Puberty is a critical period of neural development, and exposure to stress and inflammation during this period is thought to increase vulnerability to mental illness. The gut microbiome influences brain functioning and behavior and impacts mental health. Yet, the role of the gut microbiome during puberty, a period during which mental health conditions tend to onset, remains largely uninvestigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStress has a significant influence on the function of the human organism. A simple, rapid, inexpensive, and reliable marker for stress would therefore be of great value. We have recently noted that stress increases the state of leukocyte adhesiveness and aggregation in the peripheral blood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine the state of leukocyte adhesiveness/aggregation (LAA), in the peripheral blood of patients with ischaemic heart disease.
Methods: All the patients were examined during their hospitalization in the Chaim Sheba Medical Center Intensive Coronary Care Unit. The patients were divided into four diagnostic categories according to the clinical picture, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic findings, as well as enzyme levels.
Following previous observations that the adhesive state of white blood cells in the peripheral blood increases during stress, we examined 645 volunteers in various conditions of anticipatory anxiety. The volunteer subjects included 465 controls in whom stress was related solely to impending venipuncture, 149 persons under moderate stress (students before delivering a graded lecture, patients before dental treatment, etc), as well as 31 individuals under major stress (eg, before induction of anesthesia in the operating room). The respective values of aggregated leukocytes in the peripheral blood were 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe determined the state of the leukocyte adhesiveness/aggregation in the peripheral blood by using a simple slide test and found it to be more sensitive than the white blood cell count for the detection of acute mental stress. Included were 71 controls, 64 young athletes examined just before their exercise, 14 volunteers who were examined 10-20 min before engagement in rappelling while an additional group of 20 were examined just before the act as they were facing an abyss from the top of a cliff. The state of leukocyte adhesiveness/aggregation correlated significantly (p less than 0.
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