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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science, Ltd
    Journal of neuroendocrinology 13 (2001), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2826
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Body temperature and pituitary-adrenal responses to restraint (15 min or 4 h) stress were evaluated in nondependent and morphine-dependent rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated twice daily with increasing doses of morphine (10–100 mg/kg, s.c.) for 16 days. Transmitters were implanted in the peritoneal cavity to monitor body temperature and blood was collected for hormone assays. Acute withdrawal from chronic morphine treatment was associated with reduced body weight, increased adrenal weight and decreased thymus weight. Sixteen days after termination of chronic morphine treatment, rats had recovered normal adrenal size, but still displayed marked thymus involution and reduced body weight. Restraint-induced hyperthermia was attenuated in morphine-dependent rats that had undergone 12-h withdrawal. Sixteen days after withdrawal, rats still had not fully recovered the hyperthermic response to restraint. Chronic morphine treatment resulted in a marked elevation of basal corticosterone concentrations. Despite the negative-feedback effects of elevated basal corticosterone concentrations, morphine-dependent rats that had undergone 12-h withdrawal displayed a potentiated and prolonged corticosterone response to restraint stress. In contrast, rats that had undergone 8-day and 16-day morphine withdrawal had recovered normal basal pituitary-adrenal activity, but displayed significantly reduced and shorter adrenocorticotropic hormone and corticosterone responses to restraint. These results suggest that chronic morphine dependence is a chronic stressor, resulting in profound and long-lasting changes in the temperature and pituitary-adrenal responses to acute restraint stress in a time-dependent manner. This morphine-dependence model may be useful in understanding the role that hormonal stress responses play in the maintenance and relapse to opioid use in humans.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-8798
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A new commercially developed cytomegalovirus (CMV)-IgM ELISA was found to be sensitive and specific when compared with sucrose gradient fractionation of Ig classes in CMV antibody-positive and negative sera. The presence of CMV IgM in patients' sera correlated with positive virus isolation from circulating mononuclear blood cells and urine. Serial examinations of patients with primary or recent CMV infection revealed a typical sequence of IgM and IgG development. The frequency of CMV isolation declined as the concentration of IgM decreased and the IgG levels increased. Since the isolation of CMV from clinical specimens is a cumbersome procedure, we suggest that the IgM ELISA could provide rapid and valuable information on the presence of an active or reactivated CMV infection.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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