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Query: UMLS:C0848237 (
acute stress
)
4,619
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was performed to investigate the influence of repeated
psychological stress
alone or combined with high NaCl intake on the function of the sympathetic nervous system. In addition, NPY levels have been measured in brain regions of potential importance in the central regulation of stress responses (ventrolateral and dorsomedial medulla, paraventricular and arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, and frontal cortex). Normotensive Wistar rats received a standard diet alone or supplemented with NaCl. To accentuate differences in sodium balance, rats on the high NaCl diet (HNa) were uninephrectomized. Half the animals on each diet were subjected to chronic stress using daily sessions (1 h) of immobilization stress. After 12 days, plasma levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY), norepinephrine (NE), and epinephrine (E) were measured basally and in response to acute footshock stress. HNa intake or chronic stress alone did not significantly alter either basal or stimulated plasma levels of NPY. However, combining the treatments produced a significant interaction, increasing the NPY response to footshock by 31% compared to HNa alone (p = 0.039) and by 98% compared to stress alone (p less than 0.001). Chronic stress increased basal levels of NE and enhanced the response to subsequent
acute stress
: combining the treatments did not yield further increases. Plasma levels of E were not significantly affected by the treatments. In the brain, stress alone had no effect on the NPY levels in the structures studied. HNa intake induced a significant increase in NPY levels of the arcuate nucleus, and produced a significant interaction with stress in the dorsomedial medulla. In a supplementary experiment, to evaluate the role of the autonomic nervous system in plasma NPY responses, treatment with the ganglion blocker hexamethonium was shown to significantly attenuate stress-induced changes in NPY, NE, and E.
...
PMID:Central and peripheral effects of repeated stress and high NaCl diet on neuropeptide Y. 135 17
In several diseases chronic pain is associated with long-lasting pathophysiological responses which differ strongly from those observed in acute situations. When persisting, acute pain often results in physical and
psychological stress
which may in turn aggravate the initial pathological state. In the present work we examined the secretory patterns of pituitary hormones related to
acute stress
(growth hormone (GH), prolactin (PRL) and beta-endorphin (beta-END)) in rats during the phase of Freund adjuvant-induced arthritis (AIA, a model used for chronic pain studies) when chronic pain is maximum (14 and 21 days, postinoculation (PI)). Using radio-immunoassay hormones were measured in plasma samples taken every 30 min for 7 h in free-moving rats 14 and 21 days after Freund adjuvant or vehicle injection and in control animals. The total amount of GH secretion was higher at 14 and 21 days PI in AIA rats as compared to vehicle-treated and control animals, and the pulsatility of GH secretory pattern was not modified by AIA. PRL and beta-END secretion were not significantly different in arthritic rats as compared to controls. These results show that GH, PRL and beta-END responses induced by
acute stress
are not observed during the AIA phase when chronic pain is maximum. Thus, in our experimental conditions, beta-END and PRL do not seem to be good plasma markers of chronic pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Chronic pain induces a paradoxical increase in growth hormone secretion without affecting other hormones related to acute stress in the rat. 159 79
Thirty-eight men participated in a study of immunological, hormonal, and psychological parameters before and after
acute stress
situations. A brief but
acute stress
was repeated daily for 4 days. This exposure caused the plasma levels of IgM and C3 to increase from Basal Day to Experimental Day 4. Significant correlations between endocrine and immunological parameters, and also between psychological measures and immunological parameters, were found. Use of psychological defense was related both to endocrine and immunological changes. The authors concluded that
psychological stress
may influence immunological functions both indirectly, by hormonal changes, and directly, by nervous regulation during brief but
acute stress
periods.
...
PMID:Brief uncontrollable stress and psychological parameters influence human plasma concentrations of IgM and complement component C3. 179 98
Psychological stress
has been shown to affect immune system status and function, but most studies of this relationship have focused on
acute stress
and/or laboratory situations. The present study compared total numbers of leukocytes and lymphocyte subpopulations (determined by flow cytometry) and antibody titers to latent and nonlatent viruses among a group of chronically stressed individuals living near the damaged Three Mile Island (TMI) nuclear power plant with those of a demographically comparable control group. Urinary catecholamine and cortisol levels were also examined. Residents of the TMI area exhibited greater numbers of neutrophils, which were positively correlated with epinephrine levels. The TMI group also exhibited fewer B lymphocytes, T-suppressor/cytotoxic lymphocytes, and natural killer cells. Antibody titers to herpes simplex were significantly different across groups as well, whereas titers to nonlatent rubella virus as well as IgG and IgM levels were comparable.
...
PMID:Chronic stress, leukocyte subpopulations, and humoral response to latent viruses. 255 49
Patients recovering from acute surgical stress often excrete increased 17-OH corticosteroids with no change in 17-ketosteroids. The explanation for these findings is unclear. In order to investigate possible divergence between cortisol and adrenal androgen metabolism in
acute stress
, repeated morning cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHA) measurements were made in patients undergoing ACTH stimulation 48 to 96 hours preoperatively, followed by determinations before and during major surgery, also performed in the morning. Cortisol and DHA are largely metabolized by the liver, so liver blood flow under a constant general anesthetic regimen known not to affect cortisol metabolism was monitored by pre- and intraoperative indocyanine green dye clearance. Results indicated no difference between the cortisol and DHA stimulation resulting from two hours of ACTH stimulation or major surgery, and a small (14.4%) decline in hepatic blood flow during general anesthesia. However, while DHA concentrations remained constant immediately preceding surgery, cortisol concentrations increased by 61% (P less than 0.05). Previous studies have also demonstrated increased concentrations of cortisol before surgical procedures, presumably due to
psychological stress
. However, this is the first demonstration of a dissociation between concentrations of cortisol and an adrenal androgen due to
psychological stress
.
...
PMID:Dissociation of adrenal androgen and cortisol levels in acute stress. 298 40
The present study was carried out to examine the effect of repetitive
acute stress
on pituitary secretion of prolactin (PRL) and luteinizing hormone (LH) during subsequent exposure to the same stimulus or to a second, novel stress. Intact adult male rats were subjected to either a single or 10 daily acute episodes of a
psychological stress
, transfer to a novel environment, or a physical stressor, restraint. A single acute exposure to either stress caused a temporary but significant increase in circulating concentrations of LH and PRL, and repetitive daily exposure to these stressors resulted in the habituation of stress-stimulated release of both hormones by the 10th consecutive day. When rats previously exposed to daily novel environment stress were subjected to a single episode of restraint stress, they showed an attenuation of both the LH and PRL secretory responses to this type of stress, compared to rats exposed to only one episode of restraint. These results indicate that repeated daily exposure to specific
acute stress
stimuli can result in the eventual habituation of both the LH and PRL hormonal responses to stress. At least with regard to the paired stressors examined in this study, adaptation to one type of
acute stress
stimulation may result in altered hormonal responsiveness to a second, unfamiliar stressor.
...
PMID:Effects of repetitive daily acute stress on pituitary LH and prolactin release during exposure to the same stressor or a second novel stress. 344 82
Psychological factors have long been thought to play a contributing role in either the predisposition, onset or course of various physical illnesses. Recently, rapid advances in immunology have created interest in the interaction between psychosocial factors, behaviour and the immune system. This paper reviews some of the models proposed to explain the relationship between psychological variables and physical illness and presents evidence for a contribution of psychological factors to certain illnesses in which abnormalities in immunologic state are thought to be important. From a somewhat different perspective, animal studies have demonstrated complex effects of stress, on disease susceptibility. Recent human studies have demonstrated consistent immunologic changes in people undergoing acute naturally occurring
psychological stress
such as bereavement or an important examination. In humans, the effects of chronic stress may be different from
acute stress
, corresponding to the findings in animals. Abnormalities in immunologic functioning and physical illness are reviewed for different psychiatric disorders--depression, anorexia nervosa and schizophrenia; depression is the only disorder which consistently demonstrated immunologic changes. Possible mechanisms for the stress/immune-change relationship are suggested.
...
PMID:Stress, immunity and illness--a review. 360 31
Upper small bowel motility was continuously recorded for 36-48 h in 37 healthy ambulant volunteers using twin pressure-sensitive radiotelemetric capsules tethered in the small bowel. Each study began with a 24-h period that was free of applied stress. The second 24-h period included 7 h of intermittent
psychological stress
during the day and brief episodes of
acute stress
during the following night, except in the members of a control group to whom no stress was applied. Stress responses were assessed from cardiovascular status and self-reported visual analogue scales. Applied stress during the second day significantly inhibited the incidence of fasting migrating motor complexes compared with the first day; when no stress was applied there was no reduction in migrating motor complexes. Nocturnal stress was less effective in the inhibition of migrating motor complexes. All the stressors induced positive cardiovascular and subjective stress responses. The stress-induced inhibition of migrating motor complexes was reversed by oral metoclopramide; however, the drug did not reverse the cardiovascular or subjective response to stress. In contrast, domperidone did not inhibit the gastrointestinal effects of stress. Neither drug appeared to influence small bowel motility under normal conditions.
...
PMID:Effects of different types of stress and of "prokinetic" drugs on the control of the fasting motor complex in humans. 369 7
The effect of stress on drinking, water balance and endocrine profile was studied using ten castrated rams. Individual sheep were exposed to 30-h periods of total isolation (
psychological stress
) or physical separation from their social group (control). Plasma was analysed for haematocrit, osmolality, electrolyte levels and concentrations of cortisol and arginine vasopressin. Isolation stress significantly reduced water intake, increased haematocrit and plasma concentration of cortisol, but did not alter osmolality or vasopressin concentration. The physiological effects of this self-imposed water restriction contrast with those obtained by depriving the sheep of water for 24 h under conditions that were not stressful, i.e. by keeping them grouped together. These results suggest that cortisol may act to defend plasma volume in sheep exposed to
acute stress
. The results also indicate that vasopressin probably should not be considered to be a 'stress hormone' in the sheep.
...
PMID:Endocrine and behavioural factors affecting water balance in sheep subjected to isolation stress. 381 41
In animal husbandry, stress has usually been conceived as a reflex reaction that occurs ineluctably when animals are exposed to adverse environmental conditions, and which is the cause of many unfavorable consequences, ranging from discomfort to death. The inadequacy of this view is apparent from the new concepts that have been developed from research aimed at understanding the relationships between hormonal and behavioral reactions to stressful situations. Psychological aspects of environmental stimuli are powerful activators of endocrine responses. The amount of
psychological stress
that an animal experiences determines how much the pituitary-adrenal axis responds. Indeed, removing the variable of emotional arousal reduces or eliminates responses to some other stressors such as heat and cold. This means that one of the most important characteristics of the stress response, its nonspecificity, lies in the afferent part of the response, not the efferent. Hormonal and behavioral responses are intimately related in stressful situations. In particular, the perception and ensuing behavior of the subject are critical to the nature and intensity of hormonal response. Evidence from experiments in farm animals is presented to support these concepts. Because adjustment abilities are limited by genetics and previous experience, the respective role of each of these factors needs to be delineated more accurately. In addition, most experimental studies have been concerned with
acute stress
, while chronic multiple stress, which is more likely to be encountered in intensive husbandry, has received little attention. The approach in this field is hampered by the lack of suitable physiological criteria to assess long-term adaptive changes. Opportunities for further research are delineated and the need for a more integrated view of stress reactions in farm animals is emphasized.
...
PMID:Stress in farm animals: a need for reevaluation. 635 Feb 54
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