Results 231 to 240 of about 37,200 (286)

Protective effect of melatonin against maternal deprivation-induced acute hippocampal damage in infant rats

open access: yesNeuroscience Letters, 2006
It is known that maternal deprivation induces hippocampal damage in the developing brains. In the present study, we examined the effects of melatonin on maternal deprivation-induced hippocampal damage both during and after stress-hyporesponsive period ...
KAZIM Tuğyan   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Maternal exercise decreases maternal deprivation induced anxiety of pups and correlates to increased prefrontal cortex BDNF and VEGF

open access: yesNeuroscience Letters, 2011
Maternal deprivation (MD) may cause neuropsychiatric disorders such as anxiety disorder by negatively affecting the cognitive functions and behavior in pups.
Nazan Uysal, Ayfer Dayi, İlkay Aksu
exaly   +2 more sources

How early maternal deprivation changes the brain and behavior?

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2022
Early life stress can adversely influence brain development and reprogram brain function and consequently behavior in adult life. Adequate maternal care in early childhood is therefore particularly important for the normal brain development, and adverse ...
Masa Cater, Gregor Majdic
exaly   +2 more sources
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MATERNAL DEPRIVATION

Pediatrics, 1956
The effects upon the child of separation from his mother (deprivation syndrome) have been critically reviewed. Effects of physical neglect or emotional rejection by the child's mother have not been included in this paper. The results of maternal deprivation in the physical, intellectual and emotional areas have been described.
L, EISENBERG, K, GLASER
openaire   +2 more sources

Maternal Deprivation Reassessed

International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 1982
(1982). Maternal Deprivation Reassessed. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy: Vol. 32, No. 3, pp. 395-397.
Ralph LaRossa, Michael Rutter
openaire   +2 more sources

Age-dependent effects of maternal deprivation on oxidative stress in infant rat brain

open access: yesNeuroscience Letters, 2005
Developing brain is much more sensitive to all kind of stressors. than the developed brain. Early maternal deprivatit in causes some behavioural and physiological effects on rats.
Nazan Uysal   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Maternal deprivation reconsidered

Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 1972
THE concept of “maternal deprivation” is one that rapidly caught the imagination of both the general public and professional workers. It became widely accepted that severe distortions in a child’s early family life could have long-lasting effects on his later development, and “maternal deprivation” has been thought to be the cause of conditions as ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Maternal—Fetal Deprivation and the Cardiometabolic Syndrome

Journal of the CardioMetabolic Syndrome, 2006
Epidemiologic studies suggest a relationship between low birth weight and adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Risk factors such as obesity, insulin resistance, diabetes mellitus, and hypertension—the cardiometabolic syndrome—are similarly affected. These observations are now supported by numerous animal studies.
Michael, Bursztyn, Ilana, Ariel
openaire   +2 more sources

The maternal deprivation animal model revisited

Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2015
Early life stress, in the form of MD (24h at pnd 9), interferes with brain developmental trajectories modifying both behavioral and neurobiochemical parameters. MD has been reported to enhance neuroendocrine responses to stress, to affect emotional behavior and to impair cognitive function.
Eva M. Marco   +6 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Effects of Neonatal Amygdalectomy in the Maternally Reared and Maternally Deprived Macaque

Nature, 1967
IN the monkey, bilateral amygdalectomy results in a number of behavioural changes which have been well documented1–4. These changes consist of (1) reduction in aggressiveness and relative tameness toward man; (2) increased orality, coprophagia and the mouthing of inedible objects; (3) hypermetamorphosis; and (4) hypersexuality.
A, Kling, P C, Green
openaire   +2 more sources

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