH and AVP were positively correlated in controls and patients.
Cortisol
responses to all three provocative stimuli were positively correlated in both subject groups. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that hypothalamic or supra-hypothalamic overactivity may be involved in the development of HPA-axis abnormalities in patients with
depression
.
...
PMID:Consistent reduction of ACTH responses to stimulation with CRH, vasopressin and hypoglycaemia in patients with major depression. 255 71
Cortisol
and hypophyseal hormones contents were measured in the blood serum of circular, schizophrenic and psychogenic depressed patients during pharmacotherapy. Distinct nosological differences in hypophyseal hormone secretion were noted. The increase in blood serum levels of ACTH, prolactin and somatotropic hormones were obligatory stages of the positive therapeutic effect in circular depressions. The ACTH and prolactin decrease was characteristic of schizophrenic
depression
. The cortisol level decreased in any
depression
with positive therapeutic effect.
...
PMID:[Changes in hormonal indicators during the treatment of depression of different types]. 275 Mar 67
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