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prolactin

n. a peptide hormone both synthesized and released into the bloodstream by specialized cells in the anterior pituitary gland called lactotrophs. Although generally known for its originally described role in initiating and maintaining lactation—prolactin levels rise significantly in women during pregnancy, stimulating the mammary glands to grow and subsequently produce milk—prolactin also performs many other essential reproductive, homeostatic, and behavioral functions in both sexes. These include such activities as preserving the corpus luteum and enhancing its secretion of progesterone, modulating sexual arousal and the orgasmic refractory phase, influencing spermatogenesis, regulating prostate gland development, regulating the immune response, regulating water and electrolyte concentrations (osmoregulation), modulating oligodendrocyte precursor production, and inhibiting fat metabolism. Prolactin also is associated with mammalian and avian parental behavior, with prolactin variation possibly explaining individual differences in parental choices and the initiation of parental interactions. Given such versatility of action, it is not surprising that prolactin receptors are found throughout the body, including within the hypothalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, and other areas of the central nervous system; the thymus and lymphocytes of the immune system; and the liver, kidney, prostate, testis, ovary, uterus, mammary glands, and numerous other organs. Also called lactogenic hormone; lactotropic hormone; lactotropin; luteotropic hormone (LTH); luteotropin.

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Psychology term of the day

January 18th 2025

repression

repression

n.

1. in classical psychoanalytic theory and other forms of depth psychology, the basic defense mechanism that excludes painful experiences and unacceptable impulses from consciousness. Repression operates on an unconscious level as a protection against anxiety produced by objectionable sexual wishes, feelings of hostility, and ego-threatening experiences and memories of all kinds. It also comes into play in many other forms of defense, as in denial, in which individuals avoid unpleasant realities by first trying to repress them and then negating them when repression fails. See primary repression; repression proper.

2. the oppression or exclusion of individuals or groups through limitations on their personal rights and liberties.

3. more generally, the process of restricting, restraining, or subduing something or someone. Compare suppression. —repress vb.