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Clinical Trial
. 1996 Nov;20(8):1315-23.
doi: 10.1016/s0278-5846(96)00128-5.

The effects of age, gender, and season on serotonergic function in healthy subjects

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Free article
Clinical Trial

The effects of age, gender, and season on serotonergic function in healthy subjects

R N Golden et al. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 1996 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

1. Several factors, including age, gender, and season of the year, have been reported to affect physiologic indices of central serotonergic function, although some of these findings have not been consistent across groups of subjects and types of serotonergic measures. 2. The authors investigated the role that each of these variables might play in the neuroendocrine response to acute intravenous challenge with the serotonin reuptake inhibitor clomipramine (CMI) in healthy volunteers. 3. Thirty seven healthy subjects (17 women and 20 men), with an age range of 19 to 50 years, received 12.5 mg of CMI intravenously under standardized conditions. 4. The maximum change from baseline in plasma prolactin concentrations ("delta-max") was significantly related to age, after controlling for gender and season. 5. In contrast, neither gender nor season was significantly related to prolactin delta-max, after controlling for the other two variables. 6. Although the age range and sample size are relatively limited, the results from this study suggest that age, but not gender or season, may influence serotonergic function, as measured by the prolactin response to CMI challenge.

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