Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders

Chronic or repeated stress, particularly psychosocial stress, is an acknowledged risk factor for numerous affective and somatic disorders in modern societies. Thus, there is substantial evidence showing that chronic stress can increase the likelihood of major depressive disorder and anxiety disorder...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
:
Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (129 p.)
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spelling Stefan O. Reber auth
Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
Frontiers Media SA 2017
1 electronic resource (129 p.)
text txt rdacontent
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Frontiers Research Topics
Chronic or repeated stress, particularly psychosocial stress, is an acknowledged risk factor for numerous affective and somatic disorders in modern societies. Thus, there is substantial evidence showing that chronic stress can increase the likelihood of major depressive disorder and anxiety disorders, as well as cardiovascular diseases, irritable bowel syndrome and pain syndromes, to name but a few, in vulnerable individuals. Although a number of pharmacological agents are available to treat such stress-related disorders, many patients do not respond to them, and those who do often report a number of side effects. Therefore, a major emphasis in modern basic research is to uncover the underlying aetiology of these disorders, and to develop novel efficacious treatment strategies. This has led to a resurgence in developing, and using, appropriate animal models to study a wide variety of stress-related disorders. Thus, the aim of this research topic “Using stress-based animal models to understand the mechanisms underlying psychiatric and somatic disorders” was to bring together novel research articles and comprehensive review articles from prominent stress researchers. In addition to describing the insights such models have provided relating to the aetiology of psychiatric and somatic disorders, these articles also encompass mechanisms that are believed to underlie stress resilience and stress-protection. Finally, given the current prominence on the role of the brain-gut axis in health and disease, the research topic covers the emerging evidence showing how the gut, particularly the microbiota, influences affective behaviour and physiology.
English
stress
Glucocorticoids
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
behaviour
microbiome
Animal Models
Prefrontal Cortex
2-88945-084-8
David A. Slattery auth
language English
format eBook
author Stefan O. Reber
spellingShingle Stefan O. Reber
Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Stefan O. Reber
David A. Slattery
author_variant s o r sor
author2 David A. Slattery
author2_variant d a s das
author_sort Stefan O. Reber
title Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_full Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_fullStr Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_full_unstemmed Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_auth Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_new Using Stress-Based Animal Models to Understand the Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric and Somatic Disorders
title_sort using stress-based animal models to understand the mechanisms underlying psychiatric and somatic disorders
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2017
physical 1 electronic resource (129 p.)
isbn 2-88945-084-8
illustrated Not Illustrated
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