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Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load

Received: 27 October 2013     Published: 20 November 2013
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Abstract

At the present time occur a lot of political, ideological, religion, economic crises and other conflicts that lead to global changes of social sphere. The frequent cases of local armed conflict, terrorism act takes a considerable mobilization of economic and human resources. As a rule, the professional members of a police task force occupation for maintain securities are with extreme environments. The occupational hazard effect may evident by overstrain and depletion of functional regulatory mechanisms that provide the adaptation. The law-enforcement officers of Ministry of Home Affairs, aged 23-35 years were investigated. In according to professional occupation this one was divided in three groups: combatants that send on a mission to Caucasus for maintenance of law order; law-enforcement school students; policemen that maintain law order in territory without war conflict and never take part in combat mission. The blood serum steroid hormones (cortisol, testosterone, progesterone and estradiol) were determined. It was provided comparative analysis of means between groups: combatants before – after mission; combatant – students – policemen. Analyses of our results are shown that hormonal levels at all persons were in normal physiological limits. Together with it, significant differences of steroid serum hormonal means between comparative groups as for dependent samples well as for independent samples were revealed. The differences of endocrine system index (hormonal levels of steroid hormones) at different law-enforcement officer groups with intensive professional stress are reactions for adaptation of organism to extreme factors, probably. They provide optimal adaptive changes to response on environment stress.

Published in American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine (Volume 1, Issue 3)
DOI 10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11
Page(s) 44-47
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2013. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Law-Enforcement Officers, Stress, Adaptation, Cortisol, Testosterone, Progesterone, Estradiol

References
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    Roman Victorovich Koubassov, Yury Evlampievich Barachevsky, Valery Valentinovich Lupachev, Elena Nikolaevna Sibileva. (2013). Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load. American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, 1(3), 44-47. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11

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    ACS Style

    Roman Victorovich Koubassov; Yury Evlampievich Barachevsky; Valery Valentinovich Lupachev; Elena Nikolaevna Sibileva. Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load. Am. J. Clin. Exp. Med. 2013, 1(3), 44-47. doi: 10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11

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    AMA Style

    Roman Victorovich Koubassov, Yury Evlampievich Barachevsky, Valery Valentinovich Lupachev, Elena Nikolaevna Sibileva. Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load. Am J Clin Exp Med. 2013;1(3):44-47. doi: 10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11,
      author = {Roman Victorovich Koubassov and Yury Evlampievich Barachevsky and Valery Valentinovich Lupachev and Elena Nikolaevna Sibileva},
      title = {Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load},
      journal = {American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine},
      volume = {1},
      number = {3},
      pages = {44-47},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajcem.20130103.11},
      abstract = {At the present time occur a lot of political, ideological, religion, economic crises and other conflicts that lead to global changes of social sphere. The frequent cases of local armed conflict, terrorism act takes a considerable mobilization of economic and human resources. As a rule, the professional members of a police task force occupation for maintain securities are with extreme environments. The occupational hazard effect may evident by overstrain and depletion of functional regulatory mechanisms that provide the adaptation. The law-enforcement officers of Ministry of Home Affairs, aged 23-35 years were investigated. In according to professional occupation this one was divided in three groups: combatants that send on a mission to Caucasus for maintenance of law order; law-enforcement school students; policemen that maintain law order in territory without war conflict and never take part in combat mission. The blood serum steroid hormones (cortisol, testosterone, progesterone and estradiol) were determined. It was provided comparative analysis of means between groups: combatants before – after mission; combatant – students – policemen. Analyses of our results are shown that hormonal levels at all persons were in normal physiological limits. Together with it, significant differences of steroid serum hormonal means between comparative groups as for dependent samples well as for independent samples were revealed. The differences of endocrine system index (hormonal levels of steroid hormones) at different law-enforcement officer groups with intensive professional stress are reactions for adaptation of organism to extreme factors, probably. They provide optimal adaptive changes to response on environment stress.},
     year = {2013}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Steroid Regulatory Function at Different Professional Law-Enforcement Officer Groups in Dependence from Professional Load
    AU  - Roman Victorovich Koubassov
    AU  - Yury Evlampievich Barachevsky
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    DO  - 10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11
    T2  - American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
    JF  - American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
    JO  - American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
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    EP  - 47
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2330-8133
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajcem.20130103.11
    AB  - At the present time occur a lot of political, ideological, religion, economic crises and other conflicts that lead to global changes of social sphere. The frequent cases of local armed conflict, terrorism act takes a considerable mobilization of economic and human resources. As a rule, the professional members of a police task force occupation for maintain securities are with extreme environments. The occupational hazard effect may evident by overstrain and depletion of functional regulatory mechanisms that provide the adaptation. The law-enforcement officers of Ministry of Home Affairs, aged 23-35 years were investigated. In according to professional occupation this one was divided in three groups: combatants that send on a mission to Caucasus for maintenance of law order; law-enforcement school students; policemen that maintain law order in territory without war conflict and never take part in combat mission. The blood serum steroid hormones (cortisol, testosterone, progesterone and estradiol) were determined. It was provided comparative analysis of means between groups: combatants before – after mission; combatant – students – policemen. Analyses of our results are shown that hormonal levels at all persons were in normal physiological limits. Together with it, significant differences of steroid serum hormonal means between comparative groups as for dependent samples well as for independent samples were revealed. The differences of endocrine system index (hormonal levels of steroid hormones) at different law-enforcement officer groups with intensive professional stress are reactions for adaptation of organism to extreme factors, probably. They provide optimal adaptive changes to response on environment stress.
    VL  - 1
    IS  - 3
    ER  - 

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Author Information
  • Department of Emergency Medicine, Northern State Medical University, Arkhangelsk, Russia

  • Department of Emergency Medicine, Northern State Medical University, Arkhangelsk, Russia

  • Department of Emergency Medicine, Northern State Medical University, Arkhangelsk, Russia

  • Department of Emergency Medicine, Northern State Medical University, Arkhangelsk, Russia

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