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  • Articles  (83)
  • stress  (83)
  • Springer  (83)
  • National Academy of Sciences
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  • 1995-1999  (55)
  • 1975-1979  (28)
  • Medicine  (83)
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  • 1
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    Springer
    Cellular and molecular life sciences 51 (1995), S. 768-774 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Cortisol ; stress ; heat ; Antarctic ; fish
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Radioimmunoassay was used to determine levels of the stress-inducible glucocorticoid, cortisol, circulating in the plasma of the extremely stenothermal Antarctic fishPagothenia borchgrevinki at rest and after heat stress. Fish sampled immediately after capture (−1.9°C) had low cortisol levels (10.4±1.4 ng ml−1, mean±SEM) as did fish which were laboratory rested for 3 days. Sudden exposure to 5°C (48h) resulted in a peak cortisol value after 3 h (69.9±6.8 ng ml−1) whereas exposure to 8°C (6h) resulted in a peak value after 1 h (73.5±8.0 ng ml−1). At both temperatures levels remained significantly elevated (p〈0.05) for the entire period of exposure. Increased temperature also resulted in a significant change in haemoglobin, haematocrit and mean cell haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) (p〈0.05). Plasma lactate was significantly elevated only after exposure to 8°C (p〈0.05). Plasma cortisol levels fromP. borchgrevinki are reported here for the first time and show this cryopelagic Antarctic species to have an unusual hormonal stress profile.
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  • 2
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 52 (1996), S. 643-646 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Aging ; development time ; stress ; energy cost ; oxidative stress ; Drosophila ; homeostasis ; life span
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Life span and development time are considered in the context of the abiotic stresses to which free-living organisms are normally exposed. Under these circumstances, long life span depends upon metabolically efficient stress-resistance genes, which tend to be heterozygous. Similarly, rapid development time tends to be a feature of heterozygous stress-resistant individuals. Therefore, individuals who have high inherited stress resistance should develop fastest and live longest; in addition, they should show high homeostasis in the face of the energy costs of stress. In this way, the stress theory of aging can incorporate the developmental stage, based upon oxidative stress as an important major direct challenge.
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  • 3
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    European journal of clinical pharmacology 8 (1975), S. 323-326 
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Premedication ; stress ; plasma cortisol ; bronchoscopy ; diazepam ; pentobarbitone
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Four groups of 8 patients undergoing bronchoscopy were premedicated with either pentobarbitone 1 mg/kg i.m. followed by i.v. saline, or diazepam 10 mg and saline i.v., or diazepam 10 mg i.m. followed by diazepam 20 mg i.v. and, diazepam 20 mg i.m. and then saline i.v. Both the patients and the bronchoscopist were asked to score the premedication as excellent, satisfactory, unsatisfactory or bad. Plasma cortisol was measured before premedication and before and after bronchoscopy. Preoperatively plasma cortisol increased in every group except that given diazepam 20 mg i.m., and during bronchoscopy it rose in all except the group who received 20 mg diazepam i.v. In patients who considered the premedication unsatisfactory, the rise in plasma cortisol from before premedication until after bronchoscopy was significantly higher than in satisfied subjects. It appears that in patients undergoing bronchoscopy higher doses of diazepam (20 – 30 mg) gave better suppression of stress than 10 mg diazepam, or 1 mg/kg pentobarbitone.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: stress ; plasma catecholamines ; beta-blockade ; hemodynamic effects
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effect of calculation stress on hemodynamic parameters and plasma adrenalin and noradrenalin was studied in two groups of 6 male subjects, before and duringβ-Blockade. One group received propranolol 15 mg i. v. and the other received mepindolol sulphate 0,5 mg i. v. There was an increase in heart rate, cardiac output and blood pressure during mental stress. A significant increase in plasma adrenalin but not in noradrenalin occurred at the same time. The stress-induced rise in HR but not that in blood pressure could be prevented byβ-receptor blockade with proprandolol and mepindolol sulfate. The peripheral resistance (PR) and diastolic blood pressure in stress were even higher after propranolol than in the control study. Propranolol had no effect on the increased adrenalin concentration during stress, but it was prevented by mepindolol sulfate. There was no correlation between the increase in HR and that in adrenalin during stress, but the HR in stress and the HR reaction to infused isoproterenol were highly correlated.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: stress ; heart ; dietary fatty acids ; blood pressure ; rats ; docosahexaenoic acid
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Epidemiological studies suggest that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) are involved in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Stress is known to increase the incidence of CVD and the present study was realised to evaluate some physiological and biochemical effects of dietary docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in male Wistar rats subjected to a psycho social stress. Rats were fed for 8 weeks a semi-purified diet containing 10% of either sunflower seed oil or the same oil supplemented with DHA. This food supply represented 50% of their daily requirement. The remaining 50% were supplied as 45 mg food pellets designed to induce stress in rats by an intermittent-feeding schedule process. The control group (n = 12) was fed the equivalent food ration as a single daily feeding. The physiological cardiovascular parameters were recorded by telemetry through a transmitter introduced in the abdomen. At the end of the experimentation, the heart and adrenals were withdrawn and the fatty acid composition and the catecholamine store were determined. Dietary DHA induced a pronounced alteration of the fatty acid profile of cardiac phospholipids (PL). The level of all the n-6 PUFAs was reduced while 22:6 n-3 was increased. The stress induced a significant increase in heart rate which was not observed in DHA-fed group. The time evolution of the systolic blood pressure was not affected by the stress and was roughly similar in the stressed rats of either dietary group. Conversely, the systolic blood pressure decreased in the unstressed rats fed DHA. Similar data were obtained for the diastolic blood pressure. The beneficial effect of DHA was also observed on cardiac contractility, since the dP/dtmax increase was prevented in the DHA-fed rats. The stress-induced modifications were associated with an increase in cardiac noradrenaline level which was not observed in DHA-fed rats. The fatty acid composition of adrenals was significantly related to the fatty acid intake particularly the neutral lipid fraction (NL) which incorporated a large amount of DHA. Conversely, n-3 PUFAs were poorly incorporated in adrenal phospholipids. Moreover the NL/PL ratio was significantly increased in the DHA fed rats. The amount of adrenal catecholamines did not differ significantly between the groups. These results show that a supplementation of the diet with DHA induced cardiovascular alterations which could be detected in conscious animals within a few weeks. These alterations were elicited by a reduced heart rate and systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
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  • 6
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    Molecular and cellular biochemistry 196 (1999), S. 117-123 
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: stress ; resistance ; protection ; stress gene superfamily ; protein A ; lipopolysaccharide ; heat shock protein ; calorie restriction ; metabolic stress ; carcinogenic stress ; chemical stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Stress genes can be ascribed to have been generated by the organism for their intrinsic urge to survive against the changing environmental odds, during the evolutionary process. This concept has been supported by a large number of reports describing individual types of phenomena. These have been reconciled and globalised in terms of their relevance in this article. Supporting evidences have been drawn from the literature which indicated that by using different types of inducer one can express heat shock proteins. Similarly, several types of stress inducers, such as calorie restriction, LPS stimulation and Staphylococcal Protein-A stimulation, it was possible to induce a wide array of biological, biochemical and immunological reactions. Such biological reactions rendered protection against toxic, carcinogenic, metabolic, as well as biological stresses induced by microorganisms. Heat shock proteins have been implicated as having a role in providing resistance to the host against different types of stressors. In this article, some mechanistic schemes have been proposed as possible pathways globalising such phenomena. A minute amount of stress inducers has been observed to have helped expression of stress resistance genes, providing increased capability to the host to protect itself against myriads of both biotic and abiotic stressors. More understanding about such phenomena would help in keeping our physiological systems vigilant and our bodies healthy, fighting out the stress-related events effectively.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: transcription regulation ; sleep ; circadian ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) gene expression was studied in a seasonal hibernator, the diurnal ground squirrel, Spermophilus lateralis. RNA transcripts of 2.7 and 2.9 kb hybridizing to an HSP70 cDNA were expressed in both brain and peripheral tissues of pre-hibernation euthermic animals; higher levels of expression were observed during the day than during nighttime samples. A decline in the expression of both transcripts occurred in all tissues examined during hibernation that remained low throughout the hibernation season, including the interbout euthermic periods and regardless of time of day. Quantitative comparisons showed pre-hibernation nighttime HSP70 expression to be as low as that observed during hibernation, despite the drastic increase in metabolic state and nearly 30°C difference in body temperature. In contrast to HSP70, some mRNAs, such as β-actin and HSP60, remained relatively constant, while others, such as glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, increased in specific tissues during the hibernation season. These results indicate that the expression of a highly conserved gene involved in protection from cellular stress, HSP70, can vary with an animal's arousal state.
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  • 8
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    Cytotechnology 19 (1996), S. 207-214 
    ISSN: 1573-0778
    Keywords: Heat-shock protein ; heat resistance ; hepatoma ; multidrug resistance ; P-glycoprotein ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Abstract We have earlier isolated a glucocorticoid-resistant, dedifferentiated rat hepatoma variant, the clone 2, which exhibited deficient stress activation of the major stress-inducible heat-shock protein hsp68.Multidrug-resistant variants were isolated from clone 2 cells using increasing concentrations of colchicine. The induction deficiency of hsp68 was maintained in the colchicine-resistant clone 2 cells grown for several months in the presence of 1 μg/ml colchicine (termed ashighly multidrug-resistant variant) indicating that this heat-shock protein is not involved in the multidrug resistance. No alteration of the protein synthesis pattern was observed except the strong increase of the P-glycoprotein, which correlated with high level of corresponding mRNA. Stableheat-resistant variants of clone 2 were also isolated, which showed increaseddrug resistance to several drugs, i.e. they becamemoderately multidrug-resistant. This moderate multidrug resistance of the heat-resistant variants was further increased by stepwise selection with colchicine (highly multidrug-resistant heat-resistant variants). The levels of P-glycoprotein mRNA and protein were elevated both in the heat-resistant, non drug selected, moderately drug-resistant and in heatresistant, colchicine selected, highly drug-resistant variants. Decreased retention of antitumor drugs was observed in all multidrug-resistant variants indicating that P-glycoprotein was functional. Verapamil increased doxorubicin retention and cytotoxicity significantly. Our results showing that severely stressed hepatoma cells overexpressed the multidrug resistance gene(s) raise the possibility that the P-glycoprotein may participate in protection against enviromental stress such as heat.
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1573-0778
    Keywords: apoptosis ; bcl-2 ; cell death ; hybridoma ; osmolarity ; pH ; shear ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Abstract It has been demonstrated that the cell lines used for production of biopharmaceuticals are highly susceptible to apoptosis, and that over-expression of the bcl-2 oncogene can protect cells from death. Stress associated with the deprivation of nutrients has been shown to be the main cause of apoptosis in culture. We have extended these studies by investigating the mechanism of cell death under conditions of sub-optimal pH, shear stress and hyperosmolarity, and the protective action of bcl-2 over-expression. At pH 6, there was no clear evidence of protection from cell death. However, at pH 8, the viability of the bcl-2 transfected cells was about 20% higher relative to the control cells. Cultivation of control cells in a flat bottomed bioreactor with a magnetic stirrer bar without a pivot ring resulted in exposure of the cells to a high attrition effect. As a result, cell growth was retarded and a high level of cell death by apoptosis was observed. Under the same conditions, the bcl-2 transfected cell line exhibited a nearly five fold increase in viable cell number. This finding indicates that under apoptosis-suppressed conditions, shear stress can stimulate cell growth. Batch cultivation of both control and bcl-2 transfected cells in 350 and 400 mOsm media resulted in suppression of cell growth, athough the effect was most marked in the control cell line. Adaptation of control cells to 400 mOsm proved to be impossible to achieve. However, the bcl-2 transfected cells exhibited resistance to the osmotic stress resulting in long term adaptation to a high salt environment. Specific productivity of bcl-2 transfected cells grown in high osmolarity medium was 100% higher than that produced by non- adapted bcl-2 transfected cells grown in normal osmolarity medium. These results demonstrate that bcl-2 has a beneficial effect on hybridoma cultivation under a wide range of culture stresses.
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  • 10
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 79 (1975), S. 241-244 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: vascular permeability ; mast cells ; stress ; heparin ; histamine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The role of the mast cells in the mechanism of disturbance of vascular permeability arising in rats immobilized for 24 h was studied. The antihistamine drug dimebolin was found to have a protective action and to reduce the depth and extent of the disturbances of vascular permeability. This effect appeared only if mast cells were present and it was combined with marked degranulation of these cells. The protective action of small doses of heparin indicates that it may play a mediator role in the mechanism of action of dimebolin. It is postulated that the mast cells may have both a damaging (through the liberation of histamine and serotonin) and a protective (through the liberation of heparin) action on vascular permeability during immobilization.
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  • 11
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1471-1473 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: stress ; renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In adult male rats moderate neurogenic stress was induced by crowding for periods of 1 and 7 days. The angiotensin I concentration and renin activity in the blood plasma and the aldosterone concentration in the peripheral blood and adrenal tissues were determined radioimmunologically. Crowding the rats for 1 day led to a considerably marked increase in the adrenal aldosterone concentration in the plasma. The aldosterone concentration in the blood and adrenals of the rats was lowered 7 days after the beginning of neurogenic stress but the renin activity and angiotensin I concentration in the peripheral blood plasma were raised. The causes of the dissociation observed in the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in response to neurogenic stress of varied duration are discussed.
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  • 12
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1715-1717 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: Mitotic activity ; stress ; moderate hypothermia ; cell division ; circadian rhythms
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of moderate hypothermia on mitotic activity of the corneal epithelium of albino rats was studied. The animals were cooled to 28°C by a contact method for 1 h. Cooling was carried out in the early morning (6 a.m.), at noon, and in the evening (6 p.m.). The response of the epithelium to cooling was found to depend on the time of day. The most marked inhibition of mitotic activity (by 14 times) occurred in the afternoon, 3 h after cooling at noon. A tendency toward restoration of normal cell division was observed 6 and 12 h later. The number of mitoses was reduced 3 h after cooling in the evening, but no changes in mitotic activity were discovered 6 and 12 h later. No changes were found 3 and 6 h after cooling in the morning, but 12 h later cell division was inhibited.
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  • 13
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 81 (1976), S. 778-780 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: duodenum ; stress ; changes in organelles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The duodenal mucosa of rats was studied electron-microscopically after exposure to stress (immobilization on a special frame) for 24 h. Moderately severe changes were found in the enterocytes, manifested chiefly as focal destruction of the mitochondrial cristae and an increased number of lysosomes. The results correlate with results of histochemical investigations of the same object published previously. Changes are also described in the goblet cells and blood vessels.
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  • 14
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 81 (1976), S. 796-798 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: vascular permeability ; microcirculation ; stress ; histamine ; mast cells
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Immobilization of rats for 1 or 3 h leads to an increase in vascular permeability for ink particles and disturbances of the microcirculation in the mesenteric microvessels (formation of aggregates, appearance of “plasmatic vessels,” closure of arteriolar-venular shunts). An important role in the pathogeneis of these changes is played by histamine liberated from the mast cells without their undergoing degranulation. Liberation of histamine may be the trigger mechanism in the development of disturbances of vascular permeability during prolonged immobilization stress.
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  • 15
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: pituitary-adrenocortical system ; adaptation ; [75Se] selenomethionine ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The principles governing the distribution of the absorbed dose and the dynamics of its formation were studied by a radiometric technique in vivo during the course of 1 year after injection of 0.033 μ Ci/g of [75Se] selenomethionine into rats and the functional state of the pituitary-adrenal adaptive system was studied at the same time by determination of the plasma corticosterone level. The preparation was shown to have high affinity for the organs of the endocrine system. Evidence of increased functional activity of the adaptation system was given by an increase in the corticosterone concentration in the animals' blood plasma after injection of the radioactive preparation, which was significantly higher than in the control 3, 6, and 10 months after the beginning of the experiments. Exposure to acute stress (induced by histamine and formalin) 10 months after injection of [75Se] selenomethionine did not produce the sharp increase in the plasma corticosterone concentration characteristic of the control rats; this points to extreme stress of the pituitary-adrenal system and its inability to respond to additional loads. It is postulated that analysis of the functional state of the adaptation system could provide the key to the assessment of the biological effect of small doses of radiation.
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  • 16
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 88 (1979), S. 774-777 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: mitotic activity ; stress ; hypothermia ; DNA synthesis ; cornea
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of repeated cooling on the state of the adrenals and on the mitotic cycle and number of DNA-synthesizing nuclei in the corneal epithelium was studied in albino rats. The animals were cooled by a contact method to a body temperature of 28°C and exposed at that temperature 1 h daily for 5 days. Marked activation of the adrenals was observed: The weight of the glands was doubled, their cholesterol concentration reduced by two-thirds, their blood 11-hydroxycorticosteroid level increased fourfold, and their adrenalin excretion stimulated. The mean number of mitoses in the cornea was reduced by half. The depression was not connected with any change in the rate of mitosis but was due to delay in interphases. There was no change in the level of pathological mitoses. Chronic exposure to stress was not accompanied by any change in the number of DNA-synthesizing nuclei or the intensity of DNA synthesis.
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  • 17
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1513-1515 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: intestine ; enzyme spectrum ; exposure to heat ; hydrolytic function ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Acute experiments on young rats showed that exposure to heat (40–41°C) and cold (5–6°C) and injections of ACTH (4 units/100 g body weight per injection) during the first week of life led to a sharp decrease in total amylolytic and invertase activity of homogenates and everted segments of the small intestine of the animals. The inhibition of intestinal function continued throughout the next 2 weeks of life.
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  • 18
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 84 (1977), S. 929-932 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: catecholamines ; corticosteroids ; stress ; swimming ; physical fatigue
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of adrenocortical hormones on catecholamine synthesis in the adrenals and heart of rats was studied after prolonged swimming (8 h). Catecholamine synthesis during incubation of the adrenals with L-tyrosine was sharply depressed after swimming. Addition of hydrocortisone or prednisolone in vitro (50 μg per sample) and also injection of these hormones in vivo (50 mg/kg intramuscularly, 3 h before decapitation) increased catecholamine synthesis in the adrenals of the swimming rats but not of intact rats. On incubation of the adrenals of swimming rats in the presence of L-dopa and L-noradrenalin catecholamine synthesis was reduced compared with that in intact animals and was not restored on the addition of glucocorticoids. No stimulating effect of aldosterone on catecholamine synthesis in the adrenals could be detected in the presence of L-tyrosine. On incubation of the heart tissue of swimming rats in the presence of L-tyrosine and L-dopa, catecholamine synthesis was depressed and was not restored by glucocorticoids invitro or in vivo. It is concluded that glucocorticoids can restore catecholamine synthesis when depressed by intensive physical fatigue by acting on the tyrosine hydroxylase stage.
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  • 19
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 88 (1979), S. 1056-1058 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: stress ; pathological mitoses ; aneuploidy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract It was shown previously that exposure to stressors led to a decrease in the number of mitoses in the cornea as a result of G2−M delay. The index of labeled nuclei and level of pathological mitoses were unchanged. It is now shown that injection of pyrogenal or contact hypothermia for 1 h to 28–30°C did not cause reactive inhibition to develop in adrenalectomized rats, but led to a significant increase in the level of pathological mitoses in the cornea from 4.3–6.3% in intact and adrenalectomized rats to 10.6–12.5% in adrenalectomized rats exposed to stress. Karyotypic analysis of the bone marrow cells under these conditions revealed a significant increase in the number of aneuploid cells (both hypo- and hyperdiploid).
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1573-6822
    Keywords: cadmium ; corticosteroid secretion ; Y-1 adrenal cells ; stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In vitro and in vivo cadmium toxicity studies focus almost exclusively on CdCl2 effects. Only a few studies have used adrenocortical cells and tissue to determine cadmium salt effects during stress of adrenocorticotropin stimulation. Because several biologically relevant water-soluble cadmium salts exist, this study extended work with CdCl2 to evaluate the acute adrenocortical cell steroid secretory responses to non-lethal cadmium acetate (CdAc2) and CdSO4 4 concentrations. Control or ACTH-stimulated cultured Y-1 mouse adrenal tumor cells (ATCC) which secrete 20α-dihydroprogesterone (20-DHP) were incubated for 0.5 h in serum-free medium (FMEM) with or without 0.5, 1.0, 5.0, 10.0, 50.0, 100.0, 500.0 and 1000.0 µg CdAc2 or CdSO4/ml FMEM (1.9, 3.8, 19.0, 38.0, 190.0, 380.0 and 1900.0 µmol/L, respectively). For each salt, cell viability was measured at the end of the incubation using live cell trypan blue exclusion. In addition, cumulative CdAc2 effects during 4 h incubations and effect reversibility were determined for control and stimulated cells. After each experimental incubation, the 20-DHP secreted into the medium was determined by radioimmunoassay. Over 80% of all control or ACTH-stimulated cells were viable after incubation in the presence or absence of various CdAc2 or CdSO4 concentrations. Cadmium acetate and sulfate inhibited basal and ACTH-stimulated steroid secretion in a dose-dependent manner. For basal steroid secretion the CdAc2 concentration that first significantly inhibited was 0.5 µg/ml medium (1.9 µmol/L); stimulated secretion was significantly inhibited beginning at 5.0 µg/ml (19.0 µmol/L) and the concentration reducing stimulated 20-DHP secretion by 50% (IC50) was 5.6 µg/ml (21.3 µmol/L). Similarly, the first CdSO4 concentration to significantly inhibit basal and ACTH-stimulated steroid secretion was 10.0 µg/ml medium (39.0 µmol/L); the IC50 was 7.8 µg/ml (29.8 µmol/L). Except that basally secreting Cd2+ 2+-treated cells almost doubled 20-DHP secretion after Cd2+ removal and subsequent incubation with ACTH, all basal and ACTH-stimulated steroid secretion was irreversibly inhibited by every CdAc2 concentration. All CdAc2 concentrations initiated and maintained cumulative inhibitory effects on basal and ACTH-stimulated steroid secretion over a 4 h period. Reversibility and cumulative CdSO4 treatment studies were not conducted. Based on the results from the present studies, both CdAc2 and CdSO4 appeared to incrementally inhibit control and ACTH-stimulated steroidogenesis without affecting cell viability and to be more potent inhibitors of adrenocortical cell steroid secretion than CdCl2. Finally, CdAc2 effects on control and stimulated cells were cumulative and irreversible.
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  • 21
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    Neuroscience and behavioral physiology 29 (1999), S. 45-51 
    ISSN: 1573-899X
    Keywords: Brain ; rats ; stress ; peptides
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This report describes studies of delta-sleep-inducing peptide in the mechanism of compensating emotional behavior following disruption of a number of structures of the limbic complex (the septum and amygdala). Studies were performed in male Wistar rats. Peptide was given i.p. at a dose of 60 nmol/kg. The individual/typological characteristics of the rats' behavior and their resistance to stress was predicted using an open field test. Emotional stress was modeled by immobilizing the animals and applying electric shocks to the skin. Stress was assessed in terms of survival, adrenal hypertrophy, and thymic involution in stress conditions. Bilateral lesioning to brain structures was carried out by anodic polarization. The results obtained showed that the septum and amygdala play a significant role in the mechanisms of resistance to emotional stress. Bilateral disruption of these structures significantly decreased the animals' resistance to emotional stress, producing alterations in behavior in the open field test, increasing the lethality of acute emotional stress, and inducing changes in stress marker organs (the adrenals and thymus) in stress conditions, as compared to controls. Administration of peptide to animals with lesions to the septum or amygdala increased their resistance to emotional stress, as indicated by open field test behavior, survival, and adrenal and thymus weight in stress conditions. Thus, doses of delta-sleep-inducing peptide partially reverse reductions in stress resistance in animals with lesions to structures of the limbic complex.
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: stress ; nootropics ; antidepressants ; psychostimulators ; pyridopyrimidines
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A new pyrido[1,2-a]pyrimidine derivative causes psychostimulation in albino rats expressed in accelerated learning during the elaboration of the avoidance reaction in a shuttle box. It is also shown that on a model of acute emotional stress induced by a disturbance of the unambiguity of cause-effect relationships in the experimental setting this compound exhibits a stress-protecting effect which is comparable to the effect of piracetam.
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  • 23
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 119 (1995), S. 336-339 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: radiation exposure ; stress ; bone marrow ; thymus ; spleen ; peripheral blood
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Examination of processes occurring in the hematopoietic system of rats subjected to emotional stress shortly after 30-day exposure to low-dose γ-radiation revealed the inhibitory influence of radiation exposure on the development of adaptive reactions by this system in the stressed animals.
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  • 24
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    Keywords: stress ; sex-related differences ; lipid peroxidation ; antioxidant system ; cardiovascular damage
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    Notes: Abstract It is shown that during stress a rapid twofold increase of erythrocyte acid resistance in rats of both sexes was followed by a 1.5-fold decrease toward the 60th min in males and the 120th min in females. In males, in contrast to females, the level of malonic dialdehyde was raised not only during stress, but also 1 and 24 hours after its completion. Stress-induced dystrophic changes of cardiomyocytes were more marked in males. The area of myocardial damage in females was almost twice as small as in males. It is assumed that the better resistance of females to stress-induced cardiovascular damage may be due to increased efficacy of antioxidant mechanisms inhibiting lipid peroxidation.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: Wistar rats ; August rats ; stress ; corticosterone ; insulin ; adaptation
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    Notes: Abstract Control and acutely stressed August rats have corticosterone levels 62% and 15% higher, respectively, than their Wistar counterparts, indicating that the activity of stress-mediating hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system in August rats is higher. On the other hand, the intensity of stress reactions and, consequently, the degree of activation of this system in August rats are 40–50% lower, as is the blood level of creatine phosphokinase. During adaptation to stress, August and Wistar rats show a similar decrease in the stress reaction and in its damaging effects. However, judging from the blood corticosterone/insulin ratio, adaptation to stress in August rats coincides with intensification of catabolic processes and a reduction in the efficiency of energy production.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: arterial hypertension ; animal models ; heredity ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract Using the catheter technique, temporal variations in arterial pressure and heart rate were examined before, during, and after a 60-minute immobilization-induced stress in normotensive, spontaneously hypertensive, and stress-susceptible awake rats. Stress-susceptible rats developed a hypertensive response to the stress more rapidly than did either normotensive or spontaneously hypertensive animals.
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  • 27
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    Keywords: interleukin-1α ; lymphocyte-activating factor ; botanical preparations ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract It is found that a short-term rotation stress triggers the production of lymphocyte-activating factors by peritoneal macrophages of (CBA×C57BI/6), F1 mice and raises blood levels of interleukin-1α and corticosterone. Botanical preparations administered to unstressed animals induce no secretion of lymphocyte-activating factors by macrophages and do not change blood levels of interleukin-1α and corticosterone. The herbals limit the stress-induced production of lymphocyte-activating factors by peritoneal macrophages.
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  • 28
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 126 (1998), S. 882-885 
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    Keywords: hemorrhagic shock ; adaptation ; stress ; antioxidant protection
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    Notes: Abstract Modeling of hemorrhagic shock in rats adapted to immobilization stress required the removal of greater volumes of blood than that in control rats. The antioxidant system activation in adapted rats was accompanied by an increase in resistance to blood loss. The antishock effect of preliminary adaptation to stress was shown for the first time.
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  • 29
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 121 (1996), S. 237-240 
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    Keywords: pathological pain ; etimyzol ; stress ; adaptation
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    Notes: Abstract Administration of etimyzol in a dose of 4 mg/kg to rats with deafferentation pain syndrome reduces the incidence of the syndrome and its severity. This effect is associated with activation of the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-adrenal system. Systematic administration of the preparation models repeated stress, thus developing adaptation.
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  • 30
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 121 (1996), S. 348-351 
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    Keywords: heart ; liver ; Na,K-ATPase ; lipid peroxidation ; stress ; adaptation to stress ; adaptation to hypoxia
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    Notes: Abstract Na,K-ATPase activity is shown to be lowered more than twice 2 hours after emotional pain stress in comparison with the initial level, remaining practically unchanged during the subsequent 24 hours. Adaptation to repeated stress results in a 50% activation of Na,K-ATPase. A protective effect is demonstrated in long-term stress against the background of preadaptation. Adaptation to periodic hypoxia inhibits liver Na,K-ATPase to the same extent as does acute stress. Against the background of preadaptation to periodic hypoxia, stress does not aggravate the drop of Na,K-ATPase activity. Adaptation to stress inhibits accumulation of products ofin vitro-induced lipid peroxidation in the heart 1.4-fold and does not affect it in the liver, whereas adaptation to hypoxia sharply accelerates the accumulation of oxidized products in both organs, which probably explains the activation of liver Na,K-ATPase in adaptation to stress and its inhibition in adaptation to hypoxia.
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  • 31
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 121 (1996), S. 516-519 
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    Keywords: central nervous system ; T lymphocyte ; macrophage ; stress ; blood loss
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    Notes: Abstract A study is made of the slow cascade drifting mechanism of adaptation, which is involved in hyperplasia of the hemopoietic tissue under the action of extreme factors of various genesis on the organism. Being universal in nature, the main vector of this mechanism is shown to pass sequentially through the nervous, endocrine, T-cell, macrophagal, and hemopoietic systems.
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  • 32
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 122 (1996), S. 668-670 
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    Keywords: stress ; immunosuppression ; serotoninergic and dopaminergic systems
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    Notes: Abstract The spleens of CBA mice stressed by being immobilized for 3 h in the supine position and then immunized with sheep erythrocytes showed evidence of immunosuppression manifested in reduced numbers of plaque-forming cells on day 4 and of rosette-forming cells on day 5 after the stress and immunization. The depletion of serotonin stores in the brain caused by p-chlorophenylalanine administered 48 h before stressing the animals abolished immunosuppression under the action of immobilization stress, and a similar effect resulted from the activation of postsynaptic dopamine receptors D1 and D2 by apomorphine injected at 30 min before stress. The prevention of immunosuppression observed to occur when the balance between the serotoninergic and dopaminergic systems was shifted so that the latter system became predominant, suggests that the stress reduces immune reactivity by altering the brain's neurochemical pattern and interfering with the mechanisms of neuroimmunomodulation.
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  • 33
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 122 (1996), S. 708-711 
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    Keywords: stress ; lymphocytes ; immunodepression ; metapyrone
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    Notes: Abstract Study of lymphoid organs and T and B cells in white rats shows that long-term stress causes progressive suppression of the immune response. Blockade of steroid hormone synthesis in the adrenal cortex prevents the development of immunodepression, implying a protective effect of such a blockade against stress-related secondary immunodeficiency.
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  • 34
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 122 (1996), S. 1188-1190 
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    Keywords: adaptation to physical load ; stress ; prostaglandins ; corticosterone ; insulin
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    Notes: Abstract Adaptation to physical load protects against stress and other damage. It is suggested that this protection is associated with activation of prostaglandins E (PGE) and I2 (PGI2). Plasma contents of PGE2, PGI2, and thromboxane A2 (TxA2) and the severity of stress reaction are measured in male Wistar rats adapted to swimming. Training increases the concentrations of these prostaglandins and the prostaglandin/TxA2 ratio, reduces almost 2-fold the severity of stress reaction as assessed by the plasma corticosterone concentration and corticosterone/insulin ratio. After stress, the PGI2 and PGI2/TxA2 in adapted rats were, respectively, 33 and 31% higher than in unadapted. These findings suggest that prostaglandins are involved in the reduction of stress reaction.
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  • 35
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    Keywords: adaptation ; nitric oxide ; NO donor ; NO synthetase inhibitor ; stress ; gastric ulcer ; protection
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    Notes: Abstract The iron dinitrosyl complex (a NO donor), adaptation to stress, and their combination suppress the stress-induced ulcer formation. Nω-nitro-L-arginine, a NO synthetase inhibitor, reduce the antistress effect of adaptation. Severe stress induces a sharp decrease in the NO production in the liver and brain. After adaptation to stress, the NO production in the liver and brain does not differ significantly from control levels. However, adaptation attenuates a decrease in the NO production in the liver caused by severe stress.
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  • 36
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 127 (1999), S. 254-255 
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    Keywords: taurine ; stress ; electric stimulation
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    Notes: Abstract Intravenous infusion of taurine prevents a decrease in cardiac pump function caused by electric stimulation of the aortic arch and promotes recovery of systemic blood flow and total peripheral resistance.
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  • 37
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    Keywords: anxiety ; substance P ; diazepam-binding inhibitor ; neuropeptide Y ; stress ; inbred rats
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    Notes: Abstract The content of substance P in the hippocampus, hypothalamus, and midbrain of WAG/G rats surpassed these in Fischer-344 rats. After a 15-min stay in a shuttle box, the level of substance P in the hypothalamus and especially in the hippocampus decreased only in WAG/G rats. The content of diazepam-binding inhibitor in the hippocampus and midbrain of WAG/G rats was higher than in Ficher-344 rats. Stress increased the content of diazepam-binding inhibitor only in Fischer-344 rats. Midbrain content of neuropeptide Y in intact and stressed WAG/G rats was significantly lower than in Fischer-344 rats. There were no interstrain differences in the initial hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y between WAG/G and Fischer-344 rats. However, 15-min stress in the shuttle box increased hypothalamic content of neuropeptide Y only in Fischer-344 rats. Thus, high-anxiety rats are characterized by a low density of benzodiazepine receptors, decreased levels of substance P and diazepam-binding inhibitor, and high brain content of neuropeptide Y.
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  • 38
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 128 (1999), S. 933-935 
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    Keywords: δ-sleep-inducing peptide ; stress ; erythrocytes ; membranes
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    Notes: Abstract δ-Sleep-inducing peptide (1 μg/ml) added to erythrocyte suspension from intact rats enhanced quenching of membrane tryptophanyl fluorescence with pyrene and increased the microviscosity of zones of protein-lipid contacts. Microviscosity and polarity of membrane lipid phase remained unchanged. Exogenous δ-sleep-inducing peptide increased the negative surface charge of the erythrocyte membrane. During cold stress, the efficiency of tryptophane fluorescence quenching with pyrene decreased and microviscosity of protein-lipid contacts decreased, while microviscosity of lipid layer of the erythrocyte membranes did not change; polarity of deep membrane layers and negative surface charge increased. δ-Sleep-inducing peptide normalized the efficiency tryptophane fluorescence quenching with pyrene and membrane microviscosity, polarity, and surface charge.
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  • 39
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 121 (1996), S. 20-21 
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    Keywords: opiate receptors ; adaptation ; arrhythmia ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract Rats adapted to stress showed a decreased severity and incidence of cardiac arrhythmias induced by epinephrine, and these effects of adaptation were abolished by naloxone. It is suggested that stress adaptation mitigates arrhythmia by activating the endogenous opioid system and stimulating the μ-opiate receptors.
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  • 40
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    Keywords: opiate receptors ; stress ; catecholamines
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    Notes: Abstract The agonists of μ-opiate receptors, DAGO and DALDA, prevent stress-induced enhancement of99mTc-pyrophosphate accumulation in the myocardium, which attests to cardioprotective activity of these opioids. This phenomenon is presumably related to modulating effect of these agents on the adrenergic stage in pathogenesis of stress-induced damage to the heart.
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  • 41
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    Keywords: Ca2+ transport ; α-crystallin ; adaptation ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract α-Crystallin, an endogenous low-molecular-weight protein with chaperone activity, exerted protective effects on membrane systems of Ca2+ transport into the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscles. Protective action of α-crystallin depended on the body state. This effect was not observed in the control and after adaptation to stress, while after stress, especially against the background of adaptation, α-crystallin increased the rate of Ca2+ transport into the sarcoplasmic reticulum and thermal resistance of Ca2+ pump. The mechanisms of α-crystallin activation during stress are discussed.
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  • 42
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 119 (1995), S. 567-570 
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    Keywords: adaptation to hypoxia ; lipid peroxidation ; inflammation ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract Preadaptation of rats to altitude hypoxia results in reduced activation of lipid peroxidation during subsequent stress, inflammation, or both, as compared to hypoxiaunadapted animals, with the result that secondary changes in organs and tissues of adapted rats are much less pronounced and conditions are created for alleviating the acute inflammation and the stress reaction.
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  • 43
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 120 (1995), S. 694-696 
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    Keywords: corticosteroid receptors ; aldosterone ; brain ; hippocampus ; stress ; individual behavior
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    Notes: Abstract Differences in3H-aldosterone binding with hippocampus cytosol receptors were found to be dependent on the behavioral type of male Wistar rats in the “emotional resonance” test. These differences were not observed in the cytosol analysis of the remaining part of the brain. Control rats and rats subjected to short-term stress by painful electrical stimulation showed a long-term drop of3H-aldosterone binding with hippocampus cytosol in active as compared to passive animals preferring a closed space.
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  • 44
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    Keywords: stress ; adaptation ; cholinergic regulation ; heart
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    Notes: Abstract Rats were adapted to the continuous action of moderate immobilization stress for 1, 5, and 15 days. Thereafter the threshold of ventricular fibrillation and the heart rate were compared with biochemical indexes of adrenergic and cholinergic regulation of the heart, namely, catecholamine, cAMP, and cGMP content, acetylcholinesterase and choline acetyltransferase activity, the number and affinity of cardiac muscarinic receptors, and the catecholamine content in the adrenals. The threshold of ventricular fibrillation fell on the 1st day due to a predominance of the adrenergic regulatory effect over the cholinergic. Adaptation for 5 days is attended by a rise of the threshold of ventricular fibrillation to the norm and by marked bradycardia, both these shifts being abolished by atropine. Elevation of the heart's resistance to arrhythmias stems from the prevalence of cholinergic regulation. Equilibrium between the cholinergic and adrenergic effects on the heart was found as a results of 15-day adaptation. The normal threshold of ventricular fibrillation and the increased cardiac resistance to arrhythmia were preserved and dictated largely by adaptive changes at the cardiomycyte level.
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  • 45
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 120 (1995), S. 981-983 
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    Keywords: heparin ; mast cells ; ACTH ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract A morphometric analysis of mast cell populations in the subcutaneous tissue and mesentery from rats demonstrated stimulation of heparin secretion by adrenocorticotropic hormone. Thirty minutes after the administration of this hormone to unstressed rats, the functional stutus of mast cells did not differ from that of such cells from rats stressed by being immobilized for 30 min after receiving physiological saline instead of the hormone. In contrast, the 30-minute immobilization failed to elicit an adequate secretory response from the mast cells of rats in which the release of adrenocorticotropic hormone had been blocked by dexamethasone.
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  • 46
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    Keywords: transauricular electrostimulation ; stress ; myocardial infarction ; catecholamines ; met-enkephalin
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    Notes: Abstract Adaptation to transauricular electrostimulation decreases the content of epinephrine in the adrenal glands and norepinephrine in the heart. Immobilization stress has no appreciable effect on the content of catecholamines in the heart and adrenal glands. In animals with myocardial infarction, the content of norepinephrine in the heart decreases 2-fold, while the content of epinephrine in the adrenals decreases inconsiderably. Adaptation to transauricular electrostimulation is associated with a rise in met-enkephalin concentration. Preadaptation induces a more pronounced rise of met-enkephalin and promotes normalization of epinephrine in the adrenals, without changing the content of norepinephrine in the heart.
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  • 47
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 125 (1998), S. 547-549 
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    Keywords: intereleukin-1 ; lymphocyte activating factor ; lysosome-cation proteins ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract Acute cold stress induced lymphocyte activating factor production by peritoneal macrophages and elevation of blood corticosterone concentration in the rat, while lysosomecation indices significantly decreased. Multiple cold stimuli initiated lymphocyte activating factor production by peritoneal macrophages in the rat, but corticosterone blood concentration decreased and lysosome-cation indices remained unchanged. The difference in lymphocyte activating factor production in response to single and multiple cold stimuli has been demonstrated for the first time.
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  • 48
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 127 (1999), S. 236-239 
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    Keywords: cold ; stress ; corticosterone ; lipid peroxidation ; tocopherol
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    Notes: Abstract The relationships between serum corticosterone content, intensity of lipid peroxidation (LPO) and the concentration of tocopherol in tissues, and the transmembrane potential in thymocytes were studied in rats exposed to two consecutive coolings. Both exposures increased serum corticosterone. The first exposure activated LPO in the serum, while the second stimulated LPO in thymocytes. The second cooling lowered body temperature to a lesser extent than the first one. Body temperature did not depend on the content of LPO products or corticosterone, but negatively correlated with the content of tocopherol in the brain hemispheres and adrenal glands. The rats exhibiting high-level thermoregulation after the first exposure to cold showed a higher thymocyte transmembrane potential after the second cooling. The second exposure potentiated the negative relationship between the brain and serum content of corticosterone and LPO products, which indicates that the content of LPO products cannot be used as an index of stress intensity.
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  • 49
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 127 (1999), S. 120-122 
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    Keywords: stress ; skin ; glycosaminoglycans
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    Notes: Abstract Here we studied the effects of water-immersion emotional stress on the components of several skin biopolymers in rats. The resistance of animals to stress was determined in preliminary experiments. This model of stress induced similar effects on the studied components in stress-resistant and stress-predisposed rats.
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  • 50
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    Keywords: sialoadhesin ; hemopoietic islets ; granulocyte-macrophagic precursors ; bone marrow ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract In leukemia-prone AKR mice, adaptation to 10-h immobilization stress increases the content of sialoadhesin-positive macrophages to the level of intact (CBA×AKR)F1 hybrids. Hybrid mice responds to stress by a slight reduction of this parameter. The contents of granulocytic hemopoietic islets and committed granulomonocyte precursors in the bone marrow after stress undergo opposite changes. Unlike hybrids, granulocytopoiesis in AKR mice is not activated by stress.
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  • 51
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 128 (1999), S. 794-796 
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    Keywords: stress ; adaptation ; behavioral and somatic indices ; rats
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    Notes: Abstract We developed a model of stress (free swimming in a cage) which allows to assess the immediate and long-term effects of emotional stress. This stress induced typical changes in the open field test and ulceration of gastric mucosa. Unlike standard immobilization stress the proposed technique excludes a traumatic factor, it is well reproducible and simple.
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  • 52
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    Keywords: August and Wistar Rats ; stress ; ulcer formation ; adaptation ; behavior
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    Notes: Abstract The incidence of gastric ulceration induced by acute emotional stress in Wistar rats is 3 times higher than in August rats, and the mean number of gastric ulcers in Wistar rats 6.3-fold surpassed that in August rats. Wistar rats predisposed to stress-induced ulceration displayed suppressed locomotor and exploratory activities in the open field test, while August rats had more stable behavioral patterns and enhanced exploratory activity after stress. Short-term preadaptation to hypobaric hypoxia for 6 days attenuated stress-induced gastric ulceration, whereas long-term adaptation (40 days) aggravated the severity of gastric ulcers in August and Wistar rats. The interstrain differences in stress-induced ulceration persisted after adaptation. The data suggest that these differences are related to genetically determined peculiarities of production and metabolism of NO and glucocorticoids in August and Wistar rats.
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  • 53
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 80 (1975), S. 1032-1034 
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    Keywords: Blood loss ; stress ; cyclic AMP ; blood donation
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    Notes: Abstract The concentration of cyclic adenosine-3′,5′-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) in the plasma of blood donors (10 regular, 28 first time) was investigated by the competitive protein binding method on the day before donation and shortly after the removal of 20 ml blood. Two types of responses of the donors to donation were established: with no change and with a change in the cyclic AMP level. In accordance with these responses the donors were conventionally divided into two subgroups-“stable” and “reactive.” The cyclic AMP level in the regular donors was higher than in the primary, and at the time of taking the blood it was increased still more, especially among the subjects of “reactive” type. The cyclic AMP concentration in first-time donors of reactive type was either lower or higher than the mean value on the day before donation, and at the time of bleeding it rose or fell respectively to the mean level.
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  • 54
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 80 (1975), S. 1475-1477 
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    Keywords: bone marrow ; stress ; migration of T-lymphocytes
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    Notes: Abstract From 6 to 9 h after the beginning of the response to stress caused by immobilization for 6 h, cells with antigenic (θ-antigen) and functional (helper cells) characteristics of T-lymphocytes appeared in the bone marrow of CBA mice. Migration of T-lymphocytes into the bone marrow is regarded as a mechanism for increasing the nonspecific reactivity of the body.
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  • 55
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 119 (1995), S. 120-123 
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    Keywords: luliberin ; Surfagon ; stress ; aggressive/defensive behavior ; alcohol motivation
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    Notes: Abstract In experiments with random-bred male rats separated into short and long sleepers according to the duration of ethanol-induced sleep (narcosis), a synthetic luliberin analog (Surfagon) administered into a brain ventricle was found to reduce pain sensitivity and affective aggressiveness in response to unavoidable painful electrostimulation, and to increase convulsive activity. Short-sleeping rats differed from long-sleeping ones in showing greater behavioral excitability and aggressiveness and in being more responsive to Surfagon, which lowered both these parameters in the former rats to a greater extent than in the latter before castration as well as after it. Mechanisms of the observed behavioral effects of Surfagon are discussed, and it is concluded that they are not mediated by sex steroids, and that the major factor in the mechanisms of its action is the accessibility of limbic structures and of the central gray substance in the midbrain.
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  • 56
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 119 (1995), S. 602-604 
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    Keywords: laser ; brain cortex ; physical exercise ; stress ; adaptation
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    Notes: Abstract The motor zone of the rat brain cortex is subjected to pulsed infrared (0.89 μ) laser radiation, which is found to stimulate DNA synthesis both in intact animals and after strenuous physical exercise (swimming). Preliminary laser irradiation exerts a stress-limiting effect on cells of the brain cortex and thymus but does not prevent swimminginduced reduction of3H-thymidine incorporation in nuclear DNA of muscles.
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  • 57
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 122 (1996), S. 887-889 
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    Keywords: arterial hypertension ; stress ; myocardium ; hormones ; electrolytes
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    Notes: Abstract Study of the heart in a new strain of rats with hereditary stress-induced hypertension (NISAG) reveals a complex of structural and functional changes which are analogous to the manifestations of essential hypertension. These changes are shown to be adaptive-compensatory in nature and indicative of limited functional reserves of the hypertrophic myocardium.
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  • 58
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 122 (1996), S. 892-894 
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    Keywords: opiate receptors ; opioid peptides ; adaptation ; arrhythmia ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract A decrease in the severity and occurrence of epinephrine- and CaCl2-induced cardiac arrhythmias and an increase in the β-endorphin and enkephalin contents in the brain, myocardium, adrenals, and blood plasma are observed in rats adapted to stress. The antiarrhythmic effect of adaptation is abolished by naloxone. A single administration of D-kyotorphin, a liberator of endogenous peptides, to intact animals also increases the resistance to arrhythmogenic factors. Intravenous administration of the enkephalinase inhibitor RB101 produces a significant antiarrhythmic effect in control animals.
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  • 59
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    Keywords: stress ; adaptation ; heart
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    Notes: Abstract Effects of adaptation to hypoxia on the contractility of isolated rat hearts and on their levels of ATP and inorganic phosphate after total ischemia were evaluated. This adaptation failed to render the cardiac energy-supplying system more resistant to postischemic reperfusion and thus did not accelerate the restoration of cardiac contractility after ischemia. The results of adaptation to hypoxia were then compared with those of adaptation to stress, which had been shown to bring about a marked increase in cardiac resistance to postischemic reperfusion. It is concluded that the profound differences noted between the cardioprotective effects of these two forms of adaptation are due to a much greater accumulation of stabilizing proteins from the HSP70 family during adaptation to stress.
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  • 60
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 124 (1997), S. 965-967 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: stress ; peptide hydra morphogen ; cell division
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of hydra peptide morphogen on poststress disturbances in albino rats is evaluated. A 4-h immobilization leads to a rise of corticosterone, activates lipid peroxidation, impairs antioxidant defense system, and induces a marked decrease in the content of thyrotropic hormone and thyroxine. The relative weight of the thymus significantly decreases 24 h after immobilization. Moreover, stress inhibits proliferative processes in corneal and pyloric epithelium immediately and 24 h after immobilization. Hydra peptide morphogen prevents the endocrine shift, normalizes the content of lipoperoxides and α-tocopherol immediately after stress, weakens poststress proliferation disturbances, induces compensatory stimulation of proliferative processes in the corneal epithelium 24 h after stress, and normalizes DNA synthesis in the pyloric epithelium, the level of malonic dialdehyde being elevated.
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  • 61
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 126 (1998), S. 762-764 
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    Keywords: arterial hypertension ; stress ; vascular reactivity
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    Notes: Abstract In vitro experiments on isolated segments of abdominal aorta of NISAG hypertensive rats with assessment of32P incorporation showed that hypertension in these rats is developed as due to enhanced metabolism of phosphatidylinositol phosphates under the effect of norepinephrine resulting in higher vascular reactivity to norepinephrine.
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  • 62
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 126 (1998), S. 932-933 
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    Keywords: δ-sleep-inducing peptide ; stress ; erythrocyte membranes
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    Notes: Abstract Exposure of rats to cold stress leads to the accumulation of conjugated dienes and Schiff's bases and decreases superoxide dismutase and catalase activities. Plasma levels of extraerythrocytic hemoglobin and iron and the total peroxidase activity increase. This indicates destablization of the erythrocyte plasma membrane in stress. Exogenous δ-sleep-inducing peptide decreases the intensity of lipid peroxidation by increasing the activity of the antioxidant enzymes and stabilizes the structure of the erythrocyte plasma membrane.
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  • 63
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 126 (1998), S. 997-999 
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    Keywords: opiate receptors ; stress ; cardiosclerosis ; arrhythmias
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    Notes: Abstract Peripheral injections of the μ-opiate receptor agonist DALDA,k-opiate receptor agonist spiradoline, and δ-opiate receptor blocker DuP734 significantly increased the ventricular fibrillation threshold in animals with modeled postinfarction cardiosclerosis or stress-induced damage to the heart.
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  • 64
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    Keywords: stress ; skin ; lipids ; melatonin
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    Notes: Abstract Changes in the skin lipid composition induced by water-immersion stress in rats treated and untreated with melatonin were studied by thin-layer chromatography. Skin lipids showed a delayed reaction to stress. Melatonin exerted a protective effect which was manifested on the 2nd day after treatment in restoration of the level of total lipids and the absolute content of the majority of lipid fractions. The data suggest modification of, the metabolic relationships between skin lipids as well as lipids of the blood and subcutaneous adipose tissue.
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  • 65
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 127 (1999), S. 477-479 
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    Keywords: physical exercise ; stress ; kinin system ; elastase ; adaptation
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    Notes: Abstract In rats, adaptation to strenuous exercise was accompanied by phasic changes in the activities of the kallikrein-kinin system, elastase-like proteinases, and proteinase inhibitors, and total antioxidant activity in the serum, myocardium, liver, and cerebral cortex. After 30-min physical exercises, activity of the kallikrein-kinin system decreased in the serum and increased in tissue with parallel activation of elastase-like proteinases in the myocardium and cerebral cortex. After 3-h exercises the activity of the kallikrein-kinin system showed some indications of exhaustion, especially in the myocardium and cerebral cortex. Activities of elastase-like proteinases tended to normal due to activation of α1-proteinase inhibitor and normalization of total antioxidant activity.
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  • 66
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    Keywords: heredity ; stress ; hypertension ; kidneys ; juxtaglomerular apparatus
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    Notes: Abstract Structure of juxtaglomerular apparatus of the kidney in NISAG rats and morphometric parameters of renin-producing juxtaglomerular, cells of afferent arterioles attest to its activation.
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  • 67
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    Keywords: Ca transport ; cytoplasm ; stress ; adaptation
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    Notes: Abstract Acute stress reduces and adaptation to stress enhances thermal resistance of Ca2+ pump of the sarcoplasmic reticulum fraction. Soluble cytoplasmic factors increase the rate of Ca2+ transport into myocardial sarcoplasmic reticulum and its thermal resistance in the stressed, stress-adapted, and control rats, the activating effect being most pronounced during acute stress. Structural and functional mechanisms underlying the protective effect of soluble cytoplasmic factors on membrane-bound enzymes are discussed.
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  • 68
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 127 (1999), S. 155-157 
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    Keywords: lymph node ; stress ; catecholamines ; serotonin ; histamine
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    Notes: Abstract Luminescence analysis and histochemical methods have shown that stress affects various structures of rat immunocompetent organs and decreases the contents of catecholamines, serotonin and histamine in central and peripheral immune organs. The content of biogenic amines in thymic structures increased 10, 20, and 30 days after the administration of the immunostimulator polystim against the background of stress. The results obtained indicate that polystim displays stress-protective activity and can be used in clinical practice.
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  • 69
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 128 (1999), S. 1094-1096 
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    Keywords: erythrocyte electrophoretic mobility ; erythrocyte volume ; rats ; stress ; correlation
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    Notes: Abstract At rest, rat erythrocyte electrophoretic mobility varied independently on cell volume. Emotional and physical stress gave rise to a short-lived moderate negative correlation between erythrocyte volume and the coefficient of asymmetry of electrophoretic mobility distribution, probably originating from accompanying metabolic and systemic influences.
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  • 70
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 79 (1975), S. 636-637 
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    Keywords: contact digestion ; stress ; invertase
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    Notes: Abstract Activity of intestinal invertase immediately after immobilization for 4 h was studied in experiments on albino rats of both sexes and of different ages. The inhibitory effect of stress on the activity of contact digestion and enzyme formation in the intestinal epithelial cells was discovered, and the effect observed was found to depend on the sex and age of the animals. This was reflected in a greater degree of depression of invertase activity in young females and sharp fluctuations in its activity in old female rats.
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  • 71
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 83 (1977), S. 882-883 
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    Keywords: hemicastration ; stress ; anovulation ; sigetin
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of sigetin on anovulation was investigated in experiments on sexually mature female rats. Anovulation was induced experimentally by stress (keeping the rats under overcrowded conditions) and by unilateral ovariectomy (hemicastration). Treatment with sigetin in a dose of 10 mg/kg for 4–5 days restored normal ovulation. If large doses of sigetin (up to 30 mg/kg) were given for longer periods (2–3 weeks) no such effect was observed. The results of these experiments suggest that sigetin, in small doses, stimulates the secretion of luteinizing hormone.
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  • 72
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 84 (1977), S. 919-921 
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    Keywords: stress ; hypothalamus ; corticosteroids ; multiple unit activity
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    Notes: Abstract Chronic experiments on rabbits showed that excitation of the pituitary-adrenocortical system during immobilization stress is accompanied by changes in multiple unit activity in the anterior, medial, and lateral hypothalamus. Activation of the medial and inhibition of the anterior and lateral hypothalamus are observed during stress.
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  • 73
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 84 (1977), S. 1500-1503 
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    Keywords: repeated partial hepatectomy ; stress ; stimulation of division ; periods of the mitotic cycle
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    Notes: Abstract Repeated partial hepatectomy (PH), performed 24 h after a 70% PH, had the following effect on the mitotic cell cycle in the regenerating rat liver: it delayed (by about 2 h) the cells in the G2 period, left the S period almost unchanged, and delayed the cells for 6–8 h in the G1 period. A mock repeated operation had a similar effect. This indicates that the influence of the repeated PH on the mitotic cell cycle in the regenerating liver is due to operation stress. Additional stimulation of division by repeated PH affects the character of the regeneration process as a whole.
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  • 74
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    Keywords: steroids ; peripheral blood ; stress ; Papio hamadryas
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    Notes: Abstract The character of changes in the level of 12 steroids in peripheral blood plasma of male baboons (Papio hamadryas) under conditions of immobilization and surgical stress was determined by a radioimmunological method. During stress the concentration of androgens in the blood plasma of the monkeys is reduced, whereas the concentration of precursors of the steroid hormones and of hydrocortisone is increased. These changes are opposite in phase to the diurnal rhythm of the steroids. The fall in the levels of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone and the rise in the concentrations of pregnenolone, 17 α-hydroxypregnenolone, and 17 α-hydroxyprogesterone in the blood plasma of male baboons exposed to stress were found to be the most objective and sensitive criteria of the stressor situation.
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  • 75
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 569-572 
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    Keywords: adrenal cortex ; stress ; structural changes ; cholesterol
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of cholesterol, administered for 14 days, on the response of the adrenal cortex was studied in rats during severe stress. Under these conditions the degree of activation of the gland and the degree of its structural changes were lower than in the control. It is suggested that the action of cholesterol depends on its influence both on the hypothalamus and on the adrenocortical tissues. The latter effect is connected with the action of cholesterol as a substance delaying peroxidation.
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  • 76
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 1112-1114 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: mitotic activity ; stress ; pyrogenal ; DNA synthesis
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of prolonged stress on the mitotic regime and number of DNA-synthesizing cells in the corneal and lingual epithelium was studied in response to pyrogenal. Injection of pyrogenal for 5 days caused a decrease of 41% in the number of mitoses in the corneal and lingual epithelium. The decrease in the number of dividing cells did not correlate with changes in the rate of mitosis. The number of pathological mitoses in the corneal epithelium of intact rats remained unchanged during stress. The index of labeled nuclei in the corneal and lingual epithelium of the control rats was 12.6 and 10.8 respectively, which did not differ significantly from their values in the experimental animals (12.2 and 12.2).
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  • 77
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 87 (1979), S. 112-115 
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    Keywords: taurine ; stress ; cyclic AMP ; cyclic GMP ; receptor
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    Notes: Abstract Taurine had no effect on the cyclic nucleotide level in the heart of intact rats but sharply reduced the increase in cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP levels taking place during stress. The action of taurine on the cyclic GMP content in the heart was not exhibited after preliminary atropinization of the animals; its effect on cyclic AMP was greatly reduced after partial blockade of β-adrenoreceptors. It is suggested that taurine is a nonspecific regulator of the sensitivity of the myocardial cells to biologically active substances.
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  • 78
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 87 (1979), S. 421-423 
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    Keywords: α-amylase ; total protease ; lipase ; stress
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    Notes: Abstract The enzyme spectrum of pancreatic homogenate was studied in acute experiments on male albino rats during adaptation for 30 days to muscular exertion (forced swimming in water at a temperature of 32±1°C), heat (hyperthermia to 40–41°C), and cold (cooling to 3–4°C) for 3 h. The initial periods of adaptation to these factors (second-twelfth day) were shown to be characterized by a considerable decrease in activity of all the enzymes studied, but later, with adaptation of the animals to these factors, enzyme activity was restored to its original level (18th–24th day), and remained more or less constant until the end of the experiment (30th day). It is suggested that changes in the enzyme spectrum of the pancreas are brought about through the participation of the hypothalamo-hypophyseo-adrenal system in accordance with the principle of the general adaptation syndrome.
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  • 79
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 79 (1975), S. 405-407 
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    Keywords: stress ; immobilization ; lipolytic effect ; prostaglandins
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    Notes: Abstract Investigation of the level and composition of free fatty acids in the blood plasma of monkeys revealed definite changes after stress (immobilization) which were prevented by a single injection of prostaglandin E2 immediately before exposure to the stressor. The role of prostaglandins as a factor in the feedback mechanism limiting the lipolytic effect of neuromediators and hormones, secreted intensively during stress, is analyzed.
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  • 80
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 83 (1977), S. 667-670 
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    Keywords: sleep ; stress ; neurotropic drugs ; sodium hydroxybutyrate
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    Notes: Abstract A state of stress induced in cats by electrical stimulation of the hypothalamus was shown to reduce the total duration of sleep at the expense of its paradoxical phase. Haloperidol (1, 2, or 3 mg/kg), diazepam (0.5 or 1 mg/kg), nitrazepam (1 or 6 mg/kg), Noxyron (glutethimide) (10, 30, and 60 mg/kg), and pentobarbital (5, 15, and 30 mg/kg) did not restore the structure of sleep when disturbed by stress, and lithium hydroxybutyrate (100 and 150 mg/kg), dimedrol (diphenhydramine) (1, 5, and 6 mg/kg), and imipramine (1, 3, and 6 mg/kg) increased the total duration of sleep on account of the slow-wave phase. Sodium hydroxybutyrate (100 mg/kg) restored the normal electrophysiological pattern of sleep, reduced the latent period, and increased the total duration and number of episodes of the paradoxical phase, and also reduced the number of awakenings.
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  • 81
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 88 (1979), S. 1252-1254 
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    Keywords: stress ; contractile function of the heart ; calcium transport
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of pain-induced emotional stress (PIES) on the contractile function of rat papillary muscle removed 2 h after the end of exposure to stress was studied. The velocity and amplitude of contraction and also the velocity of relaxation of the myocardium of animals exposed to PIES were reduced by more than 40%, whereas the positive inotropic effect of a high frequency of contraction was reduced by 75–86% and adrenergic reactivity was reduced about by half, although the maximal effort developed during isometric contraction was unchanged. It is suggested that during PIES a disturbance develops in the calcium transport system in the membranes and in the sarcolemmal adrenoreceptor-adenylate cyclase system.
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  • 82
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 88 (1979), S. 691-694 
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    Keywords: stress ; adrenal cortex ; glucocorticoids
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    Notes: Abstract A sharp decrease in the glucocorticoid content accompanied by an increase in the free cholesterol and a decrease in the content of esterified cholesterol were observed in the adrenal cortex of dogs 10–15 sec after nociceptive stimulation. The blood concentrations of the hormones were increased, mainly due to the proteinbound hydrocortisone fraction. The next phase of the response (30–60 sec after stimulation) was marked by activation of synthetic processes, leading to considerable accumulation of hormones in the gland. The blood glucocorticoid level was doubled, the original ratio of hydrocortisone to corticosterone was restored, and the transcortin depot was replenished. The role of the adrenal and transcortin deports of glucocorticoids in the feedback mechanism during stress is discussed.
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  • 83
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 88 (1979), S. 841-843 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: histamine H2 receptors ; experimental gastric ulcers ; pepsinogen ; stress
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Dystrophic lesions of the gastric mucosa were observed to be formed and the pepsinogen content was reduced by 57% in the gastric mucosa of rats exposed to various experimental stressors (immobilization with electrical stimulation, immobilization at 6°C, trauma to or ligation of the pylorus). and the changes correlated with the degree of injury to the stomach. Pharmacological blockade of H2 receptors by cimetidine (100 μmoles/kg) and methiamide (410 μmoles/kg) largely prevented the formation of experimental ulcers and the decrease in the pepsinogen level. The results indicate that endogenous histamine participates in the mechanism of formation of dystrophic gastric lesions.
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