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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prolactin
and cortisol responses to dl-fenfluramine challenge were examined in 11 patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
and in 11 healthy controls who were age and gender matched. After obtaining two baseline samples, each subject was given 60 mg of dl-fenfluramine orally and further blood samples were drawn hourly during the following five hours in order to measure prolactin and cortisol levels. There was no difference in either baseline or fenfluramine-induced hormonal responses between patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
and controls. There was also no correlation between depression scores on HAM-D and hormonal responses in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
. The findings of this study do not support a role for 5-HT in
chronic fatigue syndrome
.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine assessment of serotonin (5-HT) function in chronic fatigue syndrome. 870 60
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and central 5-HT function were compared in
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
), depression and healthy states. 10 patients with
CFS
and 15 patients with major depression were matched for age, weight, sex and menstrual cycle with 25 healthy controls. Baseline-circulating cortisol levels were highest in the depressed, lowest in the
CFS
and intermediate between the two in the control group (P = 0.01).
Prolactin
responses to the selective 5-HT-releasing agent d-fenfluramine were lowest in the depressed, highest in the
CFS
and intermediate between both in the healthy group (P = 0.01). Matched pair analysis confirmed higher prolactin responses in
CFS
patients than controls (P = 0.05) and lower responses in depressed patients than controls (P = 0.003). There were strong inverse correlations between prolactin and cortisol responses and baseline cortisol values. These data confirm that depression is associated with hypercotisolaemia and reduced central 5-HT neurotransmission and suggest that
CFS
may be associated with hypocortisolaemia and increased 5-HT function. The opposing responses in
CFS
and depression may be related to reversed patterns of behavioural dysfunction seen in these conditions. These findings attest to biological distinctions between these disorders.
...
PMID:Contrasting neuroendocrine responses in depression and chronic fatigue syndrome. 855 Sep 54
In the second part of their article on the emerging field of neuroimmunology, the authors present an overview of the role of neuroimmune mechanisms in defence against infectious diseases and in immune disorders. During acute febrile illness, immune-derived cytokines initiate an acute phase response, which is characterized by fever, inactivity, fatigue, anorexia and catabolism. Profound neuroendocrine and metabolic changes take place: acute phase proteins are produced in the liver, bone marrow function and the metabolic activity of leukocytes are greatly increased, and specific immune reactivity is suppressed. Defects in regulatory processes, which are fundamental to immune disorders and inflammatory diseases, may lie in the immune system, the neuro endocrine system or both. Defects in the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis have been observed in autoimmune and rheumatic diseases, chronic inflammatory disease,
chronic fatigue syndrome
and fibromyalgia.
Prolactin
levels are often elevated in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and other autoimmune diseases, whereas the bioactivity of prolactin is decreased in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Levels of sex hormones and thyroid hormone are decreased during severe inflammatory disease. Defective neural regulation of inflammation likely plays a pathogenic role in allergy and asthma, in the symmetrical form of rheumatoid arthritis and in gastrointestinal inflammatory disease. A better understanding of neuroimmunoregulation holds the promise of new approaches to the treatment of immune and inflammatory diseases with the use of hormones, neurotransmitters, neuropeptides and drugs that modulate these newly recognized immune regulators.
...
PMID:Neuroimmune mechanisms in health and disease: 2. Disease. 887 36
Plasma prolactin levels following oral administration of the serotonin (5-HT) releasing agent, fenfluramine hydrochloride, have been extensively used to evaluate central serotonergic function in affective and related disorders. Cortisol responses to fenfluramine have generally been a less informative measure. In healthy subjects, prolactin release by fenfluramine is dose-dependent, blocked by antagonists of serotonin receptors of the 5-HT-2a/2c type, negatively correlated with age and increased in young females. In major depression, a preponderance of studies have found blunted prolactin responses compared to matched normal controls. Although a significant minority of studies have not found blunting, increased prolactin release has not been observed. The blunted prolactin release is not due to a deficient secretory capacity of pituitary lactotrophs and is congruent with other evidence for reduced central serotonergic function in major depression. Blunting of the prolactin response may be associated with severity of depression and with elevated baseline cortisol levels. Treatment with antidepressant drugs and electroconvulsive therapy has been reported to increase the prolactin response but this has not been replicated in all studies. Blunted prolactin responses to fenfluramine have been fairly consistently associated with impulsive aggression in different personality disorders and with severity of suicide attempts in depressed patients. A number of studies employing the fenfluramine challenge test (FCT) have been conducted in obsessive compulsive disorder but their results have been variable.
Prolactin
responses to fenfluramine may be enhanced in panic disorder and
chronic fatigue syndrome
but the number of studies in these conditions is small as is the case for seasonal affective disorder. Since the therapeutic administration of fenfluramine as an appetite suppressant has been suspended because of reports of cardiac complications, further use of this compound as a challenge agent is not anticipated. Future studies are likely to employ agents acting on specific serotonin receptors and should apply methodological insights from the use of the FCT, which are considered in this review. Use of concomitant brain imaging to evaluate the central effects of challenge agents directly is likely to become more prevalent and may supplant neuroendocrine challenge paradigms such as the FCT which have been remarkably heuristic but are limited in scope and methodologically complex.
...
PMID:Evaluation of central serotonergic function in affective and related disorders by the fenfluramine challenge test: a critical review. 1128 46