Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3165657986> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W3165657986 endingPage "105004" @default.
- W3165657986 startingPage "105004" @default.
- W3165657986 abstract "In hamsters, exposure to stress in adulthood causes increased body weight. We addressed how social stress during puberty would impact food intake and body weight. Stressed hamsters started gaining significantly more weight than controls after only two days of stress exposure. Over a two-week period, stressed subjects gained 10% more weight and consumed more food than controls. At the end of the stress period, stressed hamsters collected nearly twice as many palatable sugar pellets from an arena than controls. Stressed subjects presented 15-20% more body fat in mesenteric, inguinal, and retroperitoneal fat pads. In order to assess the duration of these effects, we analyzed data from previous studies keeping hamsters for over two months past the stress period in puberty. Our analysis shows that stressed hamsters stopped gaining more weight after the stress period, but their body weights remained elevated for over two months, consistently weighing 10% more than their non-stressed counterparts. We also analyzed conditioning training data collected after the period of stress in late puberty and early adulthood (P56 to P70) that was part of the original studies. Training consisted of lever pressing for palatable food rewards. At these times, previously stressed hamsters retrieved similar numbers of food pellets from the conditioning chambers, suggesting no difference in appetite after the stress period. These data showing a long-lasting effect of stress on body weight may be relevant to studies on the ontogeny of lifelong obesity." @default.
- W3165657986 created "2021-06-07" @default.
- W3165657986 creator A5018923390 @default.
- W3165657986 creator A5040513447 @default.
- W3165657986 creator A5059592438 @default.
- W3165657986 date "2021-07-01" @default.
- W3165657986 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W3165657986 title "Lifelong enhancement of body mass from adolescent stress in male hamsters" @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1542645650 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1914037391 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1965244191 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1966495941 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1969845553 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1975865723 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1978004150 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1978037066 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1979164163 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1983431763 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1988474369 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1991448709 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1992470312 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W1999914836 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2000296512 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2004750779 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2009310404 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2010848748 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2014280680 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2019174770 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2019414704 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2020101472 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2022294913 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2022796785 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2024204801 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2027898754 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2035335774 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2035475751 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2040674157 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2043686423 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2049744473 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2052453733 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2058815839 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2059136560 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2062865200 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2066181843 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2067273260 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2067601144 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2068341324 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2078356252 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2079938187 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2083955497 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2085791858 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2089073450 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2089861344 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2090669478 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2093067611 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2094609607 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2100918766 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2101290962 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2102947363 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2120782387 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2124626453 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2125262277 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2132109730 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2139983741 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2141185837 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2143604420 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2145729053 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2146343387 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2150833441 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2154020234 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2157234438 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2157485253 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2157670485 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2158153195 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2158196600 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2158944682 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2161551744 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2167607159 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2172157844 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2249523439 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2252344547 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2290902885 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2501801755 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2510094205 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2596180819 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2599301087 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2604243304 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2610639296 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2740231311 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2898174762 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W2990427812 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W3003041011 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W3013390201 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W3036148402 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W3100078568 @default.
- W3165657986 cites W9126064 @default.
- W3165657986 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.105004" @default.
- W3165657986 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34062278" @default.