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Stress Hormone Responses (stress + hormone_response)
Selected AbstractsStress Hormone Dysregulation at Rest and After Serotonergic Stimulation Among Alcohol-Dependent Men With Extended Abstinence and ControlsALCOHOLISM, Issue 5 2001Robert M. Anthenelli Background: Alcohol dependence has been associated with long-lasting alterations in limbic-hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (LHPA) axis and serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) function. Other conditions that are associated with alcoholism (cigarette smoking and antisocial personality disorder [ASPD]) have been linked with disturbances in these interrelated systems. We evaluated the stress hormone response to 5-HTergic stimulation in alcohol-dependent men with extended abstinence (average abstinence duration, 4.3 months) and controls to determine the relative contributions of alcoholism, cigarette smoking, and ASPD on baseline and provoked plasma cortisol and adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) concentrations. Methods: One hundred nine alcohol-abstinent men with alcohol dependence (62%), habitual smoking (70%), and ASPD (43%) received d,l-fenfluramine (100 mg po) in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial. The group of recovering alcohol-dependent individuals included abstinent primary alcohol-dependent men and alcohol-dependent men with ASPD, whereas the group of non-alcohol-dependent men comprised healthy controls and non-alcohol-dependent men with ASPD. Plasma cortisol and ACTH levels were obtained at AM baseline and at half-hour intervals after drug administration. Subjective ratings of drug response and physiological measures were also obtained at baseline and every 30 min. Results: Abstinent alcohol-dependent men had significantly lower (approximately 20%) AM baseline plasma cortisol concentrations than non-alcohol-dependent men on both challenge days; however, no differences between the groups were observed with regard to resting AM plasma ACTH levels. After adjusting for these baseline differences, recovering alcohol-dependent men (area under curve = 35.6 ± 37.4 [,g/dl] × min) had a twofold greater cortisol response to fenfluramine than non-alcohol-dependent men (area under curve = 17.5 ± 32.5 [,g/dl] × min) (F= 5.1;df= 1,105;p < 0.03). The elevated cortisol response, which occurred primarily along the descending limb of the response curve, was paralleled by a nonsignificant statistical trend for alcohol-dependent men to also exhibit a greater ACTH response to fenfluramine at the 210-min (p < 0.07) and 240-min (p < 0.09) time points as compared with non-alcohol-dependent men. Cigarette smoking and ASPD did not affect hormonal responses, nor could the groups' subjective ratings and physiological measures be distinguished. Conclusions: Alcohol-dependent men with extended abstinence differed from age- and race-matched non-alcohol-dependent men in resting AM and fenfluramine-induced plasma cortisol levels. This dysfunction in glucocorticoid homeostatic mechanisms was associated with alcoholism and not with smoking or ASPD. We also observed a nonsignificant statistical trend for plasma ACTH levels to be elevated among alcohol-dependent men along the descending limb of the response curve. Alcohol-dependent men seemed to have inherited or acquired damage to 5-HT-regulated LHPA axis function, the precise mechanisms and sites of which remain to be determined. [source] Anaesthetic requirement and stress hormone responses in patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery: anterior vs. posterior approachACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 8 2009K. Y. YOO Background: The intensity of nociceptive stimuli reflects the severity of tissue injury. The anaesthetic requirement and stress hormonal responses were determined to learn whether they differ according to different surgical approaches (anterior vs. posterior) during the spinal surgery. Methods: Patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery without neurological deficits were divided into two groups: one having posterior (n=13) and the other having anterior fusion (n=13). The end-tidal sevoflurane concentrations (ETSEVO) required to maintain the bispectral index score at 40,50 were determined. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), central venous pressure (CVP), serum osmolality and plasma concentrations of catecholamines, cortisol and vasopressin (AVP) were measured. Results: There were no differences in MAP, HR, CVP and serum osmolality between the groups. ETSEVO was higher in the anterior than in the posterior group (P<0.05). The plasma concentrations of norepinephrine and cortisol increased in both groups during the surgery, whereas those of epinephrine remained unchanged. AVP concentrations increased during the surgery in the anterior group, and remained unaltered in the posterior group. The anterior group needed more analgesics (P<0.01) during the first 1 h after the operation. Conclusions: The anterior approach required a deeper level of anaesthesia while undergoing spinal surgery and more use of post-operative analgesics than the posterior approach. It was also associated with a more pronounced AVP release during the surgery. [source] Hormone Responses to Social Stress in Abstinent Alcohol-Dependent Subjects and Social Drinkers with No History of Alcohol DependenceALCOHOLISM, Issue 7 2005Cynthia A. Munro Background: Previous studies have described blunted stress hormone responses after pharmacological activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in sober alcoholics. The aim of the present study was to compare ACTH, cortisol, and prolactin responses to a psychological stressor in abstinent alcohol-dependent subjects matched to healthy control subjects. Methods: Individuals who met DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for a history of alcohol dependence but not for other axis I disorders were included in the study (n= 18; mean duration of abstinence ± SEM, 3.5 ± 5.7 years). Social drinkers (n= 23) served as control subjects. The sober alcohol-dependent and control subjects were matched for demographic measures including levels of stress symptoms. All subjects underwent the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST), a laboratory-based psychological stressor. Prestress and poststress plasma ACTH, cortisol, and prolactin levels, as well as a self-report measure of anxiety (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), were obtained. Results: Nondepressed, abstinent alcoholics and control subjects did not differ with regard to age, racial composition, or baseline or poststress ratings of anxiety. Whereas ACTH and cortisol levels increased in response to the TSST, prolactin levels did not. Stress hormone response curves for the three hormones did not differ between the alcoholics and control subjects. Conclusions: When matched for levels of stress, a laboratory-based psychological stress test did not induce differential hormone response curves for abstinent alcoholics and control subjects. [source] The neuro-cardio-endocrine response to acute subarachnoid haemorrhageCLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 5 2002Eric A. Espiner Summary objective Whereas cardiac hormones increase after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), and may contribute to sodium wastage and hyponatraemia, there is controversy concerning the relative roles of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) vs. brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and the factors initiating their secretion. Noting previous work linking stress hormone responses with cardiac injury after SAH, we have studied responses in stress hormones, markers of cardiac injury and the temporal changes in ANP and BNP and related them to changes in sodium status post ictus and during recovery from acute SAH. design, patients, measurements Eighteen patients with verified SAH of variable severity were studied in a single unit for a 14-day period post ictus under controlled conditions of sodium and fluid intake. All received a standardized protocol of daily dexamethasone and nimodipine throughout the study. Severity was graded using criteria of Hess and Hunt at admission. Stress hormones (AVP, catecholamines and admission plasma cortisol), markers of cardiac injury (ECG and daily plasma troponin T) and cardiac hormones (ANP and BNP) were measured daily and related to severity, plasma sodium and renin,aldosterone activity. Hormone levels (ANP, BNP and endothelin) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were also measured in nine patients. results Intense neurohormonal activation (AVP, cortisol and catecholamines) at admission was associated with increased levels of both plasma ANP and BNP whereas levels in CSF were unaffected. In individual patients plasma levels of ANP and BNP were strongly correlated (P < 0·001). Cardiac events (abnormal ECG and/or elevated troponin) occurred in six of seven patients graded severe but neither stress hormones nor cardiac peptides differed significantly in patients with mild (n = 11) vs. severe (n = 7) SAH. During the course of a progressive fall in plasma sodium concentration (P = 0·001), there was a delayed activation of renin,aldosterone which was inversely correlated with declining levels of plasma ANP/BNP (P < 0·002). conclusions Excessive secretion of both ANP and BNP occurs in all patients after acute subarachnoid haemorrhage and is unrelated to severity, stress hormone activation or markers of cardiac injury. Inhibition of renin,aldosterone by cardiac hormones may impair renal sodium conservation and contribute to developing hyponatraemia. In the absence of evidence for activation of natriuretic peptides within the brain, the prompt and consistent increase in both ANP and BNP strongly supports the view that the heart is the source of increased natriuretic peptide secretion after acute subarachnoid haemorrhage. [source] |