IRIS publication 8985824
Chain reactions: early-life stress alters the metabolic profile of plasma polyunsaturated fatty acids in adulthood.
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - JOUR - Clarke, G; O'Mahony, SM; Hennessy, AA; Ross, P; Stanton, C; Cryan, JF; Dinan, TG - 2009 - December - Behavioural Brain Research - Chain reactions: early-life stress alters the metabolic profile of plasma polyunsaturated fatty acids in adulthood. - Published - WOS: 26 () - 205 - 1 - 319 - 321 - The rat maternal separation paradigm can be used to examine the biological consequences of early-life stress. Immunomodulatory polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have recently attracted attention in the study of stress-related disorders. We established the plasma PUFA profile of maternally separated rodents compared to controls. Our results identify a proinflammatory PUFA profile as a persistent consequence of early-life stress and suggest new avenues of investigation in stress-related disorders. - 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.07.008 DA - 2009/12 ER -
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@article{V8985824, = {Clarke, G and O'Mahony, SM and Hennessy, AA and Ross, P and Stanton, C and Cryan, JF and Dinan, TG}, = {2009}, = {December}, = {Behavioural Brain Research}, = {Chain reactions: early-life stress alters the metabolic profile of plasma polyunsaturated fatty acids in adulthood.}, = {Published}, = {WOS: 26 ()}, = {205}, = {1}, pages = {319--321}, = {{The rat maternal separation paradigm can be used to examine the biological consequences of early-life stress. Immunomodulatory polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have recently attracted attention in the study of stress-related disorders. We established the plasma PUFA profile of maternally separated rodents compared to controls. Our results identify a proinflammatory PUFA profile as a persistent consequence of early-life stress and suggest new avenues of investigation in stress-related disorders.}}, = {10.1016/j.bbr.2009.07.008}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Clarke, G; O'Mahony, SM; Hennessy, AA; Ross, P; Stanton, C; Cryan, JF; Dinan, TG | ||
YEAR | 2009 | ||
MONTH | December | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Behavioural Brain Research | ||
TITLE | Chain reactions: early-life stress alters the metabolic profile of plasma polyunsaturated fatty acids in adulthood. | ||
STATUS | Published | ||
TIMES_CITED | WOS: 26 () | ||
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VOLUME | 205 | ||
ISSUE | 1 | ||
START_PAGE | 319 | ||
END_PAGE | 321 | ||
ABSTRACT | The rat maternal separation paradigm can be used to examine the biological consequences of early-life stress. Immunomodulatory polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have recently attracted attention in the study of stress-related disorders. We established the plasma PUFA profile of maternally separated rodents compared to controls. Our results identify a proinflammatory PUFA profile as a persistent consequence of early-life stress and suggest new avenues of investigation in stress-related disorders. | ||
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DOI_LINK | 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.07.008 | ||
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