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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In idiopathic or generalized epilepsy, serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations tend to be low, especially just before the
seizure
. Glucose tolerance curves are abnormal and variable. The electrolyte balance is disturbed, and epileptics tend to go readily into alkalosis. Serum [Na+] is usually unaffected, but [K+] is normal to low between attacks and increases during and after the
seizure
. Serum [Cl-] is usually high just before the
seizure
. Epileptics are generally mildly hypocalcemic, especially in the period before the
seizure
. Serum urea and nonprotein nitrogen values are low between paroxysms but increase after the
seizure
. Serum protein concentration is usually normal. Stress, which releases epinephrine and
corticotropin
, results in high serum citrate concentration, which probably contributes to decreased serum [Ca2+] just before a
seizure
. In the healthy individual, any increase in serum citrate is accompanied by increasing [Ca2+]. In the rabbit, convulsions can be induced with
corticotropin
, a result of increased serum citrate concentration coupled with a decrease in [Ca2+]. The net result is severe hypo-ionic-calcemia. A similar phenomenon has been reported in a few humans. Administration of insulin causes serum citrate concentrations to decrease. Apparently, the dynamic system that controls glucose and lipid metabolism, and thus electrolyte balance, through the hormones epinephrine,
corticotropin
, insulin, glucagon, calcitonin, and parathormone, is abnormal in the epileptic.
...
PMID:Clinical biochemistry of epilepsy. I. Nature of the disease and a review of the chemical findings in epilepsy. 22 Nov 36
We propose than an alarm mechanism is operative in animals, designed to regulate neuromuscular irritability by regulating [Ca2+]. Epinephrine or
corticotropin
(ACTH), injected intramuscularly into animals, causes a hypercitricemia, resulting in decreased [Ca2+]. This increases muscular excitability to facilitate escape. To avoid over reaction, [Cl-] is shifted into the plasma without a concomitant shift of Na+, thus generating an acidosis and an increase in ionization of Ca. Plasma pH, pCO2, total CO2, and [K+] decrease, and [Mg2+] increases. The acidosis, decrease in K+, and increase in [Mg2+] serve to counteract the effect of the decrease in [Ca2+], to protect against tetany. In the rabbit the hypercitricemia observed upon ACTH administration is accompained by a severe hypocalcemia and drop in blood pressure, resluting in tetanic convulsions. This seems to indicate calcitonin release, independent of the hypercitricemia. Thyroidectomized rabbits show only mild hypocalcemia when given ACTH, but develop a severe acidosis and typical grand mal epileptiform
seizures
. Administration of ACTH and then calcitonin to the goat, an animal resistant to the effects of ACTH alone, simulates the effect observed in the rabbit with respect to changes in blood components and blood pressure. Changes in the blood in the goat and rabbit resemble those in humans before an epileptic seizure. alpha-Melanotropin, containing a portion of the ACTH sequence, reacts in a manner similar to ACTH but more rapidly.
...
PMID:Clinical biochemistry of epilepsy. II. Observations on two types of epileptiform convulsions induced in rabbits with corticotropin. 22 Nov 37
A 7-month-old infant had the infantile spasm syndrome, consisting of flexor and extensor spasms, developmental delay, and hypsarrhythmia.
Corticotropin
produced delay, and hypsarrhythmia.
Corticotropin
produced improvement in the clinical symptoms and reverted the generalized electroencephalographic abnormalities to more focal ones. Removal of a choroid plexus papilloma of the left lateral ventricle was followed by clinical recovery. One year later the child was normal developmentally and neurologically and was
seizure
free on anticonvulsant therapy.
...
PMID:Choroid plexus papilloma and infantile spasms. 44 63
Androsterone sulfate (5alpha-androstan-3alpha-ol-17-one, 3-sodium sulfate) administered to freely moving rats via cerebroventricular cannulae induced analgesia, wet-dog shakes, body jerks, rigidity, Straub tail, hypermotility, excessive grooming, hyperreactivity to stimuli, aggression, escape behavior, EEG spiking, and behavioral and EEG
seizures
. These responses resemble those produced by certain opiate drugs and by
beta-endorphin
, an endogenous peptide; they appear during the 5-min infusion period, persist in some cases for several hours, and are diminished by pretreatment with the narcotic antagonist naloxone. These findings indicate that steroid hormones can act upon at least some of the same central pathways influenced by recognized opiate compounds.
...
PMID:Opiate-like naloxone-reversible effects of androsterone sulfate in rats. 74 33
Massive infantile spasms (MIS), a seizure disorder unique to infants, is considered an age-dependent response of the immature brain to various insults and stressors. The
seizures
improve with ACTH and glucocorticoids, both major components of the brain-adrenal axis. We hypothesized that CNS levels of these hormones are abnormal in infants with MIS and studied CSF from 14 infants with MIS and 13 age-matched controls by analysis for
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH), ACTH, cortisol, and interleukin-1-beta. ACTH levels in CSF of patients were significantly lower than those of controls, but differences in cortisol levels between patients and controls were not statistically significant. CRH levels in both groups were similar and fluctuated diurnally. These results indicate an alteration of specific CNS components of the brain-adrenal axis in MIS.
...
PMID:Brain-adrenal axis hormones are altered in the CSF of infants with massive infantile spasms. 131 21
There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that corticosteroids contribute to the increased neural excitability observed during ethanol withdrawal. In the present study, this was further investigated using mouse strains which differ in ethanol withdrawal severity. DBA/2 (DBA) mice were found to display more severe acute ethanol withdrawal
seizures
than C57BL/6 (C57) mice. Additionally, DBA mice showed a greater stress response than C57 mice, as measured by higher plasma concentrations of
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
and corticosterone, to an acute dose of ethanol. Mimicking withdrawal plasma corticosterone levels by administering corticosterone to ethanol-naive mice resulted in increases in handling-induced convulsions in the range observed during withdrawal. There did not appear to be a strain difference in sensitivity to the excitatory effects of corticosterone. In summary, the greater stress response to ethanol by DBA mice may account, in part, for the more severe ethanol withdrawal syndrome of this strain.
...
PMID:Genetic differences in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responsiveness to acute ethanol and acute ethanol withdrawal. 132 Sep 85
Several experiments were designed to evaluate a secondary humoral response following limbic
seizures
. After baseline antigen binding capacity (ABC) had been determined for the primary response, a second subcutaneous injection of the antigen (human serum albumin) was accompanied by an injection of either lithium (3 mEq/kg)-pilocarpine (30 mg/kg) or one of two comparator treatments: metrazol (30 mg/kg) or cyclophosphamide (50 mg/kg); other rats served as drug controls. Only the groups that received the lithium-pilocarpine (status epilepticus) or cyclophosphamide (no
seizure
) displayed significant immunosuppression after 5 but not 10 days. The results support the hypothesis that
seizure
activity within the amygdaloid-hippocampal complex modulates immunocompetence through
corticotropin
mechanisms.
...
PMID:Transient suppression of a secondary humoral response in rats is evoked by lithium-pilocarpine-induced limbic seizures. 132 17
This study shows inhibition of the increase in locomotor activity induced by ethanol (2 g/kg i.p.) in mice by a low dose (0.1 mg/kg i.p.) of the non-opioid
beta-endorphin
fragment ORG 5878 (des-enkephalin-
gamma-endorphin
). ORG 5878 (0.1 mg/kg i.p.) also significantly antagonised the large increase in electroshock
seizure
threshold produced by ethanol (1.5 g/kg i.p.). In contrast, the hypothermia induced by ethanol (2 g/kg i.p.) was not altered by ORG 5878 (0.1 mg/kg i.p.). The effects of ORG 5878 showed an abnormal dose-response relationship, in that a high dose (1 mg/kg i.p.) did not significantly suppress any of the behavioural effects of ethanol examined although there was some indication that it attenuated the stimulant action of ethanol. ORG 5878 (0.1, 1 mg/kg i.p.) did not have any intrinsic effects on locomotion,
seizure
threshold or body temperature in mice. These results are the first demonstration that ORG 5878 may act as an ethanol antagonist in some paradigms.
...
PMID:Attenuation of the behavioural effects of ethanol in mice by des-enkephalin-gamma-endorphin (ORG 5878). 141 12
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 6 cases of asymptomatic infantile spasms (IS) (mean age, 6.1 months) was collected before and after treatment with
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
. The concentration of CSF tryptophan (TRP) metabolites was analyzed using HPLC and compared to the metabolite concentration in CSF from 10 age-matched controls (mean age, 6.7 months). Levels of CSF serotonin (5-HT), 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), and kynurenine (KYN) at pretreatment were significantly lower in IS patients compared to controls (p < 0.05). In contrast, the levels of CSF 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-OHKY) before ACTH treatment were significantly higher in IS patients than in controls (p < 0.05). After the treatment, significant increases in 5-HIAA and decreases in KYN and 3-OHKY levels (p < 0.05) were observed in CSF of infants whose
seizures
were eliminated by ACTH. These findings suggested that the presence of
seizures
in IS was associated with a significant decrease in serotonergic activity, or that the turnover in the direction of 3-OHKY was altered. The possibility that elimination of
seizures
by ACTH might be related to decreased production of kynurenine metabolites was discussed.
...
PMID:[Changes in CSF tryptophan metabolite levels in infantile spasms]. 141 65
It is thought that certain actions of ethanol involve an interaction with endogenous opioids, including proopiomelanocortin-derived peptides such as
beta-endorphin
. To examine this possibility, we used a sensitive and specific assay for proopiomelanocortin mRNA to obtain an estimate of the activity of the endorphinergic system in the mediobasal hypothalamus and the pituitary of rats exposed for 10 days in an inhalation chamber to either ethanol or water. This protocol causes dependence in the ethanol-exposed group, as demonstrated by the presence of withdrawal
seizures
after cessation of treatment. While ethanol treatment did not affect proopiomelanocortin mRNA levels in the pituitary, the level in hypothalamus was significantly lower in the ethanol-treated animals than in controls. These results suggest that some effect of ethanol may involve the hypothalamic endorphinergic system.
...
PMID:Proopiomelanocortin messenger RNA is decreased in the mediobasal hypothalamus of rats made dependent on ethanol. 147 70
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