scholarly journals Roles of Oxytocin in Stress Responses, Allostasis and Resilience

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 150
Author(s):  
Yuki Takayanagi ◽  
Tatsushi Onaka

Oxytocin has been revealed to work for anxiety suppression and anti-stress as well as for psychosocial behavior and reproductive functions. Oxytocin neurons are activated by various stressful stimuli. The oxytocin receptor is widely distributed within the brain, and oxytocin that is released or diffused affects behavioral and neuroendocrine stress responses. On the other hand, there has been an increasing number of reports on the role of oxytocin in allostasis and resilience. It has been shown that oxytocin maintains homeostasis, shifts the set point for adaptation to a changing environment (allostasis) and contributes to recovery from the shifted set point by inducing active coping responses to stressful stimuli (resilience). Recent studies have suggested that oxytocin is also involved in stress-related disorders, and it has been shown in clinical trials that oxytocin provides therapeutic benefits for patients diagnosed with stress-related disorders. This review includes the latest information on the role of oxytocin in stress responses and adaptation.

2005 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 763-763 ◽  
Author(s):  
Itiel E. Dror

Dichotomizing perceptions, by those that have an objective reality and those that do not, is rejected. Perceptions are suggested to fall along a multidimensional continuum in which neither end is totally “pure.” At the extreme ends, perceptions neither have an objective reality without some subjectivity, nor, at the other end, even as hallucinations, are they totally dissociated from reality.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rainer Beurskens ◽  
Otmar Bock

This review summarizes our present knowledge about elderly people's problems with walking. We highlight the plastic changes in the brain that allow a partial compensation of these age-related deficits and discuss the associated costs and limitations. Experimental evidence for the crucial role of executive functions and working memory is presented, leading us to the hypothesis that it is difficult for seniors to coordinate two streams of visual information, one related to navigation through visually defined space, and the other to a visually demanding second task. This hypothesis predicts that interventions aimed at the efficiency of visuovisual coordination in the elderly will ameliorate their deficits in dual-task walking.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuko Tanaka ◽  
Shin Koike ◽  
Kaho Kashima ◽  
Asuka Kaseda ◽  
Kenichi Ishibashi

Abstract Background and Aims As the brain edema influences the outcomes of many edematous brain diseases due to the limited intracranial space, the role of aquaporins (AQPs) in brain edema needs to be clarified to advance its treatment especially in increasing ischemic brain diseases. Although the importance of AQP4 at the Blood Brain Barrier (BBB) has been well characterized, the roles of other AQPs is still unknown, especially a relatively new AQP11. As AQP11 is expressed in the brain capillary (Koike S et al. Int J Mol Sci. 17:861, 2016), AQP11 may also be important for the regulation of brain edema. The aim of the present study is to clarify the role of AQP11 in cerebral ischemic model to identify new treatment of cerebral edema. Method AQP expression in the brain was examined by RT-PCR. Common cervical artery was ligated for 15 min to produce ischemic-reperfusion model of brain infarction to induce brain edema. As the first step to study the involvement of AQPs in this process, the mRNA expression of AQP1, AQP4, AQP11 and GFAP were monitored after reperfusion which are expressed at BBB. As mannitol is often employed for the treatment of brain edema, the effects of single or twice doses of 1.1M mannitol 0.1 mL/g body weight i.p. on the expression of AQP1, AQP4 and AQP11 mRNA were examined after 6 h in control mice. Furthermore, hypertonic 2M NaCl was also challenged to simulate the osmotic effect: a single or twice doses of 2M NaCl 0.16 mL/g body weight were administered intraperitoneally, i.p. Results The expression of AQP1 mRNA increased by 20% one and two hours after 15-min ligation, while the expression of AQP4 mRNA decreased transiently just after the ligation but increased at 24 h by 10%. On the other hand, the expression of AQP11 mRNA started to decrease from 30 min after the ligation to continue decreasing up to 24h by 40% in wild mice, while the decrease of AQP11 mRNA only observed at 24h by 20% in AQP11 heterogenous KO mice. A single mannitol i.p. did not change serum osmolality from 320 to 317 mOsm, while twice i.p. in 6 h interval increased serum osmolality to 328 mOsm. Both procedures similarly decreased the expression of all AQPs: AQP1 by 80%, AQP4 by 40%, and AQP11 by 50%. Similar studies were conducted with 2M NaCl. A single dose of 2M NaCl increased serum Na/Osm from 151/319 to 154/322 mEq/mOsm, which decreased AQP1 by 50%, AQP11 by 35% and no change of AQP4. On the other hand, twice doses in 3 h interval increased serum Na/Osm to 208/435 mEq/Osm, which did not change all AQP expressions. Conclusion As AQP4 KO mice survive longer in brain edema models, decrease of AQP4 by mannitol will be beneficial as brain infarction increased AQP4 expression in our study. However, further decrease of AQP11 by mannitol will be detrimental as AQP11 was already decreased in brain infarction. As AQP11 KO mice die within a month due to polycystic kidneys, the studies on brain infarction in brain capillary specific AQP11 conditionaly KO mice are currently underway.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie D. Preston ◽  
Alicia J. Hofelich

A surfeit of research confirms that people activate personal, affective, and conceptual representations when perceiving the states of others. However, researchers continue to debate the role of self–other overlap in empathy due to a failure to dissociate neural overlap, subjective resonance, and personal distress. A perception–action view posits that neural-level overlap is necessary during early processing for all social understanding, but need not be conscious or aversive. This neural overlap can subsequently produce a variety of states depending on the context and degree of common experience and emotionality. We outline a framework for understanding the interrelationship between neural and subjective overlap, and among empathic states, through a dynamic-systems view of how information is processed in the brain and body.


2018 ◽  
pp. 165-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haitham Salem ◽  
Scott D. Lane ◽  
Antonio L. Teixeira

As in other psychiatric disorders, the role of the immune system is gathering increasing attention as an important mechanism in substance use disorders. Addiction is a complex condition in which a person engages in drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviors to accentuate the reward processes in the brain and avoid negative withdrawal states. Due in part to the activation of stress responses during drug withdrawal, high levels of peripheral pro-inflammatory cytokines are observed in this phase, and these immune changes might contribute to the behavioral negative reinforcing effects of the drug. This and other observations suggest that the immune system might play a role in the development of substance use disorders, also representing a potential target for biomarker and therapeutic strategy development (e.g., vaccines).


Mind Shift ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 63-79
Author(s):  
John Parrington

This chapter evaluates the basic unit of the human brain: the nerve cell, or neuron. These cells are also the main units of the peripheral nervous system, which sends messages from the brain to the other tissues and organs that make up our bodies. Neurons are the most well-known cells in the brain but they are not the only type of cell in this organ. The other main types are the glial cells, also known as neuroglia. Recent studies of the role of glial cells in the brain are revealing potentially important differences between humans and other species in the functions of these cells. The chapter then turns to the large-scale structure of the brain. The most dramatic changes in brain size and structure occurred in the final phase of human evolutionary change. Indeed, Neanderthals had brains similar in size to those of modern humans. An important feature of the human brain is that a larger fraction of its growth occurs outside the womb. Although humans reach adult brain size in childhood, brain development continues for decades afterwards.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Pan ◽  
Alexander G Chartrain ◽  
Jacopo Scaggiante ◽  
Alejandro M Spiotta ◽  
Zhouping Tang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Minimally invasive intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) evacuation has gained popularity with success in early-phase clinical trials. This procedure, however, is performed in very different ways around the world. Objective To provide a technical description of these strategies that facilitates comparison and aids decisions in which surgery to perform, and to inform further improvements in minimally invasive ICH evacuation. Methods Major authors of clinical trials evaluating each of the main techniques were contacted and asked to supply a case example and technical description of their respective surgeries. Results Five major techniques are presented including stereotactic thrombolysis, craniopuncture, endoscopic, endoscope-assisted, and endoport-mediated. Techniques differ in numerous ways including the size of the cranial access, the size of the access corridor through the brain to the hematoma, and the evacuation strategy. Regarding cranial access, a burr hole is created in stereotactic thrombolysis and craniopuncture, a small craniectomy in endoscopic, and a small craniotomy in the other 2. Access corridors through the parenchyma range from 3 mm in craniopuncture to 13.5 mm in the endoport-mediated evacuation. Regarding evacuation strategies, stereotactic thrombolysis and craniopuncture rely on passive drainage from a catheter placed during surgery that remains in place for multiple days, while the other 3 techniques rely on active evacuation with suction and bipolar cautery. Conclusion Future comparative clinical trials may identify the advantageous components of each strategy and contribute to improved outcomes in this patient population.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 238-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Sander ◽  
Didier Grandjean ◽  
Klaus R. Scherer

Modeling emotion processes remains a conceptual and methodological challenge in affective sciences. In responding to the other target articles in this special section on “Emotion and the Brain” and the comments on our article, we address the issue of potentially separate brain networks subserving the functions of the different emotion components. In particular, we discuss the suggested role of component synchronization in producing information integration for the dynamic emergence of a coherent emotion process, as well as the links between incentive salience (“wanting”) and concern-relevance in the elicitation of emotion.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 465-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Massimi ◽  
Domenica Battaglia ◽  
Federico Bianchi ◽  
Simone Peraio ◽  
Elisabetta Peppucci ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Postoperative seizures (PSs) after neurosurgical operations are common but little is known about the role of surgical brain incision on their genesis. This topic has not been addressed so far. OBJECTIVE To verify if the corticotomy affects the risk of PSs and postoperative epilepsy (PE) in children. METHODS One hundred forty-three consecutive pediatric cases operated on for supratentorial lesions at the same institution in the last 15 yr have been retrospectively reviewed by dividing them into group A, 68 children who required brain corticotomy mainly for hemispheric tumors, and group B, 75 children treated through extracortical approaches mainly for suprasellar and optic tumors. Patients with possible “epileptic” biases, like preoperative seizures, were excluded. RESULTS No significant differences have been found between group A and B as far as incidence of PSs (11.7% vs 14.5%) and PE (4.5% vs 6.5%), timing, and type of seizures are concerned after a mean 6.8 yr follow-up. The size of corticotomy in group A (<3 cm2 vs >3 cm2) had no impact on epileptogenesis as well as the other variables considered in both groups (age, sex, extent of lesion resection). CONCLUSION This study shows that the surgical cortical “trauma” would not represent a risk factor for PSs and PE. According to the present analysis and the literature, other causes seem to be involved (namely, electrolytic imbalance and brain gliosis). This information is important for preoperative surgical planning and postoperative management. A validation by both adult series and prospective studies is needed.


Cells ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 2685
Author(s):  
Diana M. Leite ◽  
Diana Matias ◽  
Giuseppe Battaglia

Within the brain, endothelial cells lining the blood vessels meticulously coordinate the transport of nutrients, energy metabolites and other macromolecules essential in maintaining an appropriate activity of the brain. While small molecules are pumped across specialised molecular transporters, large macromolecular cargos are shuttled from one side to the other through membrane-bound carriers formed by endocytosis on one side, trafficked to the other side and released by exocytosis. Such a process is collectively known as transcytosis. The brain endothelium is recognised to possess an intricate vesicular endosomal network that mediates the transcellular transport of cargos from blood-to-brain and brain-to-blood. However, mounting evidence suggests that brain endothelial cells (BECs) employ a more direct route via tubular carriers for a fast and efficient transport from the blood to the brain. Here, we compile the mechanism of transcytosis in BECs, in which we highlight intracellular trafficking mediated by tubulation, and emphasise the possible role in transcytosis of the Bin/Amphiphysin/Rvs (BAR) proteins and glycocalyx (GC)—a layer of sugars covering BECs, in transcytosis. Both BAR proteins and the GC are intrinsically associated with cell membranes and involved in the modulation and shaping of these membranes. Hence, we aim to summarise the machinery involved in transcytosis in BECs and highlight an uncovered role of BAR proteins and the GC at the brain endothelium.


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