Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) was performed on 30 patients fulfilling RDC or Kendell criteria for schizo-affective depression. Symptoms characteristic of depression or schizophrenia were noted, and the severity of psychosis and the severity and endogenicity of depression were assessed. Ratings of severity were repeated at 2-month follow-up. Ten of the 30 subjects were DST non-suppressors, but no clear differences in symptoms, severity of illness or outcome between suppressors and non-suppressors emerged. Thus, although schizo-affective depression is associated with an increased frequency of HPA axis abnormality as assessed by the DST, this test does not clarify the status of schizo-affective depression in the classification of psychiatric illness.
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PMID:The dexamethasone suppression test in schizo-affective depression. 315 18

The metyrapone test was applied to patients suffering from major depressive illness with melancholia, from mania, and from schizophrenia. Hypoactivity of the HPA axis as assessed by the test appears to occur infrequently in affective disorders and schizophrenia. High normal or exaggerated responses to metyrapone, as observed in Cushing's disease, appear to be correlated to DST non-suppression in melancholia.
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PMID:The metyrapone test in affective disorders and schizophrenia. 623 55

In this paper we have reported the results of studies in psychiatric patient groups using the strategy of measuring opioid activity and beta-endorphin (ir) in CSF. Our findings do not lend support to the notion of excess endorphin activity in schizophrenia, but rather suggest the possibility of a decrease in endogenous opioid activity in some schizophrenic patients. In affectively ill patients our data suggest that there may be a relative change in endogenous opioid system activity across state change in manic-depressive illness. Who also found a relationship between nurses' ratings of anxiety and CSF opioid activity in depressed patients, although it is unknown whether this directly relates to the pathophysiology of this symptom, or is related to stress response. The relationship between CSF opioid activity and HPA axis activity, as reflected by urinary free cortisol excretion, supports the notion of important physiologic relationships between these systems and raises the issue of a role for the endogenous opioid system in the abnormal activation of this system in depression. Finally, the finding of increased CSF opioid activity in anorexia nervosa patients when a minimum weight coupled with data relating endogenous opioids to eating behavior raises interesting questions regarding a possible involvement of the endogenous opioid system involvement in this illness.
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PMID:Endorphins in the cerebrospinal fluid of psychiatric patients. 629 60

The measurement of endorphins in body fluids has been an important advance in clinical research attempting to link the endogenous opioid system to psychiatric illness and symptomatology. The consideration of methodologic differences in assay technique and in clinical methods is important in evaluating results of studies. Whereas findings in early clinical studies supported the notion of increased endorphin system function in patients with schizophrenia, cumulative data from the considerable number of studies carried out throughout world centers have been unable to demonstrate a consistent abnormality in levels of endorphins in CSF or plasma of patients with schizophrenia. Among the affective disorders, data suggest the possibility of relative changes in levels of opioids within individual manic-depressive patients when studied across state change from depression to mania. In studies of depressive illness there is accumulating evidence that the endogenous opioid system may relate or contribute to abnormality of the HPA axis. In our work measuring opioids in CSF we have observed relationships between anxiety and CSF opioids in normals and psychiatric patients and changes in CSF opioid activity in patients with anorexia nervosa accompanying weight change. These data are consistent with other evidence linking endorphins to CNS noradrenergic systems and to biologic response to stress.
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PMID:The measurement of endorphins in body fluids. 635 91

A dexamethasone suppression test (DST) was carried out on autistic and other handicapped children to investigate the function of the hypothalamo-pituitary adrenal axis (HPA-axis). The subjects were 19 autistic children consisting of 11 relatively well-developed and eight poorly-developed children. The control groups were 26 normal volunteers, 19 patients with schizophrenia and 15 children with mental retardation (MR) or minimal brain dysfunction (MBD). The DST procedures followed the Carroll method. As a result, all of the normal volunteers and 19 schizophrenic patients showed normal response (suppressor). Nine of the 11 well-developed autistic children exhibited suppressor, while all of the poorly-developed children showed an abnormal response (non-suppressor). Nine of the 10 children with MR and all of the five children with MBD were suppressor. These results suggest that there might be a dysfunction in the HPA-axis of the poorly-developed autistic children.
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PMID:Dexamethasone suppression test in autistic children. 653 45

Schizophrenia is considered a neurodevelopmental disorder in which vulnerability to stress may be a contributing factor. Coping is an important psychological component of stress processing, and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system (HPA system) is one of the biological components of stress adaptation. Disturbances of either of these components may make schizophrenic patients more vulnerable to develop a psychosis under stressful circumstances. In this study, 10 schizophrenic men were compared with 10 healthy male controls in their response to a psychosocial stressor, consisting of a public-speaking task. Heart rate was monitored as a measure of autonomic arousal. HPA responses were assessed by measuring salivary cortisol. Coping skills were measured by using the Utrecht Coping List and the Ways of Coping Checklist. The stress of speaking in public increased the heart rate in both patients and controls; however, a significant cortisol response was found in the controls, but not in the schizophrenic patients. The patients used more passive and avoidant coping strategies than controls. The findings provide support for the notion that schizophrenic patients have an impaired ability to adapt, both psychologically and biologically, to their environment.
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PMID:Blunted cortisol response to a psychosocial stressor in schizophrenia. 978 48

Hypothalamic dopaminergic and serotonergic inputs participate in the regulation of pituitary hormones, and drugs that block central dopamine and serotonin receptors are expected to influence the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) and -adrenal (HPA) axes. In schizophrenic patients, the switch from neuroleptics to clozapine influences prolactin and cortisol secretion, but there is no information on possible changes on HPG-axis hormones. We measured the plasma levels of testosterone (TST), LH, FSH, as well as of prolactin (PRL) and cortisol (CORT), in a group of male patients with schizophrenia during treatment with classical neuroleptics with no satisfactory therapeutic response (31 pts, age 30.3+/-8.5, range 18-50), and 6 weeks later, after switch to treatment with clozapine (CLZ) in doses from 100 to 600 mg daily (mean 328 mg). Psychopathology was assessed using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. The hormone levels were also compared to those of a control group of 38 healthy males. Treatment with CLZ resulted in a reduction in the BPRS score by 30% in the mean. Plasma PRL was reduced from 39.9+/-26.1 to 8.3+/-5.0 ng/ml (P<0.001), CORT from 150+/-42 to 118+/-39 ng/ml (P < 0.003), while LH, FSH, and TST remained unaltered. Compared to healthy controls, patients had higher PRL and CORT levels while on neuroleptics, and no significant differences to any of the estimated hormones, after switch to clozapine. The results show that switching from classical neuroleptics to treatment with clozapine does not have any substantial effect on the HPG-axis hormone plasma levels, although it reduces substantially the levels of prolactin and cortisol.
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PMID:Switch from neuroleptics to clozapine does not influence pituitary-gonadal axis hormone levels in male schizophrenic patients. 1062 22

The authors discuss literature evidence on the possible dysfunctioning of HPA axis and the inflammatory response system (IRS) in schizophrenia in relation to a more comprehensive bio-pathogenetic hypothesis of the disorder and to the development of specific clinical patterns or 'core' schizophrenic symptoms, like those included in the so called negative/depressive dimension. The dysfunctions of HPA axis and IRS could be linked to some neurodevelopmental damage in relevant brain areas like hippocampus and it could involve mainly the glutamatergic pathways (e.g. NMDA receptors). Moreover, these changes could have some predictive value for response to typical antipsychotics (specifically for negative symptoms and drug resistance) in schizophrenia. Finally, the differential activity of typical versus atypical antipsychotic compounds on the basic HPA axis and IRS dysregulations in schizophrenia could account, at least partly, for the better clinical stabilization achieved in patients treated with the latter drugs compared to those receiving conventional neuroleptics.
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PMID:HPA axis and cytokines dysregulation in schizophrenia: potential implications for the antipsychotic treatment. 1064 89

Several lines of evidence suggest a dysregulation of the adrenocortical (HPA) system with hypersecretion of CRH is associated with suicidal behavior. However, controversial results have emerged from the determination of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) concentrations in the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of suicide attempters probably due to methodological differences. We simultaneously measured CRH concentrations in the CSF and in the plasma of 41 psychiatric in-patients with different diagnoses (affective disorder, schizophrenia, personality disorders, adjustment disorder, substance abuse) and eight neurological control subjects. We also measured plasma cortisol concentrations because data from animal experiments suggest that cortisol may influence CSF CRH concentrations. The major finding was that patients who attempted suicide prior to admission had significantly lower CSF CRH concentrations than psychiatric patients without suicidal behavior. CRH concentrations were significantly higher in the CSF than in plasma in both, psychiatric patients and neurological control subjects. There was no significant difference between suicide attempters and patients with acute suicidal ideations. The latter group showed a trend towards lower CSF CRH concentrations compared with the neurological control subjects. Patients with affective disorder alone as well as patients with multiple diagnoses, but not schizophrenic patients, showed significantly lower CSF CRH concentrations than neurological control subjects. Plasma CRH and plasma cortisol concentrations did not differ among diagnostic groups or between suicide attempters vs. non-attempters. Further studies with more homogeneous samples, drug-free patients and with simultaneous assessment of various parameters of the HPA system are warranted.
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PMID:Decreased corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid of eucortisolemic suicide attempters. 1128 50

Lesioning the ventral hippocampal formation (vHF) in the neonatal rat with an excitotoxin replicates several features of schizophrenia. Similar lesions in the adult rat disrupt the normal constraint of neuroendocrine responses to environmental stressors, which is of potential interest because the enhanced HPA axis and antidiuretic hormone activity in schizophrenia is linked to acute stress and hippocampal formation (HF) pathology. In the current study, we investigated the effects of neonatal ventral hippocampal formation lesions (NVHFL) on plasma adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) responses following a 2-min acoustic stressor in the adult rat. Levels of the two hormones did not differ between SHAM-operated and NVHFL animals in their home cages. ACTH levels doubled in SHAM-operated animals immediately following stress, but increased more than six-fold in the NVHFL group. AVP levels were halved immediately following stress in SHAM-operated animals, but did not change significantly in NVHFL. Findings could not be attributed to intervening factors known to influence neuroendocrine activity. Thus, NVHFL appear to disrupt the HF-mediated constraint of neuroendocrine responses to stress, and model the neuroendocrine dysfunction seen in schizophrenia. We posit that clarification of how NVHFL alters relatively "simple", well characterized, and phylogenetically preserved systems, such as the neuroendocrine system, may provide insight into the mechanism of hippocampal pathology in schizophrenia.
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PMID:Neonatal lesions of the ventral hippocampal formation disrupt neuroendocrine responses to auditory stress in the adult rat. 1528 11


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