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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neuroendocrine and behavioral responses to a single 60-mg oral dose of the indirect serotonin agonist dl-fenfluramine were assessed in unmedicated adults with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and neuroendocrine results contrasted with those in normal control subjects. Net fenfluramine-induced prolactin release did not differ significantly between OCD patients and normal controls. Prolactin responses in the OCD group were not significantly correlated with baseline Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale scores for either obsessions or compulsions, but were positively correlated with the baseline Hamilton Depression Scale score and Hamilton Anxiety Scale score. No clear difference in the severity of patients' obsessions or compulsions was found following challenge with fenfluramine versus placebo. Although the present study does not demonstrate a serotonergic abnormality in OCD, this may be more a reflection of limitations of the test procedures than evidence that central nervous system (CNS) serotonergic function is normal in the disorder.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine and behavioral responses to challenge with the indirect serotonin agonist dl-fenfluramine in adults with obsessive-compulsive disorder. 131 64

Prolactin is associated with the development of mammary tumors in rats. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether strain differences in susceptibility to the development of mammary tumors could be explained by genetic differences in the response of the pituitary to chronic stimulation by estrogens. Prolactin levels were measured in plasma from rats of the Sprague-Dawley, Wistar WAG/Rij and Brown Norway BN/BiRij strains before and at different times after subcutaneous implantation of estradiol-17 beta in cholesterol/paraffin pellets. In all strains plasma prolactin was elevated from the second week after implantation of the pellet, although there were quantitative differences between the responses. At 32 weeks after implantation of the pellets the plasma level of prolactin in Sprague-Dawley rats was 1247 +/- 367 ng NIAMDD prolactin RP-1/ml (mean +/- S.E.M), whereas Wistar WAG/Rij and Brown Norway BN/BiRij had plasma prolactin levels of 679 +/- 211 and 182 +/- 19 ng/ml respectively. Between 52 and 104 weeks after implantation these values rose to 4016 +/- 1116, 5004 +/- 1053 and 808 +/- 129 ng/ml respectively. The plasma concentration of prolactin of rats in this age group was strongly associated with the occurrence of pituitary adenomas in all three strains. In untreated rats, the concentration of prolactin in the plasma increased with age to only 200-400 ng/ml at 12-24 months of age but no significant differences were observed between the three rat strains. It is concluded that observed differences in spontaneous and estrogen-mediated mammary tumor development in these rat strains cannot be explained by genetic differences in the plasma concentration of prolactin.
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PMID:Prolactin concentration in plasma and susceptibility to mammary tumors in female rats from different strains treated chronically with estradiol-17 beta. 674 39

Prolactin (PRL) responses to acute challenge with the serotonin (5-HT) releaser/uptake inhibitor, d-fenfluramine (PRL[d-FEN]), were correlated with three different measures of aggression in 14 male personality-disordered subjects. Consistent with previous work, PRL[d-FEN] responses were inversely correlated with scores on the Buss-Durkee Hostility Inventory-Assault scale (BDHI-Assault) and with the Brown-Goodwin Aggression-Revised (BGA-R) Aggression scale. In addition, PRL[d-FEN] responses were inversely correlated with a direct laboratory measure of aggressive behavior (Point-Subtraction Aggression Paradigm: PSAP). Although all measures of aggression correlated with PRL[d-FEN] response, differences among the intercorrelations of these measures were found. Specifically, BGA-R Aggression scores correlated with both BDHI-Assault and PSAP scores, but no relation was found between BDHI-Assault and PSAP scores. The results suggest that central 5-HT function may be associated with both self-report and behavioral measures of aggressive behavior, which may represent somewhat separate aspects of aggressive behavior.
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PMID:Relationship of prolactin response to d-fenfluramine to behavioral and questionnaire assessments of aggression in personality-disordered men. 914 28

Some inbred strains of rats showed behavioural differences in the forced swimming test, which is considered a putative animal model of depression. In the present work, the behavioural and physiological responses to forced swimming were studied in male and female rats of five inbred strains of rats: Brown-Norway (BN), Fischer 344 (FIS), Lewis (LEW), Spontaneously Hypertensive (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY). Physiological measures were aimed at characterizing emotional reactivity, a very important issue which has usually been approached by studying a single endocrine system, and its relationship to the forced swimming behaviour. The four indices of reactivity to stress used were serum glucose, ACTH, corticosterone and prolactin. No behavioural differences between sexes were observed in the forced swimming test. In addition, BN and WKY rats showed passive behaviour compared with the other three strains, the FIS strain being the most active. Whereas only minor differences were found in the resting levels of the variables studied with regard to either sex or strain, pituitary-adrenal (PA) and glucose responses to 15 min forced swimming differed among sexes and strains. Stress-induced hyperglycaemia was lowest in WKY and highest in SHR, being lower in females than in males. The lowest ACTH and corticosterone responses to forced swimming were observed in LEW and the highest in FIS. Female rats showed a clearly higher PA response to stress in all strains. Prolactin response to stress was very similar between sexes and strains. It might thus be concluded that: (i) there are important inter-strain differences in the forced swimming behaviour, with no differences between sexes; (ii) the various physiological indices of emotional reactivity follow a different trend and no warranted conclusion on differences in emotional reactivity should be based upon a single endocrine system or even only upon physiological measures; (iii) we cannot be sure, therefore, whether or not there are differences in emotionality between the strains studied in spite of well-established inter-strains differences in the forced swimming behaviour.
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PMID:Comparison of the behavioural and endocrine response to forced swimming stress in five inbred strains of rats. 883 94

There is clear evidence for carrier-mediated transport of prolactin into the brain, and it has been widely assumed that prolactin receptors (PRLRs) in the choroid plexus (ChP) might mediate this transport. Using PRLR knockout mice, we recently showed that PRLRs in ChP are not required for prolactin transport into the brain. Hence, the function of PRLR in the ChP remains unknown. PRLR expression is increased in the ChP during lactation, suggesting a possible role in adaptive function of prolactin at this time. To gain insight into prolactin function in the ChP, we have utilized RNA sequencing and NanoString techniques to characterize transcriptional changes in response to differing levels of prolactin at diestrus, during pregnancy, and in lactation. We have observed opposing transcriptional effects of prolactin on the ChP in different physiologic states, being primarily inhibitory during diestrus but stimulatory in lactation. Insulin-like growth factor 2 (Igf2), a highly expressing transcript found in the ChP, showed a 6-fold increase at lactation that returned to baseline on suppression of prolactin levels. These results indicate that Igf2 may be an important downstream mediator of prolactin-induced signaling in the ChP.-Phillipps, H. R., Rand, C. J., Brown, R. S. E., Kokay, I. C., Stanton, J.-A., Grattan, D. R. Prolactin regulation of insulin-like growth factor 2 gene expression in the adult mouse choroid plexus.
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PMID:Prolactin regulation of insulin-like growth factor 2 gene expression in the adult mouse choroid plexus. 3073 45