Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and parity enhance performance of rats in object recognition or object placement tasks.
about
Neurosteroids' effects and mechanisms for social, cognitive, emotional, and physical functionsSex steroid hormones matter for learning and memory: estrogenic regulation of hippocampal function in male and female rodentsEarly reproductive experiences in females make differences in cognitive function later in lifeHippocampal plasticity during the peripartum period: influence of sex steroids, stress and ageingStructural and Functional Brain Remodeling during Pregnancy with Diffusion Tensor MRI and Resting-State Functional MRIContrasting effects of increased and decreased dopamine transmission on latent inhibition in ovariectomized rats and their modulation by 17beta-estradiol: an animal model of menopausal psychosis?Sex differences in escalation of methamphetamine self-administration: cognitive and motivational consequences in rats.The maternal brain: an organ with peripartal plasticity.Distinct Antidepressant-Like and Cognitive Effects of Antidepressants with Different Mechanisms of Action in Middle-Aged Female MiceConjugated equine estrogen, with medroxyprogesterone acetate, enhances formation of 5alpha-reduced progestogens and reduces anxiety-like behavior of middle-aged rats.II. Cognitive performance of middle-aged female rats is influenced by capacity to metabolize progesterone in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus.Juvenile offspring of rats exposed to restraint stress in late gestation have impaired cognitive performance and dysregulated progestogen formation.Divergent mechanisms for trophic actions of estrogens in the brain and peripheral tissues.I. Levels of 5α-reduced progesterone metabolite in the midbrain account for variability in reproductive behavior of middle-aged female ratsRegulation of object recognition and object placement by ovarian sex steroid hormones.Prenatal Stress Alters Progestogens to Mediate Susceptibility to Sex-Typical, Stress-Sensitive Disorders, such as Drug Abuse: A Review.Maternal stress during pregnancy causes sex-specific alterations in offspring memory performance, social interactions, indices of anxiety, and body mass.The role of progestins in the behavioral effects of cocaine and other drugs of abuse: human and animal research.Chronic stress and a cyclic regimen of estradiol administration separately facilitate spatial memory: relationship with hippocampal CA1 spine density and dendritic complexityMnemonic effects of progesterone to mice require formation of 3alpha,5alpha-THP.Relevance of stress and female sex hormones for emotion and cognition.Gestational exposure to variable stressors produces decrements in cognitive and neural development of juvenile male and female rats.Progesterone, administered before kainic acid, prevents decrements in cognitive performance in the Morris Water MazeProgesterone enhances learning and memory of aged wildtype and progestin receptor knockout mice.The birth of new neurons in the maternal brain: Hormonal regulation and functional implications.Chronic estradiol treatment increases CA1 cell survival but does not improve visual or spatial recognition memory after global ischemia in middle-aged female rats.Progestogens' effects and mechanisms for object recognition memory across the lifespan.Chronic estradiol replacement to aged female rats reduces anxiety-like and depression-like behavior and enhances cognitive performance.Amyloid precursor protein mutation disrupts reproductive experience-enhanced normal cognitive development in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.The pregnane xenobiotic receptor, a prominent liver factor, has actions in the midbrain for neurosteroid synthesis and behavioral/neural plasticity of female rats.Sex, hormones and neurogenesis in the hippocampus: hormonal modulation of neurogenesis and potential functional implications.Advances in neurosteroids: role in clinical practice.Neurosteroids in clinical practice: implications for women's health.The influence of offspring, parity, and oxytocin on cognitive flexibility during the postpartum period.Effect of Reproductive History and Exogenous Hormone Use on Cognitive Function in Mid- and Late Life.Progestogens influence cognitive processes in aging.An enriched environment and 17-beta estradiol produce similar pro-cognitive effects on ovariectomized rats.Paternal experience suppresses adult neurogenesis without altering hippocampal function in Peromyscus californicus.Effects of quercetin on predator stress-related hematological and behavioral alterations in pregnant rats and their offspring.Pregnancy improves cognitive deficit and neuronal morphology atrophy in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus of aging spontaneously hypertensive rats.
P2860
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P2860
Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and parity enhance performance of rats in object recognition or object placement tasks.
description
2008 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2008年の論文
@ja
2008年論文
@yue
2008年論文
@zh-hant
2008年論文
@zh-hk
2008年論文
@zh-mo
2008年論文
@zh-tw
2008年论文
@wuu
2008年论文
@zh
2008年论文
@zh-cn
name
Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and ...... ion or object placement tasks.
@en
type
label
Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and ...... ion or object placement tasks.
@en
prefLabel
Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and ...... ion or object placement tasks.
@en
P2860
P356
P1433
P1476
Estrous cycle, pregnancy, and ...... ion or object placement tasks.
@en
P2093
Cheryl A Frye
Jason J Paris
P2860
P304
P356
10.1530/REP-07-0512
P577
2008-04-04T00:00:00Z