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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of plasma free fatty acids (FFA) and somatostatin-14 (S-14) on concentrations of plasma GH, glucagon and insulin were investigated in juvenile ducks. Oleic acid, S-14 or both were infused into 4- to 7-week-old birds and plasma GH, glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI), immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and FFA were measured. An increase in plasma GH and a decrease in GLI but no change in IRI was observed after infusion of 9 mg oleic acid/kg per min. A decrease in plasma GH, FFA and IRI and an increase in plasma GLI was seen after infusion of 800 ng S-14/kg per min. These effects of S-14 on IRI and GLI were abolished when S-14 was infused simultaneously with oleic acid. It is concluded that FFA have a direct stimulatory effect on GH secretion and an inhibitory effect on glucagon secretion.
Somatostatin-14
directly inhibits the secretion of GH and its stimulatory effect on the secretion of glucagon is mediated by a
depression
in concentrations of plasma FFA. Finally, S-14 has no effect on plasma insulin when basal levels of plasma FFA are maintained.
...
PMID:Control of plasma levels of growth hormone, glucagon and insulin in ducklings: roles of free fatty acids and somatostatin. 286 14
Somatostatin
(SRIF) (6 nmol) given intracisternally (i.c.) into the alpha-chloralose anaesthetized rat has recently been shown to cause apnoea with a latency of 5-10 minutes (Kalia et al. 1984a). The apnoea produced by SRIF is very rapid, irreversible and leads to the death of the animal. In view of the existence of SRIF nerve cell bodies and terminals in medullary respiratory nuclei such as the ventral and ventrolateral subnuclei of the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (nTS) (Kalia et al. 1984b, Johanson et al. 1984), we have proposed the existence of somatostatinergic mechanisms in the respiratory nuclei of the medulla oblongata involved in mediating apnoeic conditions (Kalia et al. 1984a). In the present study, we have analysed whether the SRIF induced apnoea could be counteracted by a previous i.c. administration of the highly selective alpha 2-adreno-receptor blocking agent RX 781094 (2-(2-(I,4 benzodioxanyl]2-imi-dazoline HCl) (Doxey et al. 1983), or an opiate receptor blocking agent such as naloxone. Thus, both alpha 2-adrenoreceptor agonists and opiates induce respiratory
depression
, and opiates in high doses cause apnoea (Bolme et al. 1974, Hassen et al. 1982, Sitsen et al. 1982). In addition, catecholamine (CA) and enkephalin immuno-reactive nerve terminal networks exist in high densities within the nucleus tractus solitarius (nTS) of the medulla oblongata and may therefore interact with
somatostatin
nerve terminals in regulation of respiratory activity (Kalia et al. 1984b).
...
PMID:Somatostatin induced apnoea: prevention by central and peripheral administration of the opiate receptor blocking agent naloxone. 286 86
Somatostatin
is a hypothalamic tetradecapeptide with many central nervous system actions. We investigated a potential role for altered
somatostatin
activity in affective disorder by measuring
somatostatin
in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 47 patients with affective disorder and of 39 normal volunteers. Medication-free depressed patients showed significantly lower levels of CSF
somatostatin
than normal volunteers (p less than .001) or patients during the improved state (p less than .01).
Somatostatin
levels were significantly and inversely correlated with duration of sleep on the night of the lumbar puncture (p less than .05). Treatment with carbamazepine reduced CSF
somatostatin
(p less than .01) in contrast to the absence of effect of imipramine, desmethylimipramine, and lithium carbonate and the significant increase in CSF
somatostatin
seen in a small group of patients treated with zimelidine. The implications of these findings with respect to attempts to explore the neurobiology of
depression
are discussed.
...
PMID:CSF somatostatin in affective illness and normal volunteers. 286 61
Low levels of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
somatostatin
and abnormal response to dexamethasone are two neuroendocrine disturbances reported to appear in
depression
and other neuropsychiatric disorders. We measured the levels of CSF
somatostatin
in patients with schizophrenia (n = 44) and
depression
(n = 19). In view of in vitro and animal evidence of the ability of
somatostatin
to inhibit stimulated corticotropin secretion, we also administered the dexamethasone suppression test to a subgroup of the patients with schizophrenia (n = 16) and the total depressed group. Lower levels of CSF
somatostatin
were found in dexamethasone nonsuppressors regardless of diagnosis and were negatively correlated with maximum postdexamethasone cortisol level in the total and depressed patient groups. These data suggest a functional relationship between hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis hyperactivity and reduced CSF
somatostatin
level.
...
PMID:CSF somatostatin and abnormal response to dexamethasone administration in schizophrenic and depressed patients. 286 43
Somatostatin
is a tetradecapeptide that is assuming increasing importance as a regulator of central nervous system activity. Originally identified as the hypothalamic growth hormone release-inhibiting factor,
somatostatin
has subsequently been shown to be extensively and selectively distributed throughout the central nervous system, to alter neuron excitability, to regulate and be regulated by the activity of classical neurotransmitters and neuropeptides, to exert a number of direct behavioral actions, and to display neuropsychiatric disorder-related alterations. In this article, a three-part study of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF)
somatostatin
in affective illness and schizophrenia is presented. In part 1, significant reductions in CSF
somatostatin
were observed in 49 bipolar and unipolar depressed patients relative to 47 controls. Values during
depression
were also significantly lower than those observed in affective disorder during the improved state or in schizophrenia. Diurnal studies involving paired AM and PM lumbar punctures revealed that depressed patients and normal volunteers had similar
somatostatin
values in the evening, despite having significantly different values in the morning. In part 2, the effects of several psychopharmacological agents on CSF
somatostatin
were examined, particularly the tricyclic anticonvulsant carbamazepine. A significant reduction of CSF
somatostatin
during treatment with carbamazepine was observed. The effect of carbamazepine on
somatostatin
could be related to its anticonvulsant, analgesic, or psychotropic effects. Part 3 deals with
somatostatin
as a major regulator of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity.
Somatostatin
affects HPA activity by inhibiting, at a number of cellular levels, the stimulated release of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) from the pituitary. A significant negative relationship between CSF
somatostatin
and the postdexamethasone plasma cortisol level in 22 depressed and 16 schizophrenic patients was observed. This relationship between low CSF
somatostatin
and escape from dexamethasone suppression was observed irrespective of diagnosis (i.e.,
depression
or schizophrenia). Thus, there is indirect supporting evidence for a role for
somatostatin
dysregulation in the most consistently observed biological abnormality in
depression
, escape from dexamethasone suppression. Further study of
somatostatin
in neuropsychiatric disorders, and particularly depressive illness, offers great promise for better understanding their underlying affective, vegetative, cognitive, and physiological dysregulations.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid somatostatin and psychiatric illness. 286 90
Neuropeptides represent a new class of compounds with important implications for the understanding of the mechanisms and treatment of epileptic disorders. Several systems of peptide modulators--in particular the opioid-like peptides, vasopressin,
somatostatin
, thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and ACTH--have partially demonstrated endogenous roles in some forms of epilepsy. Seizures and stressful situations may release endogenous opioid peptides and mediate postictal
depression
and postictal seizure refractoriness. Vasopressin is believed to increase susceptibility to convulsions and may be involved in the pathogenesis of febrile convulsions. Derangements in TRH regulation may lower thresholds for seizure expression by regulating arousal systems; however, some TRH analogs have proven to be effective anticonvulsants. Long-term alterations in
somatostatin
regulation could be components of focal epilepsies. ACTH is particularly useful in the treatment of infantile spasms. Pharmacological effects of these and other peptides have potentials for defining new classes of anticonvulsants. Cholecystokinin (CCK) and its analogs, the opioid peptides beta-endorphin and FK33824, TRH analogs, and several dipeptides exhibit potent anticonvulsant properties in chemical, electroshock, and genetic model screens. Convulsant actions of CRF,
somatostatin
, TRH, vasopressin, and high doses of endorphin or enkephalins may provide new tools to study regulatory mechanisms of cerebral excitability. The enkephalin epileptogenic effect is being developed as a predictive tool for new anti-petit mal anticonvulsants. Advances in molecular biology have identified the genes of particular peptide families. A concept has developed that the large propeptide precursors, coded by these genes, whose processing leads to functional peptide formation and release, regulate peptidergic humoral responses to external stimuli. This idea may have particular application in the understanding of the genetic basis of some seizure states. Techniques for amplification of mRNA expression have identified specific neuronal proteins and peptides. Knowledge of protein and propeptide structural cleavage sites has suggested previously unknown candidates for modular systems in epileptic states. Technological advances in automated peptide sequencing and synthesis have allowed the development of metabolically resistant analogs and antagonist peptides. The anticonvulsant potencies of CCK, TRH, and opioid peptides have been defined more clearly with these methods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neuropeptides: anticonvulsant and convulsant mechanisms in epileptic model systems and in humans. 287 23
In vivo studies were carried out in adult chickens in an attempt to evaluate the effectiveness of
somatostatin
(SRIF) in regulating hormone secretion from the splenic pancreatic lobe after 99% of the pancreatic mass was surgically ablated. Sixteen days after either sham operation or 99% pancreatectomy, birds were infused iv with SRIF (420 ng/min) alone and then glucose (59 mg/Kg/min) was superimposed on the infusate, or birds were infused iv with glucose alone and then SRIF was superimposed on the infusate. Serial blood samples were taken during the 16-day postoperative period and also at regular intervals during the 75-min observation period. Plasma was analyzed for glucose, insulin (IRI), glucagon (IRG), pancreatic polypeptide (IRAPP), and
somatostatin
(IRSRIF). Careful standardization of the SRIF radioimmunoassay, as well as analysis of the molecular form of circulating SRIF, indicated that "true" SRIF levels were being estimated in plasma of both groups of chickens. Normal-fed chickens have plasma SRIF levels of 1.12 +/- 0.07 ng/ml which increases 16 days after 99% pancreatectomy to 2.39 +/- 0.15 ng/ml plasma. The latter decreases by 55% with an overnight fast. Glucose infusion, superimposed upon a preexisting SRIF infusion in adult chickens, did not evoke an IRI response in the 99% depancreatized birds equal to that observed in sham-op controls. Although a full SRIF dose-response curve was not generated, the glucose data strongly suggest a reduced sensitivity of insulin-secreting cells to SRIF in pancreoprivic birds. Both bird groups were equally--and markedly--sensitive to the IRG-depressant effects of SRIF; in contrast, the depancreatized chickens were significantly more resistant to the APP-inhibitory effects of SRIF when compared to the sham-op control birds. Thus, 16 days after partial pancreatectomy, the hormone-release mechanisms appeared altered for IRI and IRAPP in response to SRIF. Data obtained when glucose infusions preceded SRIF infusions indicated that A-cell release of glucagon was much more sensitive to glucose (as a
depression
) in the partially depancreatized birds than in control birds. These same birds were significantly less responsive to the glucose-depressant effect on plasma APP levels. Thus, it appears that 99% pancreatectomy increases the sensitivity of the SRIF, IRI, and IRG release mechanisms in response to glucose 16 days after surgery. The insulin-to-glucagon (I/G) molar ratios indicative of metabolic anabolism can still be achieved by nutrients 16 days after partial pancreatectomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effectiveness of somatostatin in regulating pancreatic splenic lobe hormone secretion following 99% pancreatectomy in adult chickens. 287 20
Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch)
somatostatin
(sSS; 4 or 8 ng/g body wt) or synthetic Gillichthys urotensin II (UII; 2 or 4 ng/g body wt) were injected intraperitoneally into juvenile freshwater coho salmon. Both sSS and UII caused a dose-dependent increase in plasma free fatty acids (FFA) which diminished with time. sSS induced an initial (1 hr) transient hyperglycemia. By contrast, UII tended to induce hypoglycemia, this effect being significant 5 hr after injection of the higher dose. Both sSS and UII depressed plasma insulin titers 1 hr after injection. By 3 hr, the sSS-associated insulin
depression
was no longer observed. UII treatment induced a hyperinsulinemia which was present 3 and 5 hr after peptide administration. Although no decreases in liver total lipid concentration or in mesenteric fat total tissue mass were observed, lipolytic enzyme activity within each depot was significantly enhanced by both peptides. Neither sSS nor UII altered 3H2O incorporation into fatty acids or neutral lipids. However, enhanced lipogenesis, particularly by UII, was indicated by increased NADPH production resulting from glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity. Both sSS and UII enhanced glucose mobilization, as indicated by decreased liver glycogen content and increased liver glucose-6-phosphatase activity. UII, but not sSS, stimulated glycogen synthetase activity. These results suggest that both sSS and UII stimulate hyperlipidemia by enhancing depot lipase activity and that although both factors are potentially gluconeogenetic, sSS seems to be glycogenolytic and hyperglycemic, whereas UII may channel glucose to FFA synthesis.
...
PMID:Effects of somatostatin-25 and urotensin II on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism of coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch. 288 97
Several neuropsychiatric illnesses, including
depression
and Alzheimer's disease, are reported to be characterized by hypercortisolemia and by reduced levels of cerebrospinal fluid
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity (CSF-SLI). To investigate a possible causal linkage between these abnormalities we administered prednisone, 80 mg orally per day for 5 days, to 9 healthy volunteers. We observed significant prednisone-induced reductions in CSF-SLI. Moreover, the magnitude of these reductions was inversely related to the magnitude of prednisone-induced reductions in plasma ACTH levels, suggesting a functional interaction between circulating corticosteroids, central
somatostatin
and pituitary ACTH release.
...
PMID:Prednisone decreases CSF somatostatin in healthy humans: implications for neuropsychiatric illness. 288 25
Somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity was measured in the CSF of 12 patients with Alzheimer's disease, 15 age-matched control subjects, and 20 older depressed subjects. Patients with dementia or
depression
were found to have lower CSF
somatostatin
concentrations than control subjects despite markedly different clinical presentations. Severity of
depression
was clearly different in all three groups but showed no significant correlation with CSF concentration of
somatostatin
. There was a significant positive correlation between CSF
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity and cognitive functioning in all 47 subjects, but this association was not statistically significant within individual diagnostic groups. These data raise interesting questions about possible biological links between Alzheimer's disease and
depression
in older patients.
...
PMID:CSF somatostatin in patients with Alzheimer's disease, older depressed patients, and age-matched control subjects. 288 77
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