Publications by authors named "Skwarlo-Sonta K"

Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies indicate that eating organic food may be linked to lower rates of obesity, cancer, and other diseases, but research supporting these claims is limited.
  • A two-generation study with male Wistar rats examined how organic versus conventional feed affected growth, hormone levels, and immune responses, focusing on the impact of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers.
  • Results showed significant differences in feed composition based on crop protection methods, leading to notable effects on feed intake, weight gain, and immune function, highlighting the complex interactions between diet and health outcomes.
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Aim: Circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWD) are a group of disorders, in which the timing of sleep and wakefulness significantly differs from a patient's expectations or socially acceptable times. The aimof the article is to present the current principles for the diagnosis and treatment of CRSWD in adults and children.

Method: Guidelines proposed as CRSWD treatment standard are based on the recommendations from the scientific societies involved in the sleep research and medicine.

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Majority of the physiological processes in the human organism are rhythmic. The most common are the diurnal changes that repeat roughly every 24 hours, called circadian rhythms. Circadian rhythms disorders have negative influence on human functioning.

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Immunity, like other vertebrate processes, undergoes the diurnal and seasonal rhythmicity generated and synchronized by the endogenous clock. In the present study a transcription of the selected clock genes was evaluated in the chicken thymus to verify its supposed role as a peripheral clock and to check its relation with the seasonality of immune function. Chickens kept from hatch in the season-related lighting conditions (LD 16:8 in summer vs 8:16 in winter) and in a controlled temperature were exposed to the experimental peritonitis elicited by i.

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Biological rhythms in birds are driven by the master clock, which includes the suprachiasmatic nucleus, the pineal gland and the retina. Light/dark cycles are the cues that synchronize the rhythmic changes in physiological processes, including immunity. This review summarizes our investigations on the bidirectional relationships between the chicken pineal gland and the immune system.

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Demand for organic meat is partially driven by consumer perceptions that organic foods are more nutritious than non-organic foods. However, there have been no systematic reviews comparing specifically the nutrient content of organic and conventionally produced meat. In this study, we report results of a meta-analysis based on sixty-seven published studies comparing the composition of organic and non-organic meat products.

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Demand for organic milk is partially driven by consumer perceptions that it is more nutritious. However, there is still considerable uncertainty over whether the use of organic production standards affects milk quality. Here we report results of meta-analyses based on 170 published studies comparing the nutrient content of organic and conventional bovine milk.

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Demand for organic foods is partially driven by consumers' perceptions that they are more nutritious. However, scientific opinion is divided on whether there are significant nutritional differences between organic and non-organic foods, and two recent reviews have concluded that there are no differences. In the present study, we carried out meta-analyses based on 343 peer-reviewed publications that indicate statistically significant and meaningful differences in composition between organic and non-organic crops/crop-based foods.

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The avian pineal gland, apart from the hypothalamic master clock (suprachiasmatic nuclei, SCN) and retina, functions as an independent circadian oscillator, receiving external photic cues that it translates into the rhythmical synthesis of melatonin, a biochemical signal of darkness. Functional similarity to the mammalian SCN makes the avian pineal gland a convenient model for studies on biological clock mechanisms in general. Pineal melatonin is produced not only in a light-dependent manner but also remains under the control of the endogenous oscillator, while the possible involvement of melatonin in maintaining cyclic expression of the avian clock genes remains to be elucidated.

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Very little is known about the effects of an organic or conventional diet on animal physiology and health. Here, we report the effect of contrasting crop protection (with or without chemosynthetic pesticides) and fertilization (manure or mineral fertilizers) regimes on feed composition and growth and the physiological parameters of rats. The use of manure instead of mineral fertilizers in feed production resulted in lower concentrations of protein (18.

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Previously, we demonstrated that experimental peritonitis in chickens was attenuated by treatment with exogenous melatonin, while the developing inflammation decreased pineal AANAT activity. This suggested the existence of a bidirectional relationship between the activated immune system and pineal gland function. The aim of the present study was to identify the step(s) in the chicken pineal melatonin biosynthetic pathway that are affected by inflammation.

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Previously we have demonstrated that in Siberian hamsters some immune measures, especially the development of experimentally evoked peritonitis, varied in a photoperiod- and gender-dependent manner. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the photoperiod-related differences in the activity of inflammation-involved immune cells are in this species attributed to the changes in the pineal gland function and/or hormonal status. Male hamsters housed in short day (SD), compared with those from long day (LD) conditions, exhibited significantly reduced plasma testosterone concentration and elevated cortisol and melatonin levels, the latter resulting from increased activity of hydroxyindole-O-methyltransferase (HIOMT).

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Objective: Cocaine-amphetamine regulated transcript peptides (CART) belong to a neuropeptide family expressed in the central nervous system, especially in the hypothalamus, and also in peripheral tissues. The physiological functions of CART include modulation of pituitary hormone release, regulation of body weight, and the control of feeding behavior and metabolic activity. The reciprocal relationships between CART and immune system function have to be established.

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Tea tree oil (TTO) is well known as an antimicrobial and immunomodulatory agent. In the present study we confirmed the anti-inflammatory properties of TTO and investigated the involvement of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in the immunomodulatory action of TTO administered by inhalation. Sexually mature, 6-8-week-old, C(57)BI(10) x CBA/H (F(1)) male mice were used.

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The effect of PACAP 38 administration on neuroendocrine and immune parameters was examined in rats with LPS-induced peritonitis. Treatment with PACAP 38 alone did not influence the serum level of the cytokines and hormones examined, but significantly decreased immune cell activity. When administered together with LPS, PACAP 38 reversed its effect on immune and humoral parameters, causing a decrease in the serum concentrations of TNFalpha and corticosterone, and an increase in T4 and GH.

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This study examined the effect of melatonin (MLT) on in vitro phagocytosis of testicular macrophages taken from control and streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats and the possible mechanism of its action. The phagocytic activity was measured as a number of latex beads ingested by 100 macrophages (PI, phagocytic index) in consecutive time points of the incubation. Changes in intracellular free calcium level [Ca2+]i in isolated macrophages in vitro were measured with the use of ratio-image fluorescence microscopy (fluorescent dye: Fura2/AM).

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The immunomodulatory action of melatonin in different animal species is already well known, although the mechanism(s) by which the indoleamine influences the immune system have yet to be fully elucidated. Previously, we have shown both anti-inflammatory and opioid-mediated influence of exogenous melatonin on thioglycollate-induced peritonitis in young chickens. In the present study, the kinetics of peritonitis and splenocyte proliferation were compared in chickens reared in both seasons under the same L:D 12:12 conditions.

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Objectives: Siberian hamsters are photoperiodic animals exhibiting seasonality of reproduction and other physiological functions. Thus, the influence of photoperiod on the in vitro activity of selected immune cells from male and female hamsters challenged with peritoneal inflammation was examined.

Methods: Animals were housed for 8-10 weeks in LD (L:D=18:6) or SD (L:D=6:18).

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The immunomodulatory properties of melatonin (Mel) are generally recognized but the mechanisms of its action are not fully understood. In mammals, some of the immunomodulatory effects of Mel are mediated by opioids synthesized by immune cells under its influence. The present study was performed to examine whether Mel-induced opioids are involved in the immunomodulatory activity of Mel in chickens.

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The pineal hormone melatonin exhibits immunomodulatory activity well documented in mammals and birds. The mechanism of melatonin action within the immune system is, however, poorly understood. In mammalian immune cells in vitro, melatonin acts mainly as an antiapoptotic, oncostatic and antiproliferative agent, and these effects are exerted via specific receptors or are related to its free radical scavenging activity.

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The pineal gland is a vertebrate neuroendocrine organ converting environmental photoperiodic information into a biochemical message (melatonin) that subsequently regulates the activity of numerous target tissues after its release into the bloodstream. A phylogenetically conserved feature is increased melatonin synthesis during darkness, even though there are differences between mammals and birds in the regulation of rhythmic pinealocyte function. Membrane-bound melatonin receptors are found in many peripheral organs, including lymphoid glands and immune cells, from which melatonin receptor genes have been characterized and cloned.

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Objectives: Time-dependent melatonin effects on chicken lymphocyte proliferation in vitro and the involvement of cAMP in melatonin signal transduction were examined.

Materials And Methods: Splenocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were cultured in vitro in the presence of melatonin, phytohemagglutinin, luzindole, dibutyrylcAMP (dbcAMP), forskolin and vasoactive intestine peptide (VIP). Proliferation was measured by [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation in cultures carried out for 24, 36, 48 and 72 h.

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Pineal gland, by the diurnal rhythm of synthesis and release of its principal hormone, melatonin (MEL), is involved in reciprocal relationships between neuroendocrine and immune systems, responsible for keeping internal homeostasis in vertebrate animals. In this paper the experimental data, indicating that both strategic (developmental, thus antigen independent) and emergency (evoked by antigenic activation of the mature immune system) levels of interactions between pineal gland and immune system, operate in mammals and birds, are reviewed. The cells and organs of immune system using membrane receptors as well as nuclear orphan receptors perceive MEL message.

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Background: Morphine exerts immunomodulatory effects dependent on several factors including species and parameter examined. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of morphine on experimental peritonitis and leukocyte activity in young chickens of both sexes.

Methods: Peritonitis was elicited by intraperitoneal injection of thioglycollate (TG) alone or supplemented with morphine; additional chicken groups were injected with morphine alone.

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The immune system of mammals and birds exhibits the same basic anatomical and functional organization, including dichotomy into the cellular and humoral immune response. Specificities of avian immune system may be, however, very useful for understanding numerous phylogenetic and evolutionary mysteries. Similarities and differences between mammals and birds in terms of several pineal gland functions are well known, and they seem to include the immunomodulatory activity of melatonin (MEL) as well.

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