Recherche
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Multi-hit early life adversity affects gut microbiota, brain and behavior in a sex-dependent manner
(Brain, Behavior, and Immunity. vol. 80, pp. 179-192, 2019)Article de revue -
Adverse childhood experiences and physiological wear-and-tear in midlife: Findings from the 1958 British birth cohort.
(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. vol. 112, n° 7, pp. E738-46, 2015-02-17)Article de revue -
Impact of perinatal exposure to high-fat diet and stress on responses to nutritional challenges, food-motivated behaviour and mesolimbic dopamine function
(International Journal of Obesity. vol. 41, n° 4, pp. 502-509, 2017-04)Article de revue -
Pharmacological restoration of gut barrier function in stressed neonates partially reverses long-term alterations associated with maternal separation.
(Psychopharmacology. vol. 236, n° 5, pp. 1583-1596, 2019-05)Article de revue -
E.26 - Maternal High Fat Diet Reverses the Emotional Consequences of Maternal Separation in Offspring, but Increases Its Vulnerability to Diet-Induced Obesity:
(Behavioural Pharmacology. vol. 24, pp. e48-e49, 2013-10-01)Article de revue -
Pharmacological inhibition of gut leakiness prevents the long-term effects of early-life stress in rats
(European Neuropsychopharmacology. vol. 27, pp. S686-S687, 2017)Article de revue -
ROCK inhibition prevents tau hyperphosphorylation and p25/CDK5 increase after global cerebral ischemia.
(Behavioral Neuroscience. vol. 125, n° 3, pp. 465-72, 2011-06-01)Article de revue -
Maternal high-fat diet and early life stress differentially modulate spine density and dendritic morphology in the medial prefrontal cortex of juvenile and adult rats
(Brain Structure and Function. vol. 223, n° 2, pp. 883-895, 2018-03)Article de revue -
Perinatal high-fat diet increases hippocampal vulnerability to the adverse effects of subsequent high-fat feeding
(Psychoneuroendocrinology. vol. 53, pp. 82-93, 2015-03)Article de revue -
Pharmacological restoration of gut barrier function in stressed neonates partially reverses long-term alterations associated with maternal separation
(Psychopharmacology. vol. 236, n° 5, pp. 1583-1596, 2019)Article de revue