subject area of
- A LONG-TERM INCREASE IN BASAL LEVELS OF CORTICOSTERONE AND A DECREASE IN CORTICOSTEROID-BINDING GLOBULIN AFTER ACUTE STRESSOR EXPOSURE Journal Article
- Chronic social stress produces reductions in available splenic type II corticosteroid receptor binding and plasma corticosteroid binding globulin levels Journal Article
- DIFFERENTIAL ACTIVATION OF ADRENAL-STEROID RECEPTORS IN NEURAL AND IMMUNE TISSUES OF SPRAGUE-DAWLEY, FISCHER-344, AND LEWIS RATS Journal Article
- Effects of viral infection on corticosterone secretion and glucocorticoid receptor binding in immune tissues Journal Article
- Evidence that brief stress may induce the acute phase response in rats. Journal Article
- Long-term changes in mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptor occupancy following exposure to an acute stressor Journal Article
- Major molecular differences between mammalian sexes are involved in drug metabolism and renal function Journal Article
- STRESS-RESPONSE, ADRENAL-STEROID RECEPTOR LEVELS AND CORTICOSTEROID-BINDING GLOBULIN LEVELS - A COMPARISON BETWEEN SPRAGUE-DAWLEY, FISCHER-344 AND LEWIS RATS Journal Article
- Sex differences in dendritic atrophy of CA3 pyramidal neurons in response to chronic restraint stress Journal Article
- Short-term treadmill running in the rat: what kind of stressor is it? Journal Article
- TNF-alpha-induced corticosterone elevation but not serum protein or corticosteroid binding globulin reduction is vagally mediated Journal Article
- Treadmill running produces both positive and negative physiological adaptations in Sprague-Dawley rats Journal Article