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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), we measured
adrenocorticotropin
hormone (ACTH) and cortisol responses following administration of
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) in 8 combat veterans with chronic PTSD. The PTSD patients had a significantly lower ACTH response to CRH compared to a control group of normal volunteers. Blunted ACTH responses occurred in patients with PTSD alone, as well as those PTSD patients who also had major depression. The cortisol response, although reduced, was not significantly different from normal. The blunted ACTH response to CRH in PTSD patients is similar to that seen in other psychiatric disorders, such as
depression
, panic disorder, and anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:The corticotropin-releasing hormone test in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder. 254 31
This article presents a series of experiments that involves the development of three novel strategies for human stress research and the utilization of these strategies to examine neurobehavioral processes of stress in healthy volunteers, schizophrenia, and affective illness. The first strategy involved intravenous 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG) administration, a glucoprivic stressor. We found that glucoprivic stress results in dissociation of hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA), adrenomedullary, and sympathoneural activity. In addition, glucoprivic stress in neuroleptic-treated schizophrenic patients caused heightened dopamine activity, as reflected by increased plasma homovanillic acid (HVA) levels and decreased adaptive responses as assessed by decreased food consumption following 2DG administration. These data suggest that neuroleptics do not prevent stress-related increases in dopamine activity and that schizophrenia may be associated with abnormalities in the stress response. The second strategy assessed effects of uncontrollable and identical amounts of controllable stress in volunteers and depressed patients. In volunteers, it was found that uncontrollable in comparison to controllable stress results in specific behavioral and neuroendocrine alterations. Moreover, uncontrollable stress exposure in depressed patients in comparison to volunteers produced greater alterations in behavioral ratings and plasma cortisol levels and that the uncontrollable stress related increases in helplessness ratings and cortisol levels were significantly correlated. These data suggest that depressed patients may have increased sensitivity to uncontrollable stress and that there may be an important interrelationship between the cognitive deficits of
depression
and the heightened HPA axis activity observed in these patients. Lastly, we used a naturalistic strategy to examine mechanisms relating childhood parental loss and the development of adult affective illness and found that among subjects with early parental loss histories, those who developed adult psychiatric illness had increased resting plasma levels of cortisol and
beta-endorphin
(ir) as compared with subjects with early loss and no adult history of psychiatric illness. Moreover, increased HPA activity in adulthood was significantly related to poor childhood adjustment to parental loss. The implications of the results of these studies are discussed.
...
PMID:A.E. Bennett award paper. Experimental approaches to human stress research: assessment of neurobiological mechanisms of stress in volunteers and psychiatric patients. 255 97
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 GABAB agonist baclofen is reported to produce general anesthesia when administered either centrally into the lateral ventricles of rats or peripherally to mice. Previously we demonstrated that
beta-endorphin
given intracerebrally produces anesthesia in rats, a response localized to sites in or adjacent to the inferior third and fourth ventricles. In order to compare the anatomical localization of these two anesthetic responses, we administered baclofen into the inferior or superior lateral or third ventricles, the aqueduct, or fourth ventricle in rats. Although 10 micrograms baclofen infusions into several regions caused loss of the righting reflex, in no case did animals exhibit an unconscious state which satisfied strict criteria of anesthesia. Infusions of 20 micrograms into the inferior third and fourth ventricles elicited seizures followed by a postictal
depression
. Although unresponsive to some stimuli, these animals showed no impairment in the corneal reflex. Since this dose was often lethal, higher doses not tested. Baclofen, given to mice intraperitoneally at doses of 25, 50, or 75 mg/kg, failed to elicit strictly defined anesthesia, although, to varying degrees, animals exhibited analgesia, loss of the righting reflex, and loss of behavioral responses to loud sounds. Animals continued to show motor responses when handled and retained corneal reflexes. Baclofen does not evoke an unconscious anesthetic state when administered centrally or systemically, emphasizing the need for strict criteria to define general anesthesia and to categorize drugs that promote this state.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of general anesthesia: brain regional responses to baclofen. 255 52
Recent studies suggest that the hypercortisolism and dexamathasone resistance of
depression
arise, at least in part, at the level of the brain, ie, cortisol-releasing factor (CRF) and/or other
corticotropin
-secretagogues are hypersecreted. This article suggests a similar cause of the hypercortisolism of social subordinance. Two troops of wild olive baboons, living freely in the Serengeti Ecosystem of East Africa, have been under long-term study. Consistently, in stable dominance hierachies, subordinate males are hypercortisolemic relative to dominant animals. Furthermore, hypercortisolemic males are dexamethasone resistant. There are no rank-related difference in cortisol clearance or adrenal sensitivity to
corticotropin
, suggesting a pituitary and/or neural locus of the hypercortisolism. Subordinate males were shown to secrete less
corticotropin
in response to a CRF-challenge than did dominant males. Following the logic used in similar studies with depressives, if subordinate males were hypercortisolemic despite decreased pituitary sensitivity to CRF, then this implies that the hyperactivity of the adrenocortical axis is driven at the level of the brain. Furthermore, subordinate males were hyporesponsive to CRF after administration of metyrapone, which blocks cortisol secretion and disinhibits the pituitary from feedback inhibition. Thus, the pituitary appears to have lost sensitivity to CRF itself in these low-ranking males. These observations are interpreted in light of behavioral data suggesting that these subordinate males are under sustained social stress.
...
PMID:Hypercortisolism among socially subordinate wild baboons originates at the CNS level. 255 41
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
Bulimia nervosa has been recently identified. DSM III-R gives more restrictive criteria for the trouble than DSM III. One may doubt it allows to better understand the probable psychopathological heterogeneity of this eating disorder. Biological indexes up to now only led to partial results. Their interpretation is made more difficult because of the small size of the samples of patients, studied in conditions which are often ill-defined. The biological parameters which are investigated are similar to those studied in
depression
: monoamines, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, Growth Hormone, prolactin , melatonin,
beta-endorphin
, EEG mapping. Antidepressants and anticonvulsants remain the most often mentioned drugs. Tryptophane, lithium, opiate antagonists, amphetamines, serotoninergic drugs are currently being studied.
...
PMID:[Bulimic behaviors. Clinical, biochemical, pharmacologic data]. 266 2
There is evidence that excessive cortisol secretion in depressed patients might result, in part, from an enhanced adrenocortical sensitivity to
corticotropin
. This phenomenon has been examined using the cosyntropin (alpha1-24-
corticotropin
) stimulation test. Most studies have used supramaximal doses of cosyntropin administered in the morning, when adrenal sensitivity to
corticotropin
is at its maximum. This could partially obscure subtle differences in adrenocortical sensitivity in
depression
that might otherwise be evident at lower cosyntropin doses given later in the day. To test this hypothesis, we administered two consecutive cosyntropin tests on separate occasions employing a submaximal 0.05-microgram/kg dose and a maximal 0.2-microgram/kg dose. The cortisol centered cumulative response over 240 minutes was measured after each test in 12 depressed patients (7 melancholic, 5 nonmelancholic) and 6 healthy volunteers. When the difference in mean cortisol centered cumulative response values was determined, healthy controls demonstrated a significant increase in cortisol centered cumulative response, while the nonmelancholic patients had a less robust increase in cortisol centered cumulative response. In contrast, the melancholic patients demonstrated cortisol responses similar to those of the healthy subjects after each cosyntropin dose, suggesting an enhanced adrenocortical sensitivity to
corticotropin
. These data support the hypothesis that increased glucocorticoid secretion in
depression
may result from abnormalities at several sites within the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis.
...
PMID:Enhanced adrenocortical sensitivity to submaximal doses of cosyntropin (alpha1-24-corticotropin) in depressed patients. 273 Feb 79
Diazepam-binding inhibitor (DBI) is a neuromodulatory peptide for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurotransmission. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of DBI have been found to be elevated in
depression
. CSF levels of the peptide
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) have also been found to be elevated in
depression
. Therefore, we examined for a relationship between DBI and CRH in human CSF. We found significant positive correlations between CSF levels of DBI and CRH in depressed patients, pathological gamblers, and normal controls. These data, along with the elevated CSF levels of DBI in
depression
, suggest the possibility that DBI may have a role in coordinating responses to stress in humans in addition to its possible role in the pathophysiology of
depression
.
...
PMID:Diazepam-binding inhibitor and corticotropin-releasing hormone in cerebrospinal fluid. 281 71
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