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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aims of the two studies were to investigate the relationship between emotions and immune responses in an experimental setting by inducing social fear and to broaden our understanding of bodily reactions by examining both cardiovascular and hormonal responses. Seventy-nine healthy subjects were confronted with a situation in which relatively strong social fear was induced in the laboratory.
Social fear
was induced by having to prepare and give an oral presentation in front of an audience. Thirty additional healthy subjects formed a control group; they followed exactly the same procedure, but, instead of the "public speaking situation," they were subjected to a nondemanding task of the same duration. The results indicate that public speaking evoked fear as shown by both elevated feelings of tenseness and negative bodily sensations. Moreover, the data clearly show enhanced cardiovascular activity, elevated plasma hormone levels, and changes in immunological parameters (natural killer cell number and T helper/inducer cells). The control group reported significantly less feelings of tenseness and negative bodily sensations and showed a decrease in cortisol, prolactin, and
beta-endorphin
levels. Although some variation on immune responses was present, no variation on cardiovascular activity occurred in the control group during the experiment. The results show that there is indeed a relationship between emotion and immune responses. In addition, the data collected on body responses point to a direct mediating effect of sympathetic-adrenal medulla activity and an indirect mediating effect of hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis activity.
...
PMID:Experimental social fear: immunological, hormonal, and autonomic concomitants. 877 27
Social phobia may be associated with a dysfunction of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. In this study we determined HPA axis responsivity to a psychological stressor in patients with social phobia and compared them to healthy controls. Fifteen patients with DSM IV social phobia with a mean score of 77.7 on the Liebowitz
Social Anxiety
Scale and 15 age and sex matched controls underwent the stressor consisting of mental arithmetic and a short term memory test performed in front of an audience. Plasma levels of cortisol and
corticotropin
were measured at various intervals throughout the test. Although baseline measures of cortisol did not differ between patients (319.8+/-34.6 nmol/l) and controls (279.5+/-42.7 nmol/l)(t=0.7, df=28, P<0.5) nor did baseline
corticotropin
values (8.6+/-2.1 pg/ml vs 13.7+/-2.0 pg/ml respectively) (t=-1.8, df=28, P<0.08) this stressor resulted in a significantly greater delta max cortisol response (the difference between baseline values and the maximum increase during the stressor) in patients (167.1+/-23.7 nmol/l) than in controls (106.7+/-16 nmol/l) (t=2.1, df=28, P<0.04). There was no significant difference in delta max
corticotropin
between groups (patients 8.8+/-2.1 pg/ml vs controls 9.1+/-1.9 pg/ml) (t=-0.08, df=28, P<0.9). This preliminary study indicates that patients with social phobia appear to have a hyper-responsive adrenocortical response to psychological stress.
...
PMID:HPA axis response to a psychological stressor in generalised social phobia. 1208 62