14 research outputs found

    Psychological stress factors and salivary cortisol in nursing students throughout their training

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    OBJECTIVE: to analyze psychological stress factors and salivary cortisol concentration in nursing undergraduates throughout their training. METHOD: a cross-sectional, analytical, and comparative study carried out in an evening course using a sociodemographic questionnaire, an Instrument to Assess Stress in Nursing Students, and salivary cortisol analysis. The study included descriptive and comparative analyses and a multiple linear regression model. RESULTS: 187 participants answered the questionnaires, and 129 had their cortisol quantified. The domains Practical Activities Execution, Professional Communication, and Professional Training represented the stress factors with the highest mean values for 3rd, 4th, and 5th-year students compared to 1st and 2nd year. For the 5th year, it was the domains Professional Communication and Professional Training compared to the 3rd year and Environment compared to the 1st and 3rd year. A significant result was obtained between the times of cortisol collections for males (p < 0.0001), females (p < 0.0001), and for 1st (p = 0.0319) 2nd (p = 0.0245), and 5th (p < 0.0001) years. CONCLUSION: Students in years 3 through 5 had higher exposure to stressors, and there were adjustments in cortisol production rhythmicity for students in years 1, 2, and 5

    Increased sympathetic tone and hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis activation impact in metabolic parameters from hypertensive rats

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    Increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) may play an important role in the development of hypertension and in adiposity disorders. We aimed to investigate the influence of increased sympathetic tone and hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis activation in metabolic parameters by evaluating the morphometry of isolated adipocytes from different fat pads and energy consumption. Serum levels of catecholamines, HPA hormones, T3 and adipokines were measured in 15-weeks-old Wistar (WIS), Wistar-Kyoto (WKY), Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats (SHR) and WIS treated with NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). L-NAME and SHR showed a reduced adiposity when compared to their controls, which may be related to higher concentrations of T3. However, SHR presented the most evident lipodystrophy, presenting significant changes in the morphometry from isolated adipocytes and the production of adipokines. Thus, our study suggests that endocrine changes in hypertension models may highlight possible therapeutic targets in the treatment of metabolic changes associated with hypertension

    Anti-ulcerogenic mechanisms of a lyophilized aqueous extract of Dalbergia monetaria L-in rats, mice and guinea-pigs

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    The decoction of Dalbergia monetaria L. is popularly used in Brazil for the treatment of gastric ulcer and the lyophilized aqueous extract (LAE) of D. monetaria has significant anti-ulcerogenic activity and inhibits gastric ulcer lesions induced by pylorus-ligature, ethanol and hypothermic-restraint stress. This work was conducted to identify the antiulcerogenic mechanisms of action of the LAE of D. monetaria. We analysed the effect of the LAE on prostaglandin E-2 (PGE(2)) synthesis and on the characteristics (pH, volume and total acid content) of gastric juice. The antagonism between the LAE and histamine or carbachol was also analysed. The LAE increased gastric mucosal PGE(2) synthesis compared with control (89.7 +/- 21.5 and 52.6 +/- 11.8 pg mg(-1) respectively) as assayed by enzyme immunoassay in the rat stomach. The LAE reduced the total acid content of gastric juice, but did not modify pH or gastric volume significantly, in Shay rats. Dose-response curves to histamine were shifted to the right in guinea-pig isolated right atria (pD(2) values were 5.77 +/- 0.2 and 5.42 +/- 0.3, respectively, in the absence and presence of the LAE), with a significant reduction in maximum response (140 +/- 15.1 and 98 +/- 13.0, respectively). The same effect was observed when the agonist was isoprenaline. The LAE had no effect on the dose-response curve to carbachol in rat fundus strips. Thus, the protective effect of the LAE on induced gastric lesions might be because of synergistic effects, e.g. increased PGE(2) synthesis and antagonism of H-2 histamine and beta-adrenergic receptors, reducing gastric acid secretion. Increased PGE(2) synthesis results in increased protection, and antagonism of H-2 histamine and beta-adrenergic receptors reduces aggressive factors against the gastric mucosa.51673574

    Antiulcerogenic mechanisms of dehydrocrotonin, a diterpene lactone obtained from Croton cajucara

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    The bark of Croton cajucara Benth. is used in Brazilian folk medicine as an infusion to treat gastrointestinal disorders. The aim of the present study was to assess the mechanisms involved in the antiulcerogenic activity of dehydrocrotonin (DHC), a diterpene isolated from C. cajucara bark. We studied the effects of DHC on pylorus ligature (Shay) in mice treated with the drug (100 mg/kg) by the intraduodenal route. DHC did not induce any alteration in gastric volume in Shay mice but modified the pH and total acid concentration of gastric juice. Incubation of gastric juice with DHC did not reduce gastric acidity compared to control. We also investigated the effects of DHC on the response to histamine of Fight atria isolated from guinea pigs and on the response to carbachol of stomach fundus strips from rats. The concentration-response curves for the chronotropic effect of histamine in guinea pig right atria were shifted to the right, with a significant decrease in the maximum response, in the presence of DHC. Similar results were obtained with DHC (30 mu M) for the concentration-response curves to carbachol in the isolated rat stomach. The ability of DHC to increase PGE(2) release from rat stomach mucous cells was also studied. We observed that DHC induced a significant increase in PGE(2) production (60% compared to control). In addition, the effects of DHC on the healing of acetic acid-induced gastric ulcer in rats were evaluated 14 days after acid injection. Oral administration of DHC (100 mg/kg per day) for 14 consecutive days had no effect on gastric ulcer healing in rats. Thus, the protective effect of DHC on induced gastric lesions could be, due to synergistic effects, e.g., an increase in PGE(2) release and non-competitive antagonism of H-2-receptors and of muscarinic receptors. Whereas the former result represents an increase in the protective factors, the latter one shows a decrease in the aggressive factors against the gastric mucosa.65432533

    Salivary cortisol concentrations, stress and quality of life in women with endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain

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    The objective of this study was to evaluate the perceived stress index, quality of life, and hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activity in women with endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain. For the study, 93 women with endometriosis and 82 healthy women volunteered. The visual analogue scale (VAS) (0 = no pain; 10 = severe pain) was used to determine pain intensity; the perceived stress questionnaire (PSQ) defined stress index, and the health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL)-SF-36 questionnaire was used to evaluate quality of life. Salivary cortisol was measured at 0800, 1600, and 2000h and the awakening cortisol response was assessed to evaluate the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activity. The results show that women with endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain of moderate intensity (4.1 +/- 0.58, mean +/- SEM) have higher levels of perceived stress (0.55 +/- 0.01 versus 0.42 +/- 0.01, p < 0.05), a poorer quality of life expressed as lower scores for all items of the inventory and hypocortisolism. Lower levels of salivary cortisol were observed in all three samples collected, as well as in the awakening cortisol response, for women with endometriosis (0.19 +/- 0.09 mu g/dl) when compared with controls (0.78 +/- 0.08 mu g/dl, p < 0.051), and it was independent of pain intensity and Mental health (MH) scores in SF-36. We concluded that women with endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain show low concentrations of salivary cortisol and a high level of perceived stress, associated with a poor quality of life. Whether the hypocortisolism was an adaptive response to the aversive symptoms of the disorder or a feature related to the etiology of endometriosis remains to be elucidated.115390397Foundation for the Support of Research in the State of Sao Paulo [03/09173-3]Improvement of University Level PersonnelFoundation for the Support of Research in the State of Sao Paulo [03/09173-3

    Effect of swimming session duration and repetition on metabolic markers in rats

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    The aim of this study was to investigate the profile of metabolites in male rats subjected to 50-60 min of swimming on three protocols: group A, a single 50 min swimming session; group B, one session a day for three days (5 min on day 1, 15 min on day 2 and 30 min on day 3); and group C, one session a day for 5 days, with increasing duration from 5 min on day 1, 15, 30, 45 and 60 min on consecutive days. The interval between sessions was 24 h. Measurements were made after the last swimming session. Controls did not swim. The glycogen content of liver and gastrocnemius and soleus muscle was depleted in the three groups that swam, but blood glucose concentration was significantly increased only in group B. Serum lactate concentrations were greater than the controls in groups A and B. There were significant increases in serum free fatty acid concentrations in all groups that swam. The increases in plasma free fatty acids may have resulted from lipolysis stimulated by endogenous catecholamines in groups A and C, since basal lipolysis measured in vitro was unchanged by swimming. The large increase in basal lipolysis in group B may have contributed to the rise in plasma free fatty acids. Adipocytes from rats in groups A and B were supersensitive to epinephrine, whereas those from group C were not. We conclude that the metabolic alterations were less pronounced after the last of five swimming sessions over 5 days than after a single session, even though session duration and the contribution of the physical component were similar. Glucose mobilization, but probably not utilization, was similar in the three groups that swam. The mechanisms of lipid mobilization from adipose tissue differed, depending on the stress paradigm. The metabolic changes in groups A and B indicated that three daily swimming sessions were insufficient to cause adaptation. The results contrast with previous findings for foot-shock stress, which leads to sensitization rather than adaptation in response to repeated stimuli.6212713

    Stress among nurses: an examination of salivary cortisol levels on work and day off

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    Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)The present study evaluates the use of salivary cortisol concentration as a physiological index of the stress level among nurses on their work day and day off and correlates it with the questionnaire used to measure occupational stress in nurses (Inventario de Estresse em Enfermeiros IEE). This is a comparative, cross-sectional descriptive study in which sociodemographic data, IEE results and salivary cortisol levels were used. Fifty-seven nurses participated in the study (80.7% females and a mean age of 37.1 years old). The IEE average score was 124.5. The average cortisol level was 564.1 ng/m on work day and 354.1 ng/mL on day off. Nurses who had double workdays presented high values of salivary cortisol during the work day (638.1 ng/mL). In conclusion, salivary cortisol identified the nurses' stress level, and differences were found between a work day and day off. On the nurses' day off, their salivary cortisol levels and stress scores were lower.47511871194Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES

    Stress-induced alteration in the lipolytic response to beta-adrenoceptor agonists in rat white adipocytes

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    We analysed the sensitivity to beta-adrenoceptor agonists in epididymal adipose cells from rats submitted to a stress protocol previously reported to induce alterations in sensitivity to catecholamines in cardiac tissue from rats. Food intake and body weight were lower, whereas adipocytes basal Lipolysis was higher (control: 0.59 +/- 0.04; stress: 1.00 +/- 0.11, mu mol glycerol/100 mg total lipids/100 min) in stressed compared to control rats. The responses to isoprenaline (pD(2) control: 7.46 +/- 0.11; stress: 8.11 +/- 0.17), adrenaline (pD(2) control: 5.78 +/- 0.20; stress: 6.13 +/- 0.18), and salbutamol (pB(2) control: 5.64 +/- 0.28; stress: 5.92 +/- 0.34) were sensitized, and the lipolytic responses to norepinephrine (pD(2) control: 6.98 +/- 0.13; stress: 6.41 +/- 0.12) and to BRL37344 (pD(2) control: 8.43 +/- 0.19; stress: 7.54 +/- 0.21) were desensitized. Responses to the higher concentration (100 mu M) of isoprenaline (control: 1.80 +/- 0.18; stress: 2.24 +/- 0.10 mu mol glycerol/100 mg total lipids/100 min), epinephrine (control: 1.64 +/- 0.17; stress: 2.24 +/- 0.14 mu mol glycerol/100 mg total Lipids/100 min), salbutamol (control: 0.65 +/- 0.11; stress: 1.21 +/- 0.41 mu mol glycerol/100 mg total lipids/100 min), and d-butyryl-cAMP (control: 1.59 +/- 0.17; stress: 2.72 +/- 0.25) were significantly enhanced in adipocytes from stressed rats, pD(2) or maximum response to CGP12177 were not altered. Supersensitivity to isoprenaline was abolished by 50 nM ICI118,551 but was not modified by 100 nM metoprolol. However, subsensitivity to norepinephrine and to BRL37344 was abolished by 100 nM metoprolol.[il Our results suggest that in epididymal adipocytes from stressed rats there is a desensitization of the response to adrenoceptor agonists mediated by beta(2)-adrenoceptors together with a sensitization of the response mediated by Pn-adrenoceptors. PB-adrenoceptors seem to be resistant to the stress effect.4091719172

    Effect of essential oil obtained from Croton cajucara Benth. on gastric ulcer healing and protective factors of the gastric mucosa

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    The bark of Croton cajucara Benth. (Euphorbiaceae) is used widely in Amazonian folk medicine for the treatment of a wide range of gastrointestinal symptoms. Infusions of C. cajucara bark contain dehydrocrotonin (DHC), the furan diterpene, and an essential oil, a rich mixture of sesquiterpenes. Although the antiulcerogenic activity of the essential oil has been studied in different gastric ulcer models in mice and rats, its mechanism remains unclear. In this work, we examined the ability of this essential oil to increase PGE(2) release from mucus cells, as well as its effects on the amount of gastric mucus and on the healing of acetic acid-induced gastric ulcers. The essential oil (100 mg/kg body wt., p.o). significantly increased PGE(2) production by glandular cells (by 102% as compared to control) and the amount of Alcian blue binding to the gastric mucus. In chronic gastric ulcers, a single daily oral dose of essential oil (100 mg/kg body wt.) for 14 consecutive days accelerated ulcer healing to an extent similar to that seen with an equal dose of cimetidine. Thus, the protective and healing actions of the essential oil from C. cajucara bark on gastric lesions resulted mainly from an increase in PGE(2) release and gastric mucus formation which would protect the gastric mucosa.9652352

    Subsensitivity to insulin in adipocytes from rats submitted to foot-shock stress

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    We examined the effect of three daily foot-shock stress sessions on glucose homeostasis, insulin secretion by isolated pancreatic islets, insulin sensitivity of white adipocytes, and glycogen stores in the liver and soleus muscle of rats. Stressed rats had plasma glucose (128.3 +/- 22.9 mg/dL) and insulin (1.09 +/- 0.33 ng/mL) levels higher than the controls (glucose, 73.8 +/- 3.5 mg/dL; insulin, 0.53 +/- 0.11 ng/mL, ANOVA plus Fisher's test; p < 0.05). After a glucose overload, the plasma glucose, but not insulin, levels remained higher (area under the curve 8.19 &PLUSMN; 1.03 vs. 4.84 &PLUSMN; 1.33 g/dL 30 min and 102.7 &PLUSMN; 12.2 vs. 93.2 &PLUSMN; 16.1 ng/mL 30 min, respectively). Although, the area under the insulin curve was higher in stressed (72.8 &PLUSMN; 9.8 ng/mL) rats than in control rats (34.9 &PLUSMN; 6.9 ng/mL) in the initial 10 min after glucose overload. The insulin release stimulated by glucose in pancreatic islets was not modified after stress. Adipocytes basal lipolysis was higher (stressed, 1.03 &PLUSMN; 0.14; control, 0.69 &PLUSMN; 0.11 &mu;mol of glycerol in 60 min/100 mg of total lipids) but maximal lipolysis stimulated by norepinephrine was not different (stressed, 1.82 &PLUSMN; 0.35; control, 1.46 &PLUSMN; 0.09 &mu;mol of glycerol in 60 min/100 mg of total lipids) after stress. Insulin dose-dependently inhibited the lipolytic response to norepinephrine by up to 35% in adipocytes from control rats but had no effect on adipocytes from stressed rats. The liver glycogen content was unaltered by stress, but was lower in soleus muscle from stressed rats than in control rats (0.45 &PLUSMN; 0.04 vs. 0.35 &PLUSMN; 0.04 mg/100 mg of wet tissue). These results suggest that rats submitted to foot-shock stress develop hyperglycemia along with hyperinsulinemia as a consequence of insulin subsensitivity in adipose tissue, with no alteration in the pancreatic sensitivity to glucose. Foot-shock stress may therefore provide a useful short-term model of insulin subsensitivity.80878378
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