- A
neurohormone is any
hormone produced and
released by
neuroendocrine cells (also
called neurosecretory cells) into the blood. By
definition of
being hormones...
-
injected with
these neurohormones,
their mating system does not change. In contrast, if
prairie voles are
injected with the
neurohormones, they may form a...
-
neuroendocrine cells. Both
classic hormones and
neurohormones are
secreted by
endocrine tissue; however,
neurohormones are the
result of a
combination between...
- astrocytes,
microglial and
other cells of the
central nervous system.
These neurohormones,
produced by
neurosecretory cells, are
normally secreted from nerve...
- of the
autonomic nervous system. It
synthesizes and
secretes certain neurohormones,
called releasing hormones or
hypothalamic hormones, and
these in turn...
- phase) is
typically a
relaxing experience after the
release of the
neurohormones oxytocin and prolactin, as well as
endorphins (or "endogenous morphine")...
-
Science in 1976, and the
Nobel Prize for
Medicine in 1977 for his work on
neurohormones,
sharing the
prize that year with
Andrew Schally and
Rosalyn Sussman...
- in the female, and ****togenesis in the male. GnRH is
considered a
neurohormone, a
hormone produced in a
specific neural cell and
released at its neural...
-
hormones from the
anterior pituitary by
secreting a
class of
hypothalamic neurohormones called releasing and release-inhibiting hormones—which are released...
- activity, and a
feeling of
relaxation that can be
attributed to the
neurohormones oxytocin and prolactin. The
intensity and
duration of the refractory...