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

Numerous studies have identified specific areas in which the effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy may occur including fetal growth retardation, neonatal deaths, pregnancy complications leading to premature delivery and possible effects on lactation and long-term effects on surviving children. Despite the number of papers which have been published on this subject there is still no clear understanding of the extent to which smoking in general, and various components of cigarette smoke in particular, exert a detrimental effect on the human reproductive potential. Although epidemiological evidence is scanty there are indications that cigarette smoking decreases fertility in women, increases the frequency of menstrual abnormalities and decreases the age of spontaneous menopause. Cigarette smoking in males has also been implicated as a cause of decreased sperm numbers and an increased frequency of abnormal sperm morphology as well as a decrease in sexual performance. Experimental evidence from humans and rodents suggests that nicotine can alter the hypothalamic-pituitary axis through its stimulation of growth hormone, cortisol, vasopressin and oxytocin release which in turn inhibit luteinizing hormone and prolactin release.
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PMID:Smoking and reproductive health. 391 Feb 12

Attention is focused on the similarities in primary structure of the egg-laying neurohormone of the pulmonate Lymnaea stagnalis and of the opisthobranch Aplysia californica which both consist of 36 amino acid residues. FMRFamide-like peptides have now been isolated and sequenced from six molluscan species. Besides FMRFamide, two closely related peptides were isolated from the central nervous system of L. stagnalis and sequenced. This indicates that a family of FMRFamide-like peptides exist not only in the molluscs, but also within one species. A molluscan growth hormone, isolated from the brain of L. stagnalis, has been characterized. This small peptide hormone stimulates in vitro a receptor-adenylate cyclase system of mantle edge cells and in vivo the Ca2+-incorporation in the shell edge. The biochemical characterization of three vertebrate-like peptides of L. stagnalis, resembling oxytocin, Arg-vasopressin, and insulin, confirms the immunological findings that gastropods contain peptides which are structurally closely related to mammalian peptides.
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PMID:Molecular properties of various snail peptides from brain and gut. 391 18

In order to establish whether thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) inhibits lysine-vasopressin (LVP)-induced growth hormone (GH) release, six normal men were tested with LVP alone or in combination with TRH. LVP strikingly increased serum GH levels; this response was not altered by TRH. These results indicate that in man TRH is not involved in the control of GH secretion in response to LVP.
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PMID:Thyrotropin-releasing hormone does not inhibit lysine vasopressin-induced growth hormone secretion in normal men. 393 80

A total of 206 depressive patients (176 outpatients and 30 inpatients) underwent a dexamethasone suppression test (DST). Resting levels of serum growth hormone (GH), plasma vasopressin (AVP) and plasma homovanillic acid (HVA) were also measured in a proportion of the patients. Fifty-seven per cent of the endogenous patients showed nonsuppression of cortisol in the DST, while 92% in the nonendogenous group showed normal suppression. The diagnostic confidence of a positive test was 83%. The sensitivity and specificity of the test was slightly higher among inpatients than out-patients, and serum cortisol value at 4 p.m. was more useful than the morning value. No significant correlation was found between severity of the depression as measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression and serum cortisol. In single subjects there was, however, an obvious correlation. The levels of serum GH, plasma AVP and plasma HVA did not differ in the endogenous and nonendogenous groups, and there was no correlation between serum cortisol in the DST and the concentrations of the other hormones or HVA in plasma.
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PMID:Dexamethasone suppression test and the levels of serum growth hormone, plasma vasopressin and plasma homovanillic acid in depressed in- and outpatients. 397 6

We describe a 24-year-old short, obese girl who has bizarre episodic neurological abnormalities related to hyperosmolality due to hypernatraemia. Investigation of osmoregulation by water loading and infusion of hypertonic saline revealed (i) hypodipsia with thirst onset raised to plasma osmolality of 332 mmol/kg and (ii) elevation of the threshold for vasopressin release (plasma osmolality 320 mmol/kg) but normal slope of the plasma vasopressin-plasma osmolality curve. Baroregulated vasopressin release was also grossly subnormal. Other hypothalamo-pituitary investigations showed deficiencies of releasing hormones for gonadotrophins and growth hormone, but prolactin response to combined hypoglycaemia and TRH was blunted She demonstrated other anomalies including hyperlipoproteinaemia and defective lymph drainage of the legs. Skull X-rays, together with computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance scans of the hypothalamo-pituitary region and the rest of the brain were normal. We believe that this is the first case of essential hypernatraemia documented with direct evidence of resetting of the osmostat.
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PMID:A case of 'essential' hypernatraemia due to resetting of the osmostat. 398 72

Hormonal disturbances caused by hypothalamic pathology can be treated effectively by target hormone replacement in the case of failure of glandotropic hormone secretion. Hyposomatotropism in children has to be substituted by parenteral administration of growth hormone. In addition gonadotropins respectively gonadotropin releasing factor have to be given in order to restore fertility in hypothalamic hypogonadism. Posterior pituitary failure can be adequately replaced by administration of analogues of antidiuretic hormone. Hypothalamic pathology causing hypersecretion of anterior pituitary hormones may also be accessable to medical treatment. This pertains particularly to hyperprolactinemia and precocious puberty. However, there is no medical therapy so far for hypothalamic disturbances leading to veterative dysfunction like disturbances of temperature regulation and control of thirst and polyphagia. In this situation symptomatic correction of the abnormality represents the only possibility to keep these patients alive.
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PMID:Medical therapy of hypothalamic diseases. 399 50

The effects of postnatal methyl mercury exposure on the ontogeny of renal and hepatic responsiveness to trophic stimuli were examined. Increased ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was used as an index of tissue stimulation. In the rat, renal ODC responsiveness to growth hormone, angiotensin, vasopressin, isoproterenol, and serotonin was absent at birth and matured 3 to 4 weeks later. However, pups exposed to methyl mercury showed marked, ODC responses to these same agents as early as 10 to 19 days of postnatal age, accompanied by a significant renal hypertrophy. In contrast to the kidney, the liver of normally developing rats was responsive to trophic factors even in the neonate. In this tissue, there was no consistent effect of neonatal methyl mercury treatment on ODC responses at any developmental stage tested; although absolute liver weights were reduced, liver/body weight ratio was not affected. These results demonstrate that postnatal methyl mercury exposure causes a precocious onset of ODC responses to trophic agents specifically in the kidney. Altered responsiveness may mediate some of the effects of this organomercurial on overall renal development and function.
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PMID:Postnatal methyl mercury exposure: effects on ontogeny of renal and hepatic ornithine decarboxylase responses to trophic stimuli. 402 2

Endocrine function has been investigated in four anencephalic neonates to determine the influence of absence of cortical and hypothalamic tissue and of hypoplasia of the pituitary. Intravenous glucose administration resulted in higher peak values for blood sugar and more rapid glucose disposal rates than reported in normals. Intravenous insulin tolerance tests on two of the infants failed to evoke elevations in plasma growth hormone, and the infants showed a remarkable resistance to the hypoglycemic effect of insulin. Administration of lysine-vasopressin caused an active growth hormone release. Similarly, there was a large increase in serum thyrotropin after administration of synthetic thyrotropin-releasing hormone. Basal levels of both thyrotropin and growth hormone were low as compared with values reported for normal newborns. Prolactin values obtained on three of the infants were in the normal range. The results strongly suggest that anterior pituitary function mediated by the hypothalamus and its releasing factors is deficient in anencephaly. However, the anterior pituitary can release growth hormone and thyrotropin when stimulated directly and, in the case of thyrotropin release, may function autonomously. The normal prolactin values presumably reflect the absence of the hypothalamic prolactin inhibitory factor.
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PMID:Endocrine studies in anencephaly. 419 8

The insulin test carried out with adequate safeguards under standardized conditions yields valuable information regarding hypothalamic and pituitary function when plasma levels of sugar, cortisol, and growth hormone are determined. The use of a test based on the plasma cortisol response to the infusion of lysine-vasopressin, a polypeptide with a corticotrophin-releasing action, is also of value as a test of pituitary function. Used in conjunction with the insulin test it enables pituitary disorders to be differentiated from those involving the hypothalamus.
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PMID:Assessment of hypothalamic pituitary function in endocrine disease. 428 15

1. The epigastric adipose tissue of rabbits has been prepared so that the effects of close arterial injections and infusions on blood flow and release of free fatty acids (FFA) can be studied. The effects of pharmacologically active agents and hormone preparations have been investigated.2. Release of FFA was stimulated by synthetic adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH), alpha and beta melanophore stimulating hormone (MSH), porcine growth hormone, glucagon, thyrotropic hormone (TSH) and luteotropic hormone (LTH). Single injections of fat-mobilizing agents produce a sustained rise in the release of FFA.3. Although pitressin caused release of FFA, synthetic vasopressin and oxytocin failed to do so. The FFA releasing activity of pitressin has therefore been attributed to a contaminant.4. Catecholamines were found not to stimulate release of FFA from this fat depot, but were found to increase plasma FFA when infused intravenously.5. Injections of acetylcholine, histamine, bradykinin, 5-hydroxytryptamine, synthetic arginine vasopressin, and lysine vasopressin, oxytocin, angiotensin and FSH did not stimulate release of FFA although marked effects on blood flow were produced.6. Injections of prostaglandin E(1) gave sustained increases in blood flow, and inhibited FFA release when stimulated by growth hormone.7. The mobilization of FFA is sometimes associated with an increased rate of blood flow.
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PMID:The mobilization of free fatty acids from rabbit adipose tissue in situ. 430 78


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