Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The gonadal steroids--estrogens and androgens--appear to have a mood-elevating, psychotonic effect. The improved sense of well-being and increased vigor probably is engendered by restoration of somatic efficiency and psychic equilibrium. 1. The male climacteric, as observed in a limited number of men, is associated with a low level of serum testosterone. The levels of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone are not elevated because estrogen concentration continues unaltered well into old age. Androgen replacement therapy often lessens fatigue, depression and headaches, and headaches, and improves libidinous drives. 2. In the aging female, many climatric symptoms other than those due to vasomotor instability were heretofore considered merely coincidental. Recent studies suggest that the metabolism of cerebral hormones is markedly influenced by endogenous and exogenous gonadal steroids. Thus, postmenopausal depression, headaches, and nervousness may be hormone-dependent symptoms. 3. The incidence of endometrial cancer is no greater and is probably less in estrogen-treated women than in women not treated with estrogen, if regular cyclic courses of an oral progestogen are added to the regimen.
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PMID:Update on the male and female climateric. 48 57

The serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), estradiol, progesterone, androstenedione, testosterone (total and free) and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEAS) were investigated prior to surgery in 24 postmenopausal women with benign and 28 postmenopausal women with malignant epithelial ovarian tumors. The serum concentrations of hormones were compared with those of 28 healthy, postmenopausal, age-matched controls. Significantly lower serum FSH levels were demonstrated in women with malignant tumors. No significant differences were found between the groups regarding the serum LH levels. The hCG levels were low in all groups. Regarding progesterone and estradiol levels, low postmenopausal steroid levels were found in all groups examined and no significant differences were demonstrated within the groups. No significant correlations between the levels of estradiol and FSH or progesterone and LH were demonstrated. To exclude a central depression of gonadotropin release mediated by the dopaminergic system we examined the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and prolactin. No differences were found between the groups regarding TSH and prolactin levels. A possible relationship between other hormones/factors produced by the tumor and exerting a negative feedback, either centrally or directly, on the gonadotropin release remains to be investigated. A change in biological activity in the gonadotropins might explain the present findings.
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PMID:The pituitary-gonadal axis in women with benign or malignant ovarian tumors. 138 13

This study describes sexual activity, nocturnal penile erections, and mood states as a function of serum levels of androgens in previously untreated hypogonadal men before and during hormone replacement, selected infertile men (elevated serum follicle-stimulating hormone levels), and normal men. Nocturnal penile tumescence and rigidity were measured with a portable monitor, and sexual activity and mood were assessed by prospective, self-reported written forms. Nocturnal erections were absent or of very low amplitude and duration in the untreated hypogonadal men compared to the infertile and normal men. Nocturnal erections increased steadily during hormone replacement and were in the normal range within 6 to 12 months of treatment. In contrast, serum testosterone concentration rapidly reached the upper range of normal. During treatment, the hypogonadal men reported increases in several aspects of sexual activity, including sexual interest and the number of spontaneous erections. On mood inventories, the untreated hypogonadal men scored significantly higher in ratings of depression, anger, fatigue, and confusion than did infertile and normal men. During hormonal replacement therapy these scores decreased, although the hypogonadal men continued to score higher in "depression" than did infertile and normal men. In most instances, the men with infertility and the normal men were statistically indistinguishable in nocturnal penile tumescence and rigidity parameters, self-reported sexual activity, and mood state. These data support the hypothesis that androgen treatment increases nocturnal and spontaneous erections, and sexual interest, and has some capacity to improve mood.
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PMID:A long-term, prospective study of the physiologic and behavioral effects of hormone replacement in untreated hypogonadal men. 139 30

During the past decade, the development of various gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) agonists, which induce reversible hypo-oestrogenism has opened a new area in the medical management of endometriosis. In an open, multicentre phase III study, the efficacy, tolerance and safety of the Gn-RH agonist leuprorelin acetate were tested. The preliminary results of 104 women treated in seven German centres are presented. Pelvic endometriosis was diagnosed by laparoscopy and classified according to the American Fertility Society scoring system: 33% of patients had minimal, 22% mild, 28% moderate and 8% severe endometriosis and in 9% no pathological results were obtained. The patients' mean age was 30 +/- 6 years and 66 had infertility problems. Treatment was started within the first 3 days of the menstrual cycle and consisted of a subcutaneous injection of leuprorelin acetate 3.75 mg, repeated once monthly over 24 weeks. A follow-up period of 12 months after the last injection has been completed in 70 patients, including a second laparoscopy. At all visits, symptoms were evaluated, physical examinations performed, and blood samples collected for haematological screening, serum chemistry determinations and measurement of the gonadotrophins oestradiol and progesterone and leuprorelin acetate. The median score at laparoscopy fell from 12 before operation to 8 after operation and 2 after treatment with leuprorelin acetate. Of the total number of patients, 89% had improvements in their endometriosis, 8% a deterioration and 3% no change. Patients reported improvement in the following: dysmenorrhoea 93%, dyspareunia 62% and pelvic pain 70%. However, all women complained of at least one of the following symptoms: hot flushes 86%, sleep disturbance 62%, sweating 61%, headache 41%, nausea 32% and depression 20%. Fifty-five percent of patients reported additional side effects such as vaginal dryness, fatigue and lower abdominal pain. After the third injection, amenorrhoea persisted in 94% of the women. Four weeks after the first leuprorelin acetate injection median concentrations of oestradiol fell from 45 pg/ml to 11 pg/ml, follicle-stimulating hormone from 7 U/L to 3 U/L and luteinising hormone from 5 U/L to 1 U/L and remained almost unchanged over the observation period. During the 6 months' treatment, laboratory parameters showed no significant deviations from normal; only total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and alkaline phosphatase increased. Treatment results were judged as good and satisfactory in 82% and 11% of cases, respectively. On the basis of this study, it can be concluded that leuprorelin acetate treatment is safe, well tolerated and effective in the medical management of endometriosis and endometriosis-related complaints.
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PMID:Treatment of endometriosis with leuprorelin acetate depot: a German multicentre study. 153 21

During the breeding season, five groups of three ewes were implanted at ovariectomy with 0.36, 0.5, 1.0 and 6.0 cm oestradiol implants or implants containing no steroid. Eleven days after receiving implants, blood samples were taken every 10 min for 6 h; implants were then removed. Treatments were repeated three times during each of two consecutive breeding seasons and four times during the intervening anoestrus. In ovariectomized ewes without steroid treatment, luteinizing hormone (LH) pulse frequency increased from early to mid-breeding season, decreased to a minimum at mid-anoestrus and increased to reach a maximum at the mid-point of the second breeding season, subsequently declining. LH pulse amplitude was inversely related to frequency. Basal serum LH concentrations decreased gradually from the first breeding season to reach a minimum at mid-anoestrus and gradually increased to reach a maximum at the end of the second breeding season. Mean serum LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations were higher at the end of the second breeding season compared with the beginning of the first breeding season. All parameters of gonadotrophin secretion were decreased much more by oestradiol during the anoestrus than during the breeding season. LH pulse frequency was decreased during anoestrus and at high oestradiol concentrations during the first breeding season. Apart from LH pulse amplitude, the decreases in all parameters of gonadotrophin secretion were less during the second compared with the first breeding season. The minimum effective dose of oestradiol required to decrease mean and basal serum concentrations of LH during anoestrus was lower than in the breeding season. The minimum effective dose of oestradiol required to decrease mean serum concentrations of FSH was lower in the first compared with the second breeding season. Oestradiol depression of LH pulse amplitude and mean serum concentrations of LH and FSH showed a dose dependency during the breeding season. During anoestrus dose dependency was seen for basal concentrations of LH and mean serum concentrations of LH and FSH. We conclude that significant chronic changes in gonadotrophin secretion occur in the ewe with time after ovariectomy. Sensitivity to oestradiol also changes, and the effects of oestradiol are not always dose dependent. We suggest that the circannual pattern of LH pulse frequency and basal LH secretion are directly linked to the circannual cycle of photoperiod.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of time after ovariectomy, season and oestradiol on luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone secretion in ovariectomized ewes. 159 48

The changes in the activity of the pituitary-gonadal axis during sympathetic nerve degeneration after superior cervical ganglionectomy (SCGx) were examined in female rats. In a first experiment SCGx performed at 24.00 h of diestrus II, 17 h in advance to the critical period for gonadotropin and prolactin (PRL) release, caused a delay of 1 day or more in estrous cyclicity, while SCGx at 24.00 h on estrus did not modify the estrous cycle. In a second experiment ovariectomized rats injected subcutaneously with estradiol-progesterone or vehicle were subjected to SCGx 17 h before the expected maxima in luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and PRL serum levels. A significant decrease of serum gonadotropin and PRL concentration was found in SCGx, steroid-treated rats. In a third experiment groups of rats injected with estradiol-progesterone and killed at 15.00, 16.00, 17.00, or 18.00 h at or around the time of maximal FSH, LH, and PRL release were used. SCGx performed 17 h before killing caused a generally depressive effect of LH, FSH, and PRL release. In a fourth experiment ovariectomized rats were subjected to pinealectomy and, 1 week later, to estradiol-progesterone treatment and SCGx as in experiment 2. Pinealectomy did not modify the depression of steroid-induced LH, FSH, and PRL release found during wallerian degeneration of sympathetic nerves after SCGx. In a fifth experiment the effect of alpha 1- and/or beta-adrenoceptor blockade on SCGx-induced inhibition of hormone release was assessed in estradiol-progesterone treated, spayed rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Estrous cycle delay and inhibition of gonadotropin and prolactin release during sympathetic nerve degeneration after superior cervical ganglionectomy of rats. 250 28

To more completely assess the means by which alcohol impairs the female reproductive cycle in rats, we have measured hypothalamic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), pituitary LHRH receptor content, and the serum levels of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), prolactin (Prl), and progesterone (P). After two successive cycles, the animals began receiving either an alcohol or a isocaloric control liquid diet regimen beginning on the first day of diestrus, with continued monitoring of the estrous cycle throughout the experiment. An additional set of controls consisted of animals maintained on lab chow and water provided ad libitum. Our results indicate that those animals receiving the control diets showed uninterrupted estrous patterns, whereas those animals receiving the alcohol diet remained in diestrus. Additionally, the alcohol-treated animals showed an increase (p less than 0.05) in LHRH content, with a concomitant decrease (p less than 0.01) in serum LH, and an increase (p less than 0.01) in serum Prl. No significant differences were detected in serum FSH levels or pituitary LHRH receptor content. No differences were detected in serum P levels. These results indicate that short-term alcohol administration disrupts the female reproductive cycle, causing persistent diestrus, and support our hypothesis that the alcohol-induced depression in serum LH levels is due to a diminished release rate of hypothalamic LHRH.
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PMID:Detrimental effects of short-term ethanol exposure on reproductive function in the female rat. 283 6

Possible protective effects of the agonist [D-Trp6]LH-RH (analog of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone in which Gly-6 is replaced by D-tryptophan) and antagonist N-Ac-[D-Phe(pCI)1,2,D-Trp3,D-Arg6,D-Ala10]LH-RH against testicular damage caused by x-radiation were investigated in rats. Three months after being subjected to x-irradiation of the testes with 415 or 622 rads, control rats showed marked reduction in the weights of the testes and elevated levels of LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), indicating tubular damage. Histological studies demonstrated that, in testes of rats given 415 rads, most seminiferous tubules had only Sertoli cells and no germinal cells, and, in the group given 622 rads, the depression of spermatogenesis was even more marked. Rats pretreated for 50 days with LH-RH antagonist (1000 micrograms/kg of body weight per day) showed a complete recovery of testicular weights and spermatogenesis 3 months after 415 rads and showed partial recovery after 622 rads, and LH and FSH levels returned to normal in both of these groups. Thus, pretreatment of rats with LH-RH antagonist, by reversibly inhibiting gonadal function, protected the germinal cells of the testes against damaging effects of x-rays. Three experiments were also carried out in which the rats were pretreated for 1-2 months with long-acting microcapsules of the agonist [D-Trp6]LH-RH, liberating 25 micrograms of the agonist per day. Some rats were then subjected to gonadal irradiation with 415 or 622 rads and allowed a recovery period of 2-4 months. In spite of pretreatment with [D-Trp6]LH-RH, testicular weights were significantly lower and LH or FSH levels were elevated in the irradiated groups as compared with nonirradiated controls. The recovery of spermatogenesis was incomplete, and there was a decrease in the number of germinal cells after 415 rads and especially after 622 rads. On the basis of testicular weights, histology, and gonadotropin levels, it could be concluded that the agonist [D-Trp6]LH-RH did not protect the rat testes exposed to 622 rads and, at most, only partially protected against 415 rads. These results suggest that pretreatment with LH-RH antagonists and possibly agonists, might decrease the testicular damage caused by radiation and accelerate the recovery of reproductive functions.
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PMID:Protective effects of analogs of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone against x-radiation-induced testicular damage in rats. 294 28

We have shown previously that estradiol-17 beta (E2) reduces number of ovulations in cyclic rats, induces atresia of the dominant preovulatory follicle in monkeys, and that the initial effects of this treatment include reduced viability and estrogen accumulation in vitro by aspirated granulosa cells (GC) from monkeys and hamsters. The present experiment was designed to determine whether the reduction in estrogen accumulation can be ascribed to a direct action of E2 on the aromatization of androgen to estrogen in vitro. Female hamsters were injected with 30 I.U. pregnant-mare serum gonadotropin i.p. and sacrificed 3 days later. GC were aspirated from the largest follicles and incubated for 48 h ("initial incubation" period) in the presence of human pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone (hFSH, 100 ng/ml). Following initial incubation, GC were further incubated for up to 24 h ("secondary incubation" period). During this subsequent incubation, medium was supplemented with 100 nM 3H-1 beta-androstenedione (3H-A4). Initial incubation with E2 at doses of 10 ng/ml, 100 ng/ml and 1 microgram E2/ml induced variability in GC response, and a maximal depression of approximately 70%. The inhibition by E2 of hamster GC function in vitro parallels that shown in vivo for both hamsters and monkeys, but contrasts with that shown for rats. Thus, hamsters may represent an appropriate model in which to study the atretogenic effects of E2 directly on antral follicle development.
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PMID:FSH-induced aromatase activity in hamster granulosa cells: effect of estradiol-17 beta in vitro. 311 87

Ten years of data were analyzed for an effect of season on basal and stimulated progesterone secretion by porcine granulosa cells in vitro. Basal progesterone secretion by granulosa cells from large preovulatory follicles exhibited a marked depression during the summer months, as compared to the rest of the year. The ability of granulosa cells from small (1-2 mm) or medium (3-5 mm) follicles to respond to stimulation of progesterone secretion by either follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) or follicular fluid was also markedly depressed during the summer months. These observations on decreased steroidogenic capacity of porcine granulosa cells in vitro during the summer parallel observations of decreased reproductive function of pigs in vivo. They suggest that the decreased reproductive capacity of pigs in summer may be due, in part, to a decreased capacity for follicular development within the ovary as a result of an altered neuroendocrine signal rather than due only to an altered neuroendocrine signal.
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PMID:Seasonal variation in porcine granulosa cell responsiveness to stimulation of progesterone secretion in vitro. 312 Aug 14


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