Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The CSF concentrations of CRF, somatostatin and beta-endorphin were determined in nine patients who fulfilled DSM-III criteria for major depression with psychotic features. CSF samples were obtained at baseline in the depressed state, and again after a course of ECT. Concentrations of both CRF and beta-endorphin decreased after ECT, while the concentration of somatostatin increased, although the latter difference did not attain statistical significance. The increase in CSF concentrations of CRF and beta-endorphin in depressed patients is therefore seen to be state-dependent.
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PMID:Neuropeptide concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid of depressed patients treated with electroconvulsive therapy. Corticotrophin-releasing factor, beta-endorphin and somatostatin. 167 78

The hypothesis that ECT produces selective effects on hypothalamic-pituitary activity was investigated by determining the effect of ECT on pituitary hormone release in nine depressed patients. After ECT there were massive and rapid increases in the plasma concentrations of nicotine- and oestrogen-stimulated neurophysin (NSN and ESN), prolactin (PRL) and adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), smaller increases in plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) and cortisol, a significant decrease in plasma growth hormone (GH) concentration but no change in plasma thyrotropin (TSH). There was significant attenuation of PRL responses with repeated ECT. The hormonal responses to ECT cannot simply be attributed to stress, since a similar pattern of increases in plasma hormone concentrations did not occur in psychologically normal patients in whom plasma hormone concentrations were measured during induction of anaesthesia and abdominal incision for cholecystectomy. Analysis of these hormonal responses in terms of the knowledge available on the neurotransmitter control of pituitary hormone release suggests that some of these hormonal responses to ECT may be mediated by the activation of serotonergic neurones, while others are probably due to direct stimulation of the neuroendocrine neurones themselves.
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PMID:Selective effects of ECT on hypothalamic-pituitary activity. 303 82

The evidence for stress activation of endorphinergic systems suggests a physiological role in endogenous analgesic and anti-anxiety regulation which would provide a reserve in emergency situations. The possibility of involvement of these systems in psychiatric illness arises from the psychotogenic and anxiolytic properties of some opiates. The endorphin-excess and -deficiency hypotheses of schizophrenia are reviewed in the light of naloxone's small but statistically significant antipsychotic action, and the activation of endorphinergic systems in the course of neuroleptic therapy. The hypothesis that endorphinergic deficiency may be present in endogenous depression is reviewed. Although alterations in beta-endorphin immunoreactivity measured peripherally and in CNS have not been substantiated, therapeutic trials using a mu-receptor agonist have shown promise of a rapidly-acting antidepressant effect. ECT is accompanied by increases in plasma beta-endorphin immunoreactivity.
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PMID:Endorphins in psychiatry. 609 Oct 98