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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of a 21-year-old woman with Cushing's disease due to a pituitary tumor is described. The patient was treated with cyprohepatadine for 4 weeks immediately following pituitary alpha-particle irradiation. A standard
vasopressin
test to measure ACTH-mediated cortisol release was performed four times: prior to pituitary irradiation, after irradiation, after 4 weeks of cyproheptadine therapy, and off cyproheptadine for 2 weeks.
Cyproheptadine
failed to modify
vasopressin
-stimulated cortisol release in the patient described. This study suggests that cyproheptadine, which has previously been shown to decrease ACTH secretion, probably acts principally at the hypothalamic, rather than at the pituitary level.
...
PMID:Failure of cyprohepatdine to inhibit vasopressin-stimulated cortisol release in a patient with Cushing's disease. 101 93
Direct effects of cyproheptadine, reserpine, synthetic ovine corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), dexamethasone, and lysine-8-
vasopressin
(LVP) on the secretion of immunoreactive ACTH and beta-endorphin from the adenoma and the nonadenomatous tissue of patients with Cushing's disease were examined using a superfusion system.
Cyproheptadine
and reserpine (10(-9)-10(-7) M of each) suppressed immunoreactive ACTH and beta-endorphin secretion from both tissues. CRF (10(10)-10(7) M) stimulated the secretion of both peptides from the nonadenomatous tissue, but only a high dose of CRF could stimulate the secretion of these peptides from some adenomas. Such CRF-induced secretion was partially suppressed by dexamethasone. LVP (10(-9)-10(-7) M) stimulated peptide secretion from both types of tissue. These results suggest direct inhibitory effects of cyproheptadine and reserpine on the secretion of these peptides from the pituitary of patients with Cushing's disease, a different stimulatory mechanism of LVP from that of CRF in these tissues, and low sensitivity of the adenoma to CRF.
...
PMID:Effects of cyproheptadine, reserpine, and synthetic corticotropin-releasing factor on pituitary glands from patients with Cushing's disease. 630 23
The effects of local intra-arterial infusions of serotonin (5 or 25 micrograms base/min) or norepinephrine (1 or 5 micrograms base/min) on cutaneous (skin) and skeletal muscle vasculatures were investigated in canine forelimbs perfused at constant flow in dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital. Norepinephrine produced dose-related constriction of the skin and skeletal muscle vasculatures. In the cutaneous vascular circuit, norepinephrine produced large artery, small vessel, and large vein constriction. The increase in cutaneous vascular resistance was primarily due to an increase in small vessel resistance. Serotonin did not increase skeletal muscle vascular resistance but produced marked cutaneous vasoconstriction subsequent to large artery and large vein constriction. The small vessels, if anything, tended to dilate. The skin and skeletal muscle vascular responses to serotonin and norepinephrine were similar in innervated and acutely denervated forelimbs. Phentolamine pretreatment completely blocked all vascular actions of norepinephrine, and largely inhibited the cutaneous vasoconstriction produced by the infusion of the low dose of serotonin. However, the cutaneous large artery and large vein constriction produced by the infusion of the high dose of serotonin was not affected by phentolamine pretreatment.
Cyproheptadine
pretreatment blocked or largely inhibited the cutaneous vasoconstriction produced by serotonin only in doses which also inhibited norepinephrine and
vasopressin
cutaneous vasoconstriction. Pretreatment with methysergide blocked or largely inhibited the cutaneous large artery and large vein constriction produced by infusions of serotonin. Norepinephrine and
vasopressin
produced significant vasoconstriction in the presence of methysergide. These data suggest that the cutaneous large artery and large vein constriction produced by serotonin is not due to the activation of postjunctional alpha-adrenergic receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Evidence that serotonin receptors mediate the cutaneous vasoconstriction produced by 5-hydroxytryptamine in canine forelimbs. 662 7