Publications by authors named "Amy L Dugan"

Psychological stress has a high incidence after burn injury, therefore, anxiolytic drugs are often prescribed. Unfortunately, to date, no burn study has investigated the effects of anxiolytic drugs on the ability to fight infection. This study was undertaken to determine if psychological stress, anxiety-modulating drugs, or both, alter survival following an infection.

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Objective: Current evidence supports the conclusion that prolactin (PRL) is not an obligate immunoregulatory hormone and influences the immune system predominantly during stress conditions. In this study, we examined the impact of PRL on the psychogenic stress-induced responses of myeloid cells.

Methods: Seven-week-old PRL+/- (normal) and PRL-/- (deficient) mice were exposed to a predator for 1 h/day on 3 consecutive days.

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It is well known that many burn patients experience psychopathological disorders prior to burn injury. However, it is not known whether individuals that have been exposed to chronic psychological stresses will respond differently than unstressed individuals when challenged by a burn injury. In this study, we assessed whether chronic psychogenic stress prior to burn injury had any significant impact on burn injury-induced alterations in the myeloid compartment in the bone marrow and serum cytokine levels utilizing a well-controlled purely psychogenic stress model (predator exposure).

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In this study, we sought to determine if prolactin (PRL) had any influence on burn-induced alterations in myelopoiesis and serum IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and MCP-1 levels. To do this, we used mice that were PRL normal, PRL deficient, or hyperprolactinemic and had received a 15% total body surface area burn, sham treatment, or no treatment. We performed clonogenic assays of bone marrow cells, and we found that sham treatment significantly decreased monocyte/macrophage (M) colony formation relative to the control group in the PRL-deficient and PRL-normal mice (P < 0.

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The importance of prolactin (PRL) in mammopoiesis and milk production is undisputed. However, previous studies investigating the role of PRL in immune function have yielded inconsistencies. These inconsistencies have led to our hypothesis that the immunomodulatory effects of PRL are only manifest under conditions in which the organism is subjected to stress.

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