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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Systemic administration of ovine prolactin (PRL) has been previously reported to stimulate parental feeding behavior toward 7-day-old foster squabs by nonbreeding ring doves with previous breeding experience. The first of the present experiments reexamined this claim in experienced, nonbreeding birds given test squabs of different ages. Each visually isolated male and female dove was given twice-daily subcutaneous injections of ovine PRL or vehicle for 7 days and then tested for parental responses toward a single 1-3, 6-8, or 11- to 13-day-old foster squab. Prolactin significantly increased the incidence or frequency of parental
regurgitation
-feeding episodes in tests with all three squab age groups and, in addition, increased the incidence of parental feeding invitations (squab-oriented bill openings) in tests with 6- to 8-day-old squabs. A second study explored the degree to which PRL can act directly on the central nervous system to facilitate parental activity in the absence of peripheral cues generated from PRL-induced changes in other target organs, such as those associated with crop sac growth and distension. In this experiment, 6- to 8-day-old test squabs were used to determine if parental behavior is enhanced by twice-daily intracerebroventricular (ICV) injections of PRL in doses below those required to stimulate peripheral target organs. Injection schedules and behavior testing procedures were the same as those used in Experiment 1. However, half of the ICV PRL-treated and ICV vehicle-treated birds were food deprived for 16 hr before and during the test in order to control for PRL-induced
hyperphagia
and resulting crop sac distension, which could confound the results by generating peripheral stimuli conductive to the display of
regurgitation
-feeding behavior. Intracranial injections of prolactin significantly increased the incidence of feeding behavior, parental feeding invitations, and crouching or sitting in the nest in food-deprived doves but not in freely fed animals. Empty crop sac weights of freely fed and food-deprived PRL-treated birds were not increased above control values, thus indicating that ICV PRL treatment did not result in significant stimulation of peripheral target organs. These results demonstrate a facilitative action of PRL on
regurgitation
-feeding responses and associated parental behaviors that is not restricted to squabs of one particular age range. They also indicate that PRL is capable of acting directly on the brain to promote these activities in the absence of PRL-induced changes in the crop sac and other peripheral target organs.
...
PMID:Facilitation of parental behavior in ring doves by systemic or intracranial injections of prolactin. 193 30
Rumination is repeated
regurgitation
without nausea or associated gastrointestinal illness with concomitant weight loss and malnutrition. This paper describes a ruminating infant who was becoming severely malnourished.
Hyperalimentation
was used to provide necessary nutrition, and a paradigm of aversive behavior modification was instituted. This form of therapy was successful after less than four weeks, with no harmful side effects and no recurrence of the disorder.
...
PMID:Behavior modification in the treatment of rumination. 640 26
The role of the preoptic area (POA) in mediating PRL-induced parental responsiveness toward young was investigated in nonbreeding-doves with previous breeding experience. Birds received microinjections of the axon-sparing excitotoxin ibotenic acid to destroy neuronal cell bodies in the POA. Sham-lesioned controls received POA injections of vehicle. Upon recovery, birds received subcutaneous injections of ovine PRL for 7 days, followed by a 2.5-hr test with a foster squab to assess parental responsiveness. Lesioned doves displayed significantly fewer parental feeding invitations, parental
regurgitation
feeding bouts, and total
regurgitation
movements than did sham-lesioned animals. As a result, nestlings given to sham-lesioned birds gained significantly more weight than those given to lesioned birds. A significant negative correlation was obtained between the extent of POA damage induced by ibotenic acid infusion and the amount of parental behavior displayed by lesioned animals. These deficits in parental behavior were apparently a selective effect of POA damage because another PRL-mediated behavior,
hyperphagia
, was unaffected. The results suggest that the POA is an important component of the neural circuitry underlying the expression of PRL-induced parental feeding behavior in non-breeding ring doves. Because elevated PRL levels are temporally associated with parental activity during the breeding cycle, these results also implicate the POA in the spontaneous display of parental feeding activity that occurs naturally at the time of hatching.
...
PMID:Preoptic area lesions disrupt prolactin-induced parental feeding behavior in ring doves. 755 26
Prolactin stimulates the growth and development of specialized epithelial cells lining the cropsac of pigeons and doves (family Columbidae), leading to formation of "cropmilk," which is fed to the newly hatched squab. This system of milk feeding is unique among birds. To support the feeding of cropmilk, a complex array of behavioral adaptations are also supported by high levels of prolactin secretion in columbids during parenting. These specializations include elevated food intake (
hyperphagia
), nest attendance, and
regurgitation
feeding of the squab. Although prolactin is clearly important for these behavioral adaptations, the precise physiological and mechanistic bases for these behavioral effects remain controversial. The molecular mechanisms of prolactin action in the cropsac epithelium have been studied by cloning prolactin-induced genes, by cloning and expressing the pigeon prolactin receptor, and by analyzing the transcription factors that are activated after prolactin treatment. The avian (pigeon) prolactin receptor is a member of the cytokine receptor superfamily and uniquely contains a complete duplication of the extracellular ligand-binding domain. One of the early signal-transducing actions of prolactin in cropsac epithelium is the activation of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) proteins via tyrosine phosphorylation. This fundamental signaling pathway is shared with mammalian prolactin target tissues. The convergent evolution of milk feeding and the behaviors that support parenting in columbids and mammals has depended on adaptation of both conserved mechanisms and divergent physiological processes.
...
PMID:Regulation of pigeon cropmilk secretion and parental behaviors by prolactin. 852 18
A 72-year-old man was treated for fungal tricuspid valve endocarditis (TVE) with significant tricuspid valvular
regurgitation
and severe congestive heart failure caused by Candida parapsilosis. The patient had received
hyperalimentation
and antibiotic therapy for three months through a central venous catheter after the surgical treatment of ileus. The patient was treated medically with amphotericin B and fluconazole because of high surgical risk due to severe pulmonary emphysema, and he responded well. Although TVE caused by C. parapsilosis is rare, we should consider this possibility in patients receiving long-term
hyperalimentation
and antibiotic therapy using a central venous catheter.
...
PMID:Isolated tricuspid valve endocarditis due to Candida parapsilosis associated with long-term central venous catheter implantation. 1139 10
Healthy infants during the first year of life often have multiple functional gastrointestinal symptoms such as colic,
regurgitation
and constipation. The usual fuzziness and/or crying at this stage of life is interpreted as digestive discomfort or pain, and the corresponding concerns result in unsuitable behaviors as
overeating
, interruption of breastfeeding, multiple changes of formulas, innumerable queries and unnecessary medications. The aim of this paper is to update knowledge on the pathophysiology of the most common functional gastrointestinal dis orders, in order to avoid over diagnosis and select the most appropriate therapeutic approach and convenient nutritional interventions.
...
PMID:[Management of the most frequent functional gastrointestinal dis orders in healthy infants]. 2659 4