551. Chronic stress accelerates ultraviolet-induced cutaneous carcinogenesis.
- Author
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Parker J, Klein SL, McClintock MK, Morison WL, Ye X, Conti CJ, Peterson N, Nousari CH, and Tausk FA
- Subjects
- Animals, Chronic Disease, Disease Models, Animal, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Mice, Mice, Hairless, Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced etiology, Skin Neoplasms etiology, Stress, Physiological complications, Ultraviolet Rays adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Physical and emotional stressors have been found to mediate a wide variety of biological changes including the facilitation of tumor progression; however most of these paradigms utilized artificial sources of neoplasms and stress., Methods: Skh mice were exposed to carcinogenic doses of ultraviolet light (UV). The stressed group was subjected to the close proximity of fox urine as a source of stress from the presence of the odor of their natural predator, while the control group remained stress free., Results: A significant acceleration in the development of cutaneous neoplasms was observed in mice that had been exposed to the stressor. The first tumor appeared in the group after 8 weeks, whereas nonstressed mice began to develop these by week 21., Conclusion: These results suggest that stress plays a role in potentiating cutaneous carcinogenesis.
- Published
- 2004
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