All Relations between emotion and oxytocin

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
T Onaka, K Yag. Neurohypophysial responses to emotional stress after deafferentation of sino-aortic baroreceptors in rats. Neuroscience research. vol 13. issue 3. 1992-07-23. PMID:1319020. in an attempt to test the possibility that sino-aortic baroreceptors may mediate the previously reported stress response in hypothalamic magnocellular neurosecretory cell activity in rats, effects of deafferentation of sino-aortic baroreceptors on plasma levels of vasopressin and oxytocin after fear-related emotional stress were studied in male rats 28-33 days after the surgery. 1992-07-23 2023-08-11 rat
T Onaka, K Yag. Neurohypophysial responses to emotional stress after deafferentation of sino-aortic baroreceptors in rats. Neuroscience research. vol 13. issue 3. 1992-07-23. PMID:1319020. it is therefore suggested that afferent neural signals originating from sino-aortic baroreceptors are not primarily involved in the suppressive vasopressin or the facilitatory oxytocin response to fear-related emotional stress in rats. 1992-07-23 2023-08-11 rat
D A Carter, S L Lightma. Oxytocin stress responses are dependent upon emotionality. Psychoneuroendocrinology. vol 12. issue 3. 1987-08-31. PMID:3615751. comparison of posterior pituitary responses to stress in rat strains with contrasting emotionality has revealed an inverse relationship between oxytocin (ot) responses and emotional reactivity. 1987-08-31 2023-08-11 rat
J J Legros, P Gilot, I Mormont, D Gaspar, M Bruwie. [Neurophysins, vasopressin and cognitive function in aging]. Acta psychiatrica Belgica. vol 83. issue 4. 1984-02-14. PMID:6660009. neurophysins, vasopressin and oxytocin are not restricted to the hypothalamo-neuropituitary system but are also found in different brain area in relation with cognitive and emotional function and with cardiovascular regulation. 1984-02-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
G W Bisset, B J Clark, J Halda. Blood levels of oxytocin and vasopressin during suckling in the rabbit and the problem of their independent release. The Journal of physiology. vol 206. issue 3. 1971-03-24. PMID:5498514. emotional stress could inhibit the milk-ejection reflex either centrally by blocking the release of oxytocin, or peripherally by blocking the response of the mammary gland to circulating oxytocin. 1971-03-24 2023-08-11 rabbit