High levels of aggressive behaviors against intruders in the nest area are displayed by female rats during the first 10 days after delivery, declining thereafter to very low levels, even though lactation continues. Cross-fostering experiments were undertaken to test the hypothesis that pup age may affect aggression in lactating rats. The behavior of females on the 8th day after delivery when raising fostered 8-day-old pups was compared to that of females on the 8th postpartum day raising older pups (18 days old) for the last 5 days, and females on the 18th day after delivery raising fostered 18-day-old pups were compared to females in the same postpartum period nursing younger pups (8 days of age at the time of the maternal aggression test) for 5 days. Pup retrieval activity and plasma prolactin level were also analyzed. Females on the 8th postpartum day nursing 18-day-old pups were less aggressive than females in the same postpartum period, but with 8-day-old pups. Likewise, females on the 18th postpartum day nursing younger pups were more aggressive and presented higher levels of prolactin than females nursing older pups. Thus, pup development can alter the natural decline of maternal aggressive behavior.
One week after a single stressful event, a reversible DNA damage was identified in the prefrontal cortex and in the amygdala, whereas DNA damage in the hippocampus still remained.
Objective: to analyze the relationship between psychosocial stress dimensions and salivary
cortisol in military police officers. Method: cross-sectional and analytical study with 134 military police officers. The
Effort-Reward Imbalance (ERI) Model scale has been used to assess psychosocial
stress. Salivary cortisol was collected in three samples. The following tests were
used: Student's t-test, Mann-Whitney, ANOVA, Bonferroni, Kruskal-Wallis and Dunn.
Pearson and Spearman correlation methods were used, as well as multiple linear
regression. Cortisol at night showed an ascending statistical association with the
psychosocial reward (p=0.004) and a descending association with the
effort-impairment scores (p=0.017). Being part of the Special Tactical Operations
Group (GATE) and the diastolic blood pressure explained 13.5% of the variation in
cortisol levels on waking up. The sectors GATE, Special Patrol of the Elite Squad
of the Military Police and Motorcyclists explained 21.9% of the variation in
cortisol levels 30-minute after awakening. The variables GATE sector and Effort
Dimension explained 27.7% of the variation in cortisol levels at night. Conclusion: it was evidenced that salivary cortisol variation was influenced by individual,
labor and psychosocial variables.
Maternal aggression is most intense in lactating rats from the 3 rd to the 12 th day postpartum. The purpose of this study was to determine if plasma prolactin (PRL) and prolactin receptor (PRL-R L ) mRNA expression in the medial preoptic area (MPOA) of lactating rats are altered in association with maternal aggression. Lactating Sprague Dawley rats were divided into 5 groups and exposed for 10 minutes to an intruder male or to an object on postpartum day 8. Trunk blood and the brain of the dams were collected 30 or 240 minutes after exposure and from a non-exposed group. Lower levels of prolactin were found 30 minutes after the aggression test. No change was detected in the number of cells expressing PRL-R L mRNA by in situ hybridization histochemistry (ISHH) as a function of testing. However, the correlation between plasma PRL and PRL-R L mRNA expression in the mothers changed from positive in control females to negative in intruder exposed animals. These data support the concept that a maternal aggressive experience, while acutely altering PRL secretion, fails to affect PRL-R L mRNA expression.
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