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  2. Neurosteroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurosteroid

    These neurosteroids have excitatory effects on neurotransmission. They act as potent negative allosteric modulators of the GABA A receptor, weak positive allosteric modulators of the NMDA receptor, and/or agonists of the σ 1 receptor, and mostly have antidepressant, anxiogenic, cognitive and memory-enhancing, convulsant, neuroprotective, and neurogenic effects.

  3. List of neurosteroids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neurosteroids

    This is a list of neurosteroids, or natural and synthetic steroids that are active on the mammalian nervous system through receptors other than steroid hormone receptors. It includes inhibitory , excitatory , and neurotrophic neurosteroids as well as pheromones and vomeropherines .

  4. GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GABAA_receptor_positive...

    Little is known about where different complexes are located in the brain, complicating drug discovery. [7] For example, the binding site of neurosteroids in the GABA A receptor is not known [9] and barbiturates bind at a beta subunit that is distinct from the benzodiazepine binding site.

  5. Pregnenolone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pregnenolone

    Pregnenolone and its 3β-sulfate, pregnenolone sulfate, like dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), DHEA sulfate, and progesterone, belong to the group of neurosteroids that are found in high concentrations in certain areas of the brain, and are synthesized there. Neurosteroids affect synaptic functioning, are neuroprotective, and enhance myelinization.

  6. Neurocardiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurocardiology

    This complex innervates key autonomic structures from the brain's cortex to the heart along the neurocardiac axis. The heart is both the source of life and a source of cardiac arrhythmias and complications. The information originates in the brain's cortex and descends down to the hypothalamus.

  7. Category:Neurosteroids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Neurosteroids

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  8. Corticotropin-releasing hormone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corticotropin-releasing...

    CRH is produced in response to stress, predominantly by parvocellular neurosecretory cells within the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus and is released at the median eminence from neurosecretory terminals of these neurons into the primary capillary plexus of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal system.

  9. Ventricular system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventricular_system

    These form the ventricular system of the brain: [8] The neural stem cells of the developing brain, principally radial glial cells, line the developing ventricular system in a transient zone called the ventricular zone. [9] The prosencephalon divides into the telencephalon, which forms the cortex of the developed brain, and the diencephalon.