Print

Print


Hello List members.
My name Hitoshi Nishio from Japan. My mother'
s onset of Parkinson disease was after that
I was diagnosed with ALS and had to take a
ventilator one month later. I guess my
mother feels sivere stress!
 My mother had a trafic accident by the car
and hit her back head on the hard block five
years ago of the onset of PD.
I also beleve that the stress and trauma
shoud a degenerative neuron disease.
This is the abstract of American Science.
>July-August 2000
>
>
>Depression and the Birth and Death of Brain Cells.
>
>Stress and Glucocorticoids
>
>
>Many scientists believe that stress is the
most significant causal agent--with the
possible exception of genetic predisposition-
-in the etiology of depression.
> In addition, nerve cells in the
hippocampal formation are among the most
sensitive to the deleterious effects of
stress.
> Consequently, a stress-induced decrease in
neurogenesis in the hippocampus might be an
important factor in precipitating episodes
of depression. On the other hand, increasing
serotonergic neurotransmission is the most
effective treatment for depression, and it
also augments hippocampal neurogenesis. So
serotonin-induced increases in neurogenesis
might promote recovery from depression.
Considering all of this, we suggest that the
waning and waxing of neurogenesis in the
hippocampal formation might trigger the
precipitation of and recovery from episodes
of clinical depression.
>
>Gould and her colleagues examined the
relation between stress and hippocampal
neurogenesis in several species. First, they
reported that removing a ratís adrenal
glands increased neurogenesis in the adult
dentate gyrus. Moreover, they could reverse
that effect with the glucocorticoid hormone
corticosterone, which normally comes from
the adrenals. The circulating level of
glucocorticoids apparently suppressed the
birth of neurons in the dentate gyrus under
normal conditions. In an extension of these
results, Gouldís group showed that systemic
administration of corticosterone to normal
animals suppressed dentate gyrus
neurogenesis.
>
>This group also examined the effects of
naturally stressful situations. For instance,
 they exposed a rat to the odor of one of
its natural predators--a fox--and that
suppressed cell proliferation in the ratÅfs
dentate gyrus. They also demonstrated
reduced dentate-gyrus cell proliferation in
adult tree shrews after the psycho social
stress of exposing them to same-sex
individuals. Most recently, GouldÅfs group
reported suppressed cell division in a
marmoset monkeyÅfs dentate gyrus after
putting it in a cage with another marmoset
that had already been living there. In
combination, these studies show clearly that
stress suppresses the rate of dentate-gyrus
cell proliferation in adults of a number of
species. Furthermore, it probably does so
through increases in brain glucocorticoids.
>
>Additional, but older, literature is also
relevant here. Over the past 15 years, work
by Robert Sapolsky of Stanford University,
Bruce McEwen of Rockefeller University and
others has shown, in a number of species,
that stress and glucocorticoids cause
widespread morphological changes and even
cell death in parts of the hippocampal, such
as in the CA3 subfields. This region of the
hippocampus is the main target of the output
of neurons in the dentate gyrus. Whether
this hippocampal damage is at least in part
dependent on the suppression of neurogenesis
in the dentate gyrus is not known.