Immune Reproductive Articles & Analysis: Older
6 articles found
They influence everything from growth and development, sexual characteristics, and reproduction to immune responses, mood, and our body's reaction to stress. ...
CB1 is mainly found on cells in the nervous system, including certain areas of the brain and the ends of nerves throughout the body, while CB2 receptors are mainly found in cells from the immune system. CB1 receptors are responsible for the psychoactive effects; know as a ‘high’ after using cannabis. Scientists have found that endocannabinoids and cannabinoid ...
Hormones regulate the body's development, growth, reproduction, metabolism, immunity and behavior. Endocrine disruptors interfere with natural hormone systems, and the health effects can be felt long after the exposure has stopped. ...
The authors studied the effects on reproductive performance, carotenoid‐based ornamentation and cellular immune responsiveness of adult partridges, and their relationship with changes in oxidative stress biomarkers and plasma biochemistry. The authors also studied the effect of parental exposure on egg antioxidant content and on the survival, growth and cellular ...
Exposure to these substances under some circumstances is believed to result in adverse developmental, reproductive, neurological, and immune effects in both humans and wildlife. Over the years, researchers have pointed to a growing list of anomalous health effects (including the feminization of certain male wild fish and male reproductive ...
This was based on the most up-to-date knowledge and information regarding critical effects (including developmental, reproductive, hormonal, immune system and neurobehavioural effects), dose-response relationships and quantitative risk extrapolation. ...
