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Query: UMLS:C0848237 (
acute stress
)
4,619
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Evolvulus alsinoides (EA) is well known for its memory enhancement, antiepileptic and immunomodulatory properties in the traditional Indian system of medicine, Ayurveda. In view of the increasing attention towards plants offering non-specific resistance (adaptogens) towards stress, we have evaluated crude ethanolic extract of EA for its adaptogenic and memory enhancing properties in rodents. Adaptogenic activity was assessed in rats subjected to acute and chronic unpredictable stress. Male Sprague-Dawley rats, weighing 180-200 g were immobilized for 150 min once only in
acute stress
(AS) model, whereas in chronic unpredictable stress (CUS) model rats were subjected to different types of stressors daily for 7 days. Stress exposure has induced gastric ulceration with increase in adrenal gland weight, plasma creatine kinase (CK), and corticosterone level in AS and CUS. However plasma
glucose
was increased only in AS. Rats were treated with graded doses of crude ethanolic extract of EA (100, 200 and 400 mg/kg p.o.) for 3 days and subjected to AS on 3 day after 45 min of last dose. In CUS, EA at a dose of 200 mg/kg p.o. found effective in acute studies was administered 45 min prior to stress regimen for 7 days. EA reduced the stress induced perturbations similar to Panax quinquefolium (PQ) (100 mg/kg p.o.), a well known adaptogen. EA (100 mg/kg) administered orally for 3 days in adult male Swiss mice, was effective in decreasing scopolamine induced deficit in passive avoidance test. The improvement in the peripheral stress markers and scopolamine induced dementia by EA in the present study indicates the adaptogenic and anti-amnesic properties of EA.
...
PMID:Adaptogenic and anti-amnesic properties of Evolvulus alsinoides in rodents. 1589 13
In aquaculture management it is important to establish objective criteria to assess health and welfare of the fish. Here we show that European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) confronted with husbandry-associated stress (tank cleaning, i.e. scrubbing, and water temperature variation) during early life stages show poorer survival and disease resistance as juveniles. We evaluated several parameters for stress (plasma cortisol,
glucose
and lactate, hydromineral status), growth performance, the immune response (plasma IgM levels) and the effects of a nodavirus challenge. Principal component analysis allowed the establishment of a stress panel including plasma cortisol, osmolality, IgM levels and weight. Sea bass juveniles reared during early life in high and constant temperature perform best in terms of stress-related parameters assessed by principle component analysis. Variable water temperature triggers dramatic changes in plasma cortisol, osmolality, IgM levels, body weight and susceptibility to nodavirus that suggest a strong and prolonged activation of the HPI axis. Scrubbing induces some disturbances typical for mild short-term,
acute stress
, viz. increased plasma osmolality and decreased IgM levels, but does not affect plasma cortisol, growth or susceptibility to nodavirus of sea bass. Our data fit well with the concept of allostasis. We discuss the relevance of our work for sea bass aquaculture.
...
PMID:Husbandry stress during early life stages affects the stress response and health status of juvenile sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax. 1596 20
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the perception of hypoglycemia is reduced during
acute stress
. In Session I each of our 40 healthy male volunteers received a bolus injection of human insulin (0.05 IU/kg) resulting in plasma
glucose
nadirs of below 2.8 mmo/L. In Session 2 participants received insulin or saline, with half of each group being stressed by having to prepare and give a speech. Data collection at 5- to 25-min intervals included a symptom checklist, blood pressure, heart rate, and blood sampling for measurement of plasma
glucose
and counterregulatory hormones. Individuals in the stress + insulin group were less sure of having received insulin and ate fewer cookies compared with controls. They reported lower intensity of the hypoglycemic symptoms of palpitations, tremor, dizziness, and blurred vision, in contrast to the reduced subjective and behavioral reactions, they showed the strongest hormonal counterregulation. We conclude that
acute stress
during hypoglycemia reduces symptom awareness and the ability to detect hypoglycemia.
...
PMID:Acute stress modulates symptom awareness and hormonal counterregulation during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in healthy individuals. 1625 Jul 6
The skin colour of red porgy, Pagrus pagrus, can be modified by exposure to different background colours. Red and white background colours brighten the dark skin colour that develops under common culture conditions in red porgy. To assess whether skin colour is also modified by aquaculture related handling stress, we subjected red porgy to 5 min of netting stress combined with air exposure. Fish kept on a white background have: (1) a lighter skin colour, which is not influenced by an acute stressor, (2) a less saturated red colour, which significantly decreases 24h post-handling, and (3) a similar hue as fish kept on a red background. The first plasma parameters to rise after application of the stressor are cortisol, lactate and Na(+); then,
glucose
levels rose. Other plasma ions (Ca(2+), Cl(-), K(+)) were not affected up to 2h post-stressor, but had decreased at 8 and 24h after handling. Plasma pH decreased over the first 2h post-handling, indicative of plasma acidosis upon air exposure. The acidosis then coincided with increases in plasma lactate levels. As alphaMSH levels were not significantly affected by the stressor while cortisol levels showed a five to tenfold increase, we suggest that following
acute stress
in red porgy, plasma cortisol release is controlled by ACTH, perhaps in combination with a sympathic stimulation.
...
PMID:The acute stress response of red porgy, Pagrus pagrus, kept on a red or white background. 1625 49
In order to assess the biological significance of weaning and water deprivation on the control of plasma concentrations of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), cortisol, growth hormone (GH) and metabolites in response to stimulation with arginine-vasopressin (AVP) and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), we carried out three experiments in which male goats before and after weaning were intravenously injected with AVP or CRH alone, or in combination with each other. In experiment 1, 17-week-old (post-weaning) goats were intravenously injected with AVP or CRH alone at the doses of 0.1, 0.3 and 1.0 nmol/kg body weight (BW). The AVP injection significantly and dose dependently increased plasma levels of ACTH, cortisol, GH and metabolites, whereas the injection with CRH did not cause significant increases in the levels of these parameters. In experiment 2, 4-week-old (pre-weaning) and 13-week-old (post-weaning) goats were injected with either AVP or CRH alone, followed by a combined injection of both secretagogues at a dose of 0.3 nmol/kg BW. Although the basal levels of the hormones and metabolites, with the exception of
glucose
, were greater in the 4-week-old goats, the hormone responses induced by stimulation with AVP were weaker than those induced in 13-week-old goats. Additionally, there were no responses in any hormone patterns to CRH stimulation in 4-week-old goats. In experiment 3, 13-week-old goats were injected with CRH alone followed by injection with AVP for two consecutive days of water deprivation. The animals were subjected to withdrawal of up to 20% of the total blood volume and water deprivation for up to 28 h. However, no significant differences in plasma ACTH, cortisol or GH levels were observed between days 1 and 2. Based on these results, we concluded that: (1) AVP is a more potent stimulant than CRH in terms of its ability to induce increases in plasma levels of ACTH, cortisol and GH; (2) the role of AVP as a secretagogue of hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal hormones is strengthened, whereas the ineffective role of CRH remains unaltered, by weaning; (3)
acute stress
such as massive withdrawal of blood volume and subjection to water deprivation may not be sufficient burdens to alter stress-related hormone levels in young goats.
...
PMID:Responses induced by arginine-vasopressin injection in the plasma concentrations of adrenocorticotropic hormone, cortisol, growth hormone and metabolites around weaning time in goats. 1629 72
It has been suggested that beta-amylase (BMY) induction during temperature stress in Arabidopsis could lead to starch-dependent maltose accumulation, and that maltose may contribute to protection of the electron transport chain and proteins in the chloroplast stroma during
acute stress
. A time-course transcript profiling analysis for cold shock at 4 degrees C revealed that BMY8 (At4g17090) was induced specifically in response to cold shock, while major induction was not observed for any of the other eight beta-amylases. A parallel metabolite-profiling analysis revealed a robust transient maltose accumulation during cold shock. BMY8 RNAi lines with lower BMY8 expression exhibited a starch-excess phenotype, and a dramatic decrease in maltose accumulation during a 6-h cold shock at 4 degrees C. The decreased maltose content was also accompanied by decreased
glucose
, fructose and sucrose content in the BMY8 RNAi plants, consistent with the roles of beta-amylase and maltose in transitory starch metabolism. BMY8 RNAi lines with reduced soluble sugar content exhibited diminished chlorophyll fluorescence as F(v)/F(m) ratio compared with wild type, suggesting that PSII photochemical efficiency was more sensitive to freezing stress. Together, carbohydrate analysis and freezing stress results of BMY8 RNAi lines indicate that increased maltose content, by itself or together through a maltose-dependent increase in other soluble sugars, contributes to the protection of the photosynthetic electron transport chain during freezing stress.
...
PMID:RNA interference of Arabidopsis beta-amylase8 prevents maltose accumulation upon cold shock and increases sensitivity of PSII photochemical efficiency to freezing stress. 1629 66
Chronic diabetes mellitus (DM) induces hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA). Our present study addresses the role of vasopressin (AVP) in maintaining adrenocortical responsiveness during DM. AVP-deficient mutant Brattleboro rats were used with heterozygous controls and the V2 agonist, desmopressin was infused to replace peripheral AVP. To induce DM the rats were injected by streptozotocin (STZ, 60 mg/ml/kg i.v.) and studied 2 weeks later. The
acute stress
stimulus was 60 min restraint. The signs of DM (the increase in water consumption and in blood
glucose
levels) were discovered in all rats. The diuretic effect of the lack of AVP was additional to the DM-induced osmotic diuresis. DM induced significant, chronic stress-like somatic changes on which AVP-deficiency had no effect and although desmopressin infusion normalized the water consumption and the body weight gain in AVP-deficient rats, it had no effect on DM-induced changes. The
acute stress
-induced plasma ACTH elevation was smaller in AVP-deficient or DM rats but these effects were not additive. Desmopressin did not normalize the decreased ACTH-elevation of AVP-deficient animals. The resting morning plasma corticosterone level was elevated both in DM and AVP-deficient rats without interaction. The restraint-induced corticosterone rise was influenced neither by the lack of AVP nor by DM and the basal and stress-induced prolactin levels were smaller in DM rats without any effect of AVP-deficiency. In conclusion, our data suggest that AVP does not play a crucial role in HPA axis regulation during DM-induced chronic stress. In contrast, the role of AVP seems to be more important during
acute stress
, however, it is restricted to the ACTH regulation. According to the water consumption data diabetes insipidus seems to be an additional risk factor for DM.
...
PMID:The role of vasopressin in diabetes mellitus-induced hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis activation: studies in Brattleboro rats. 1646 84
Positive reinforcement training (PRT) techniques have received considerable attention for their stress reduction potential in the behavioral management of captive nonhuman primates. However, few published empirical studies have provided physiological data to support this position. To address this issue, PRT techniques were used to train chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) to voluntarily present a leg for an intramuscular (IM) injection of anesthetic. Hematology and serum chemistry profiles were collected from healthy chimpanzees (n=128) of both sexes and various ages during their routine annual physical examinations over a 7-year period. Specific variables potentially indicative of
acute stress
(i.e., total white blood cell (WBC) counts, absolute segmented neutrophils (SEG),
glucose
(GLU) levels, and hematocrit (HCT) levels) were analyzed to determine whether the method used to administer the anesthetic (voluntary present for injection vs. involuntary injection) affected the physiological parameters. Subjects that voluntarily presented for an anesthetic injection had significantly lower mean total WBC counts, SEG, and GLU levels than subjects that were involuntarily anesthetized by more traditional means. Within-subjects analyses revealed the same pattern of results. This is one of the first data sets to objectively demonstrate that PRT for voluntary presentation of IM injections of anesthetic can significantly affect some of the physiological measures correlated with stress responses to chemical restraint in captive chimpanzees.
...
PMID:Positive reinforcement training affects hematologic and serum chemistry values in captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). 1647 94
The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system is a hormonal component of brain-gut axis. There are two opposite points of view regarding the influence of stress-induced activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system on the stomach. According to the widely held view, glucocorticoids released during stress are ulcerogenic hormones and, therefore, stress-induced activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system is harmful. The results of our investigations are, however, opposite to this traditional view. To estimate the action of glucocorticoids released during stress on the gastric mucosa, the effects of glucocorticoid deficiency or occupation of glucocorticoid receptors by the antagonist RU-38486 on the formation of stress-induced gastric erosions were estimated in rats. The reduction of stress-induced corticosterone release (induced by various experimental approaches) markedly potentiated a gastric erosion formation caused by stress and acute corticosterone replacement, mimicking stress-induced corticosterone response, prevented this erosion-potentiating effect. The administration of RU-38486 also caused a significant increase of vulnerability of gastric mucosa to stress action. Thus, an
acute stress
-induced increase of glucocorticoids has a gastroprotective action against stress-induced gastric injury. We also showed that various ulcerogenic stimuli, similar to stress, induce an increase in glucocorticoid production that in turn helps the gastric mucosa to resist against a harmful action of ulcerogenic stimuli. Gastroprotective action of glucocorticoids may be mediated by multiple actions, including maintenance of
glucose
homeostasis, gastric mucosal blood flow, mucus production and attenuation of enhanced gastric motility and microvascular permeability. For maintenance of gastric mucosal integrity glucocorticoids may cooperate with prostaglandins. In conclusion, these findings indicate that activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system could be considered as a significant gastroprotective component of brain-gut axis.
...
PMID:The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system: Hormonal brain-gut interaction and gastroprotection. 1648 Dec 22
The review is focused on the action of glucocorticoids released during activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis, on the susceptibility of gastric mucosa to injury. The data support the idea that glucocorticoids produced in response to
acute stress
or other ulcerogenic stimuli have a gastroprotective action but not ulcerogenic one as it has generally been considered for some decades. It has been shown that gastroprotective action of glucocorticoids may be mediated by multiple actions, including maintenance of
glucose
homeostasis, gastric mucosal blood flow, mucus production and attenuation of enhanced gastric motility and microvascular permeability. For maintenance of gastric mucosal integrity glucocorticoids may cooperate with other gastroprotective factors. Glucocorticoid hormones exert a pivotal role in the maintenance of gastric mucosal integrity in the case of impaired gastroprotective mechanisms provided by prostaglandins, nitric oxide and capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons. These findings indicate that activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system could be considered as a significant hormonal gastroprotective component of stress reaction and therefore glucocorticoid hormones are natural gastroprotective factors.
...
PMID:[Activation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system as important gastroprotective component of stress reaction]. 1673 58
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