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Title: Sulfate and glucuronide conjugates of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG) in urine of depressed patients: central and peripheral influences. Author: Peyrin L, Pequignot JM, Chauplannaz G, Laurent B, Aimard G. Journal: J Neural Transm; 1985; 63(3-4):255-69. PubMed ID: 4067598. Abstract: A number of arguments support the hypothesis that changes in urinary levels of MHPG sulfate and MHPG glucuronide respectively reflect central and peripheral norepinephrine metabolism (NE) in man. In this line, the daily excretion of both conjugates was determined in 36 depressed women comparatively to 23 healthy women in order to assess the extent and the central or peripheral location of their possible NE dysfunction. About 80% of the patients suffering from depression (6 endogenous, 19 neurotic, 11 reactive depressions) exhibited a central NE defect, as evidenced by low MHPG sulfate, and many of them had probably also diminished sympathetic activity, as suggested by low MHPG glucuronide. Clinical symptoms possibly related to the psychic state (mood alteration) or associated to sympathetic changes (anxiety, motor activity) respectively altered sulfate or glucuronide excretion. Sulfate (S) and glucuronide (G) MHPG excretions were significantly correlated in healthy subjects (r = 0.53, p = 0.01), thus supporting the concept of the functional link between central NE activity and sympathetic function. Such a correlation was not found in depressive patients. However the lack of significant changes in the mean ratio S/G in the patient sub-groups suggests that as in normal subjects, central and peripheral NE activity are linked in depressed patients, but other factors may also modify sympathetic function. Taken together our data show that the separate assay of sulfate and glucuronide MHPG provides a better picture of NE dysfunction in depression than total MHPG measurement.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]