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Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 262872

The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD


Gotovac, Katja; Vidović, Anđelko; Vilibić, Maja; Sabioncello, Ante; Berki, Timea; Folnegović-Šmalc, Vera; Dekaris, Dragan
The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD // 1st Joint Meeting of European National Societies of Immunology, 16th European Congress of Immunology, Book of Abstracts
Pariz: Eropean Federation of Immunological Societies, 2006. str. 551-551 (poster, nije recenziran, sažetak, znanstveni)


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Naslov
The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD

Autori
Gotovac, Katja ; Vidović, Anđelko ; Vilibić, Maja ; Sabioncello, Ante ; Berki, Timea ; Folnegović-Šmalc, Vera ; Dekaris, Dragan

Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni

Izvornik
1st Joint Meeting of European National Societies of Immunology, 16th European Congress of Immunology, Book of Abstracts / - Pariz : Eropean Federation of Immunological Societies, 2006, 551-551

Skup
1st Joint Meeting of European National Societies of Immunology, 16th European Congress of Immunology

Mjesto i datum
Pariz, Francuska, 06.09.2006. - 09.09.2006

Vrsta sudjelovanja
Poster

Vrsta recenzije
Nije recenziran

Ključne riječi
War; Trauma; Immune; Endocrine; Flow Cytometry

Sažetak
Objective: Immune response is modulated by positive and negative signalling from neuroendocrine and other bodily tissues. A complex and dynamic molecular network that regulate interactions are influenced by internal and external signals or stressors. Therefore, the stress response can be considered as a study model for neuroendocrine-immune interactions. Distinct profile of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis, manifested by low cortisol level and increased number of glucocorticoid receptors (GR), is considered to be characteristic of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This is congruent with compromised cellular immune response reported in chronic stress. The findings mainly rely on studies performed decades following exposure to trauma. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of combat-associated traumatic experience on hormonal and immune responses in war veterans with PTSD diagnosed by DSM-IV within 8 years after exposure to trauma. Methods: Participants were 39 PTSD sufferers aged 25-50 (mean = 34) years and 37 age matched civilian controls. Serum hormone (cortisol, prolactin, T3, T4) and cytokine (IL-6, TNFalpha) levels were determined by radio- and enzyme immunoassays respectively. The total lymphocyte count and the proportions of total T (CD3), B (CD20) and NK (CD3-CD16, 65+) cells, helper (CD3+CD4+) and cytotoxic (CD3+CD8+) T lymphocytes, CD4 memory (CD4+CD45RO+), and activated B (CD20+CD23+) cell subpopulations were determined by flow cytometry. Polymorphonuclear phagocytic (ingestion, digestion, ADCC) functions, and NK cell activity were measured by 51Cr-release assays. Glucocorticoid receptor expression in lymphocytes and NK cells was determined by flow cytometry after surface phenotyping followed by intracellular staining of GR with anti-GR FITC-labeled MoAb. Results: Serum levels of TNF-alpha and IL-6, cortisol and prolactin were increased in PTSD sufferers as compared to controls. The total lymphocyte count was higher in PTSD patients, as well as proportions of CD3, CD4 and CD8 cells. Although the proportions of NK cells in PTSD did not differ from controls, their cytotoxic activity was enhanced and they had lower GR expression. Glucocorticoid receptor expression was also lower in overall lymphocyte population. No other measured parameters were affected. A canonical correlation revealed multivariate shared relationship between endocrine and both, functional and phenotypic, variables. Conclusions: Several endocrine and immune variables are affected by severe trauma. In early stages of PTSD, i.e. within 8 years following the traumatic event, HPA axis seems to be activated rather than suppressed. This activation could lead to the enhanced negative feedback inhibition described in late PTSD.

Izvorni jezik
Engleski

Znanstvena područja
Temeljne medicinske znanosti



POVEZANOST RADA


Projekti:
0021003

Ustanove:
Imunološki zavod d.d.

Poveznice na cjeloviti tekst rada:

Pristup cjelovitom tekstu rada

Citiraj ovu publikaciju:

Gotovac, Katja; Vidović, Anđelko; Vilibić, Maja; Sabioncello, Ante; Berki, Timea; Folnegović-Šmalc, Vera; Dekaris, Dragan
The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD // 1st Joint Meeting of European National Societies of Immunology, 16th European Congress of Immunology, Book of Abstracts
Pariz: Eropean Federation of Immunological Societies, 2006. str. 551-551 (poster, nije recenziran, sažetak, znanstveni)
Gotovac, K., Vidović, A., Vilibić, M., Sabioncello, A., Berki, T., Folnegović-Šmalc, V. & Dekaris, D. (2006) The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD. U: 1st Joint Meeting of European National Societies of Immunology, 16th European Congress of Immunology, Book of Abstracts.
@article{article, author = {Gotovac, Katja and Vidovi\'{c}, An\djelko and Vilibi\'{c}, Maja and Sabioncello, Ante and Berki, Timea and Folnegovi\'{c}-\v{S}malc, Vera and Dekaris, Dragan}, year = {2006}, pages = {551-551}, keywords = {War, Trauma, Immune, Endocrine, Flow Cytometry}, title = {The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD}, keyword = {War, Trauma, Immune, Endocrine, Flow Cytometry}, publisher = {Eropean Federation of Immunological Societies}, publisherplace = {Pariz, Francuska} }
@article{article, author = {Gotovac, Katja and Vidovi\'{c}, An\djelko and Vilibi\'{c}, Maja and Sabioncello, Ante and Berki, Timea and Folnegovi\'{c}-\v{S}malc, Vera and Dekaris, Dragan}, year = {2006}, pages = {551-551}, keywords = {War, Trauma, Immune, Endocrine, Flow Cytometry}, title = {The Endocrine-Immune Interactions in PTSD}, keyword = {War, Trauma, Immune, Endocrine, Flow Cytometry}, publisher = {Eropean Federation of Immunological Societies}, publisherplace = {Pariz, Francuska} }




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