Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Normally weaned females (at 30 days) displayed seasonal cyclic changes in natality and the characteristics of the young. Natality in the spring and summer was high, the litters were large, the proportion of females and males in the litter was equal and deaths among the unweaned young were very few. Natality in the autumn and winter was low and the litters were small and consisted mainly of males. The death rate among the young was higher than in the spring and summer. Prematurely weaned females (at 15 days) displayed no seasonal cycle either in natality or in the characteristics of the young. The studied parameters corresponded to the values found in the spring and summer in normally weaned females. No differences were found in maternal retrieving, but there was a marked difference in nest-building. The normally weaned female tore up paper (building material) into small fragments 24 hours before giving birth and dropped the young into a soft nest of finely shredded paper. On leaving the nest it covered the young up. The prematurely weaned female scattered the paper about the
cage
24 hours before giving birth and dropped the young into a
depression
stamped out among whole pieces of paper. It did not cover the young up on leaving the nest. The cause of the difference in building behaviour is evidently that prematurely weaned females failed to acquire early experience of this behaviour between the 15th and 30th day of life.
...
PMID:Significance of the weaning period for natality and maternal behaviour of laboratory rats. 14 79
Male rats (N = 27) were given initial experience with escapable shock, equivalent amounts of inescapable shock, or no shock. Measures were then obtained in the ensuing 15 hours on food intake, water intake, number of
cage
crossings, and weight change for all groups. Following this, animals were tested on an escape task. Inescapably shocked animals showed significant decreases in food and water consumption in comparison to both nonshocked and escapably shocked control rats. Weight gains were significantly decreased by exposure to shock irrespective of the availability of a coping response. Consistency of these findings with proposals suggesting that exposure to inescapable shock leads to a state of animal
depression
(learned helplessness) is discussed and compared to alternative stress explanations.
...
PMID:The applicability of inescapable shock as a source of animal depression. 55 62
Vibration-induced effects on respiration in man were studied by recording the electrical activity (EMG) from the intercostal muscles and the diaphragm. The vibration was applied in an upper thoracic region where inspiratory muscle activity prevailed or in a lower thoracic region where expiratory muscle activity prevailed. The effects were also studied by recording the movements of the thorax and the respiratory air flow. Sustained vibration in the upper region enhanced the activity of the underlying inspiratory muscles and caused an expansion of the rib
cage
whereas it had little or weak effects on diaphragm-activity or on expiratory intercostal muscles. Sustained vibration in the lower region enhanced the activity of the underlying expiratory muscles, often inhibited the inspiratory activity and caused a
depression
of the rib
cage
. It also tended to inhibit the diaphragm activity. It was also found that bilateral vibration, timed by the respiratory movements and alternating between upper and lower regions could aid or counteract the ventilation if it was applied respectively 'in phase' or 'out of phase' with the rhythmical contractions in the underlying muscles. The motor responses described are largely explicable in terms of tonic vibration reflexes (TVR) arising in the inspiratory and expiratory intercostal muscles underlying the vibrators.
...
PMID:Respiration in man affected by TVR contractions elicited in inspiratory and expiratory intercostal muslces. 74 Nov 10
The ventilatory response to CO2 was subdivided into that portion due to increasing rib
cage
expansion, and that due to increased diaphragmatic descent. Five children were studied, awake, and anesthetized with halothane, 0.8-0.9%. During anesthesia there was a 67+/-8% reduction (mean+/-SE) in the slope of the response of overall ventilation to an increase in CO2. This was primarily due to an 89+/-8% reduction in the recruitment of rib
cage
ventilation (P less than .001). There was no significant change in the slope of the diaphragmatic response (anesthetized value 19+/-21% less than control), although the response curve was shifted to the right so that a higher CO2 concentration was needed to stimulate a given level of diaphragmatic excursion. Additional measurements of the inspiratory intercostal electromyogram in three adult subjects documented a rapid, profound
depression
of intercostal activity with halothane anesthesia that was associated with a marked decrease in rib
cage
ventilation. The authors conclude that a major component of the ventilatory
depression
associated with halothane anesthesia results from the preferential suppression of intercostal muscle function with relative sparing of diaphragmatic activity.
...
PMID:Contributions of changing rib cage--diaphragm interactions to the ventilatory depression of halothane anesthesia. 90 May 41
Rats reared from weaning in social isolation made more lever presses than controls on an alternating two-lever DRL schedule of reinforcement, and obtained fewer rewards. Isolates showed an increased tendency both to anticipate reward on the correct lever, and to perseverate on the lever which last gave reward, but their anticipatory deficit was relatively more marked. It is suggested that isolates act as if under an effectively higher level of food motivation. Measurement of home-
cage
food intake showed that the normal day-time
depression
of food intake was less marked in isolates than in socially-grouped animals.
...
PMID:Incentive motivation and behavioral inhibition in socially-isolated rats. 124 Nov 38
The domesticated European carp was subjected to a two-way selection for growth rate. Five generations of mall selection for faster growth rate did not yield any response, but subsequent selection between groups (families) resulted in considerable progress while maintaining a large genetic variance. Selection for slow growth rate yielded relatively strong response for the first three generations. Random-bred control lines suffered from strong inbreeding
depression
and when two lines were crossed, the F1 showed a high degree of heterosis. Selection was performed on pond-raised fish, but growth rate was also tested in cages. A strong pond-
cage
genetic interaction was found. A theoretical explanation was suggested involving overdominance for fast growth rate and amplification through competition of intra-group but not inter-group variation.
...
PMID:Two-way selection for growth rate in the common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) 124 37
Parathyroid hormone and calcitonin, two major calcium-regulating hormones, were measured in the plasma of five experimental groups of rats to evaluate postflight calcium homeostasis after the 14-day COSMOS 2044 flight. Parathyroid hormone values were slightly higher in the flight animals (F) than in the appropriate
cage
and diet controls (S) (44 +/- 21 vs. 21 +/- 4 pg/ml, P less than 0.05), but they were the same as in the vivarium controls (V), which had different housing and feeding schedules. Neither V nor S showed the increase in plasma creatinine phosphorus and magnesium found in F, features of early renal insufficiency. F showed the lowest mean plasma calcitonin that was statistically different from V only. This difference in F and V (22 +/- 11 vs. 49 +/- 16 pg/ml, P less than 0.05) was most likely due to failure of circulating calcitonin in F to show the normal age-dependent increase we demonstrated in age-matched controls in a separate experiment. Basal values for parathyroid hormone and calcitonin were unchanged after 2 wk of hindlimb suspension, a flight simulation model, in age-matched and younger rats. From a time course experiment serum calcium was higher and parathyroid hormone lower after 4 wk than in ambulatory controls. Postflight circulating levels of parathyroid hormone appear to reflect disturbances in calcium homeostasis from impaired renal function of undetermined cause, whereas levels of calcitonin reflect
depression
of a normal growth process.
...
PMID:Circulating parathyroid hormone and calcitonin in rats after spaceflight. 152 47
The application of 1.2 and 12.0 micrograms/side of the GABAA receptor agonist 3-aminopropane sulphonic acid bilaterally into the nucleus accumbens (Acb) of rats nonsignificantly depressed locomotor activity as assessed in automated Animex activity cages, while the highest dose (60 micrograms/side) significantly stimulated activity. The GABAA receptor antagonists picrotoxinin (0.0625 and 0.125 micrograms/saide) and bicuculline (0.895 micrograms/side) produced forward locomotion around the
cage
accompanied by a number of other behaviours. The GABAB agonist baclofen (0.023 and 0.092 micrograms/side) induced a short-lasting (18 min) locomotor
depression
. None of the GABAB antagonists tested (2-hydroxysaclofen 2.6 micrograms/side, two novel beta-(benzo[b]furan) analogues of baclofen 9G or 9H each 6.8 micrograms/side, 4-aminobutylphosphonic acid 1.32 micrograms/side and phaclofen 0.535 and 2 micrograms/side) significantly affected locomotor activity. In rats pretreated with reserpine and alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine, picrotoxinin (0.0625 and 0.125 micrograms/side) did not significantly alter locomotor activity. Furthermore, when picrotoxinin (0.0625 micrograms/side) was combined with either the selective dopamine (DA) D1 agonist SKF38393 or the selective D2 agonist quinpirole, no significant alteration in locomotor function occurred. When SKF38393 and quinpirole were coadministered, significant stimulation occurred which was further enhanced by the addition of picrotoxinin. It is concluded that GABAA receptors, together with D1 and D2 receptors, play a major role in modulating the control of motor function by the Acb of rats.
...
PMID:Role of dopamine and GABA in the control of motor activity elicited from the rat nucleus accumbens. 165 18
Using respiratory inductive plethysmography, we have measured rib
cage
and abdominal motion during isoflurane anaesthesia in 16 healthy day-surgery patients. Anaesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with 1 MAC isoflurane in air-oxygen via a laryngeal mask. Measurements were taken during both resting ventilation and hyperpnoea induced by rebreathing carbon dioxide. For resting ventilation, the rib
cage
contributed a mean (SD) of 33 (15)% of the total ventilation whilst awake, and 39 (12)% during anaesthesia (ns). With increasing end-tidal carbon dioxide whilst awake, the subjects showed a mean increase in the percentage rib
cage
contribution of 7.1 (12.5)%/kPa of carbon dioxide. With isoflurane anaesthesia, there was significant
depression
of this rib
cage
recruitment with the mean contribution decreasing by 3.6 (7.4)% kPa-1 (P less than 0.05). These results indicate that 1 MAC of isoflurane does not selectively depress rib
cage
motion, except during carbon dioxide stimulated hyperpnoea.
...
PMID:Rib cage contribution to resting and carbon dioxide stimulated ventilation during 1 MAC isoflurane anaesthesia. 183 70
Drug and toxicant effects on locomotor/exploratory activity can be quite variable depending on the test and the schedule of exposure. In neurobehavioral toxicology and teratology, these interactions can affect the inferences based on the use of selected drugs as probes to assess which regulatory mechanisms are affected by one or the other treatment. The present experiments were aimed at comparing morphine effects in CD-1 mice under three conditions, namely, Varimex apparatus (VAR), toggle floor box (TOGGLE), videotape recording (VIDEO) in a home
cage
environment. Morphine HCI (0, 10, 33, or 100 mg/kg) was given IP 20 min before the start of a 30-min test session. The same procedure was repeated 24 h later. Results of VAR and TOGGLE tests were: dose 10 was largely ineffective; dose 33 induced
depression
in VAR and hyperactivity in TOGGLE; dose 100 enhanced activity in TOGGLE. There were no differences between session 1 and 2. VIDEO: Univariate analysis results showed that morphine produced a dose-dependent
depression
of Rearing and Grooming, and an enhancement of Crossing, again without changes due to repeated exposure. Results of Principal Component Analysis supported a response competition model of the changes observed in the mouse behavioral profile. The videorecording (VIDEO) procedure is the one providing the most accurate picture of changes in locomotor/exploratory activity and drug effects thereon, also allowing a more comprehensive statistical analysis of the relationships between various types of response changes.
...
PMID:Morphine effects on mouse locomotor/exploratory activity: test dependency, test reliability, uni- and multi-variate analyses. 187 Nov 96
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>