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Nathan Goodyear

Salivary cortisol as a biomarker in stress researc... [Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2009] - PubMed result - 0 views

  • psychobiological mechanisms, which trigger the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPAA) can only indirectly be assessed by salivary cortisol measures. The different instances that control HPAA reactivity (hippocampus, hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenals) and their respective modulators, receptors, or binding proteins, may all affect salivary cortisol measures.
  • linear relationship with measures of plasma ACTH and cortisol in blood or urine does not necessarily exist
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    saliva cortisol testing is a better assessment tool for HPA axis function, compared to serum cortisol
Nathan Goodyear

Clomiphene citrate effects on testosterone/estroge... [J Sex Med. 2005] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    small cohort with low serum Total Testosterone improved T:E2 ratio with clomid.  Clomid restores the HPA through inhibition of the negative feedback of Estradiol on the Hypothalamus and Pituitary in men.  This allows for an increase in gonadotropin production and thus increase in testosterone production.  Aromatase inhibition therapy would likely still prove beneficial in this situation.
Nathan Goodyear

Cytokines and steroidogenesis. - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Inflammatory cytokines appear to inhibit hormone production at the levels of the adrenal glands, testes, and ovaries.  This is in addition to suppression at the level of the hypothalamus and pituitary.  One proposed mechanism is via a reduction of sensitivity of the testes to LH.
Nathan Goodyear

Ghrelin, appetite, and gastric motility: the emerging role of the stomach as an endocrine organ - 0 views

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    orexigenic versus anorexigenic signaling and control of appetite at the level of the hypothalamus.
Nathan Goodyear

Central Control of Body Weight and Appetite - 0 views

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    great review of adiposity versus satiety signals and the hypothalamus signaling.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone for the aging male; current evidence and recommended practice - 0 views

  • Total serum testosterone consists of free testosterone (2%–3%), testosterone bound to sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) (45%) and testosterone bound to other proteins (mainly albumin −50%)
  • Testosterone binds only loosely to albumin and so this testosterone as well as free testosterone is available to tissues and is termed bioavailable testosterone
  • Testosterone bound to SHBG is tightly bound and is biologically inactive
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  • Bioavailable and free testosterone are known to correlate better than total testosterone with clinical sequelae of androgenization such as bone mineral density and muscle strength
  • peak levels seen in the morning following sleep, which can be maintained into the seventh decade
  • Samples should always be taken in the morning before 11 am
  • The reliable measurement of serum free testosterone requires equilibrium dialysis. This is not appropriate for clinical use as it is very time consuming and therefore expensive.
  • With increasing age, a greater number of men have total testosterone levels just below the normal range or in the low-normal range. In these patients total testosterone can be an unreliable indicator of hypogonadal status.
  • It is advised that at least two serum testosterone measurements, taken before 11 am on different mornings, are necessary to confirm the diagnosis.
  • Patients with serum total testosterone consistently below 8 nmol/l invariably demonstrate the clinical syndrome of hypogonadism and are likely to benefit from treatment. Patients with serum total testosterone in the range 8–12 nmol/l often have symptoms attributable to hypogonadism and it may be decided to offer either a clinical trial of testosterone treatment or to make further efforts to define serum bioavailable or free testosterone and then reconsider treatment. Patients with serum total testosterone persistently above 12 nmol/l do not have hypogonadism and symptoms are likely to be due to other disease states or ageing per se so testosterone treatment is not indicated.
  • Total testosterone levels fall at an average of 1.6% per year whilst free and bioavailable levels fall by 2%–3% per year.
  • With advancing age there is also a reduction in androgen receptor concentration in some target tissues and this may contribute to the clinical syndrome of LOH
  • Metabolic clearance declines with age
  • Gonadotrophin levels rise during aging (Feldman et al 2002) and testicular secretory responses to recombinant human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) are reduced
  • There are changes in the lutenising hormone (LH) production which consist of decreased LH pulse frequency and amplitude, (Veldhuis et al 1992; Pincus et al 1997) although pituitary production of LH in response to pharmacological stimulation with exogenous GnRH analogues is preserved
  • the decreases in testosterone levels with aging seem to reflect changes at all levels of the hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular axis
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    Leptin inhibits male Testosterone production at the level of the hypothalamus and at the testicle level.
Nathan Goodyear

Toll-like receptor signaling links dietary fatty acids to the metabolic syndrome - 0 views

  • Activation of the innate immune system controls macronutrient metabolism
  • the innate immune response is the first line of defense against invading pathogens, wherein highly conserved pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) are recognized by cognate pattern recognition receptors (PRRs
  • many studies have supported the idea that cytokine signaling directly promotes insulin resistance
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  • innate immune system may be causally linked to obesity
  • adipose tissue contains a substantial population of macrophages, and macrophage-driven adipose inflammation contributes significantly to the pathogenesis of obesity
  • Collectively, activation of the innate immune system is strongly associated with ASCVD, insulin resistance, and obesity, and recent evidence suggests that much of this association can be traced to a unique family of PRRs known as TLRs
  • TLRs are a family of type I transmembrane receptors, currently thought to comprise at least 13 members in mammals, that specifically recognize a variety of microbial PAMPs and trigger host cellular responses
  • Free SFAs have indeed been demonstrated to elicit TLR4-dependent and TLR2-dependent responses in several cell types.
  • Endogenous SFAs released from adipocytes activate cocultured macrophages via TLR4 [18], indicating the potential for cellular crosstalk in adipose tissue. Collectively, there is a growing body of evidence that SFAs promote, whereas long chain PUFA antagonize, TLR4-dependent and TLR2-dependent signaling in multiple cell models
  • In an elegant study, Shi et al. [16] demonstrated that SFAs activate TLR4-dependent signaling in both macrophages and adipocytes, and mice lacking TLR4 are protected against insulin resistance driven by intravenous lipid infusion
  • In addition to effects in macrophages and adipocytes, SFAs can activate TLR4 in the hypothalamus, which triggers a central inflammatory response that results in resistance to anorexigenic signals
  • endogenous SFAs can indeed promote innate immunity and inflammatory disease
  • This finding strongly supports the work of Hwang and coworkers [19–22] demonstrating that ω-3 PUFAs can effectively counteract SFA-induced TLR4 activation in cultured macrophages and dendritic cells.
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    high dietary fatty acids linked to metabolic syndrome through TLR.
Nathan Goodyear

Ghrelin-Induced Food Intake Is Mediated via the Orexin Pathway - 0 views

  • Ghrelin, a peptide produced in the stomach and hypothalamus, stimulates feeding and GH secretion
  • Centrally administered ghrelin exerts an orexigenic activity through the neuropeptide Y (NPY)
  • though ghrelin is predominantly produced in endocrine cells of the stomach (17, 18), it is also synthesized in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (1, 19), a critical region for feeding
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    ghrelin stimulates feeding through orexin signaling.
Nathan Goodyear

Acupuncture blocks cold stress-induced increases in the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in the rat - 0 views

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    acupuncture decreases HPA sympathetic drive.  Acupuncture calms the HPA axis and relieves stress.  Granted this is in a rat model.
Nathan Goodyear

Effect of vasopressin 1b receptor blockade on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal response of chronically stressed rats to a heterotypic stressor - 0 views

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    repeated stress results in down regulation of central stress response ie. blunted CRH response.
Nathan Goodyear

Neuroestradiol in the Hypothalamus Contributes to the Regulation of Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone Release - 0 views

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    Estrogen appears to play a role as a neurotransmitter in the female brain.  The authors call it neuroestradiol.
Nathan Goodyear

Testosterone Treatment Enhances Regional Brain Perfusion in Hypogonadal Men: The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism: Vol 88, No 7 - 0 views

  • it is established that androgen modulates various neurotransmitters in the CNS. Testosterone decreases γ-aminobutyric acid concentration in the hypothalamus, which is blocked by flutamide, a testosterone receptor blocker (14, 15). Testosterone, probably by its conversion to estradiol, increases serotonin transporter mRNA expression in dorsal raphe nucleus (16), and it also increases the density of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors and serotonin transporter sites in the forebrain (3, 16) of castrated male rats.
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    very interesting study of 7 men.  Increase brain perfusion found and symptom improvement as a result of Testosterone therapy in men ages 58-72.  Specific increase perfusion by SPECT scans were in the midbrain and Brodman areas 8 and 24 of the cerebral cortex.
Nathan Goodyear

The Aging Male Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Gonadal Axis: pulsatility and feedback - 0 views

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    good review of the male hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis.  Of interest is a good discussion of the pulsatile LH activity.
Nathan Goodyear

Neuroendocrine disorders after... [J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2008] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    The majority of people with PTHP after TBI remain undiagnosed.  The current thought, is that 25% of those with TBI have at least one pituitary hormone deficiency.  It does not have to be total pituitary failure.  Deficiencies can be isolated.
Nathan Goodyear

Hypopituitarism after traumatic brain injury - 0 views

  • PTHP is observed in about 40% of patients with a history of TBI
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    post-traumatic hypopituitarism is found in 40% of those with TBI.  The severity does correlate with the increased likelihood of developing PTHP.  Isolated deficiencies have been found in PTHP.
Nathan Goodyear

JCI - Inflammatory links between obesity and metabolic disease - 0 views

  • metainflammation
  • The chronic nature of obesity produces a tonic low-grade activation of the innate immune system that affects steady-state measures of metabolic homeostasis over time
  • It is clear that inflammation participates in the link between obesity and disease
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  • Multiple inflammatory inputs contribute to metabolic dysfunction, including increases in circulating cytokines (10), decreases in protective factors (e.g., adiponectin; ref. 11), and communication between inflammatory and metabolic cells
  • adipose tissue macrophage (ATM)
  • Physiologic enhancement of the M2 pathways (e.g., eosinophil recruitment in parasitic infection) also appears to be capable of reducing metainflammation and improving insulin sensitivity (27).
  • increasing adiposity results in a shift in the inflammatory profile of ATMs as a whole from an M2 state to one in which classical M1 proinflammatory signals predominate (21–23).
  • The M2 activation state is intrinsically linked to the activity of PPARδ and PPARγ
  • well-known regulators of lipid metabolism and mitochondrial activity
  • Independent of obesity, hypothalamic inflammation can impair insulin release from β cells, impair peripheral insulin action, and potentiate hypertension (63–65).
  • inflammation in pancreatic islets can reduce insulin secretion and trigger β cell apoptosis leading to decreased islet mass, critical events in the progression to diabetes (33, 34)
  • Since an estimated excess of 20–30 million macrophages accumulate with each kilogram of excess fat in humans, one could argue that increased adipose tissue mass is de facto a state of increased inflammatory mass
  • JNK, TLR4, ER stress)
  • NAFLD is associated with an increase in M1/Th1 cytokines and quantitative increases in immune cells
  • Upon stimulation by LPS and IFN-γ, macrophages assume a classical proinflammatory activation state (M1) that generates bactericidal or Th1 responses typically associated with obesity
  • DIO, metabolites such as diacylglycerols and ceramides accumulate in the hypothalamus and induce leptin and insulin resistance in the CNS (58, 59)
  • saturated FAs, which activate neuronal JNK and NF-κB signaling pathways with direct effects on leptin and insulin signaling (60)
  • Lipid infusion and a high-fat diet (HFD) activate hypothalamic inflammatory signaling pathways, resulting in increased food intake and nutrient storage (57)
  • Maternal obesity is associated with endotoxemia and ATM accumulation that may affect the developing fetus (73)
  • Placental inflammation is a characteristic of maternal obesity
  • a risk factor for obesity in offspring, and involves inflammatory macrophage infiltration that can alter the maternal-fetal circulation (74
  • Of these PRRs, TLR4 has received the most attention, as this receptor can be activated by free FAs to generate proinflammatory signals and activate NF-κB
  • Nod-like receptor (NLR) family of PRRs
  • ceramides and sphingolipids
  • The adipokine adiponectin has long been recognized to have positive benefits on multiple cell types to promote insulin sensitivity and deactivate proinflammatory pathways.
  • adiponectin stimulates ceramidase activity and modulates the balance between ceramides and sphingosine-1-phosphate
  • Inhibition of ceramide production blocks the ability of saturated FAs to induce insulin resistance (101)
  • NF-κB, obesity also activates JNK in insulin-responsive tissues
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    must read to see our current knowledge on the link between inflammation and obesity.
Nathan Goodyear

Minireview: Inflammation and Obesity Pathogenesis: The Hypothalamus Heats Up - 0 views

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    review of current thought on the link between inflammation and obesity
Nathan Goodyear

The Androgen 5α-Dihydrotestosterone and Its Metabolite 5α-Androstan-3β, 17β-Diol Inhibit the Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Response to Stress by Acting through Estrogen Receptor β-Expressing Neurons in the Hypothalamus - 0 views

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    Full article of previously posted abstract.  DHT metabolite 3beta-diol inhibits HPA stress response via ER beta.  
Nathan Goodyear

Membrane Estrogen Receptors Stimulate Intracellular Calcium Release and Progesterone Synthesis in Hypothalamic Astrocytes - 0 views

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    Estradiol stimulates hypothalamic progesterone synthesis in astrocytes in rat model.  This occurs through activation of calcium channels and influx of calcium.  ER alpha appears to be the prominent ER involved.
Nathan Goodyear

Sex, Receptors, and Attachment: A Review of Individual Factors Influencing Response to Oxytocin - 0 views

  • Estrogen upregulates OT and OT receptor (OTR) production
  • testosterone promotes both OTR binding in the hypothalamus (Johnson et al., 1991) as well as production of AVP (Delville et al., 1996), which has many opponent actions to OT
  • men and women show differences in plasma OT levels
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    Oxytocin and libido.
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