Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Atopic eczema is a chronic inflammatory skin disease which shares some psychological and neuroendocrine disturbances with patients suffering from depression. In view of recent findings of an attenuated response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system in patients with atopic eczema during a human corticotropin-releasing hormone (hCRH) challenge paradigm fourteen consecutive non-specifically trained in-patients with atopic eczema (8 men, 6 women) and an age-matched control group (8 men, 6 women) performed exhausting incremental graded bicycle exercise to evaluate cortisol, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), beta-endorphin, epinephrine and norepinephrine releases induced by physical stress. The exercise yielded significant increases in cortisol, ACTH, beta-endorphin, epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations in both groups. Patients with severe eczema displayed a significantly lower increase in norepinephrine levels when compared with the less affected patient group. In contrast to the challenge with exogenous hCRH no substantial difference in the net responses of ACTH and cortisol could be detected between patients with atopic eczema and controls using the physical stress paradigm. These substantial differences in the net outcome between both challenges may be related to the potential synergizing effects of various neuropeptides, e.g. CRH and vasopressin, when activating the HPA system by challenges at a suprapituitary site which may override subtle disturbances in the responsivity of the HPA system as revealed by CRH challenge alone in patients with atopic eczema.
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PMID:Physical stress-induced secretion of adrenal and pituitary hormones in patients with atopic eczema compared with normal controls. 908 93

32 out of 83 in patients with atopic dermatitis showed a decrease of urine excretion during acute exacerbation and elevated levels of antidiuretic hormone (ADH 23 of 29 cases), renin (18 of 32 cases), angiotensin (22 of 29 cases) and aldosterone (16 of 37 cases). Six cases with high ADH showed severe pitting edema of lower legs with hypoalbuminemia. ADH, volume of urine and edema were improved when their skin symptoms subsided. There was no statistically significant relationship between the dose of steroid ointment and ADH. Also there was no correlation between low 17-OHCS or 17-KS and high ADH or renin.
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PMID:[Antidiuretic hormone in severe cases of atopic dermatitis]. 1033 5