Az egyedfejlődés kritikus fázisaiban történő gyógyszeres kezelések késői következményei:
A hibás hormonális imprinting koncepciójának kiterjesztése [Late manifested sequelae
of medications in the critical periods of development The widening of the faulty hormonal
imprinting conception]
Hormonal imprinting is a physiological process, which is a part of the receptor-hormone
complex development. It determines the binding capacity of the receptors across the
lifespan. It takes place perinatally in the critical period of hormone receptor development,
when the developmental window for imprinting is open and permits the binding of hormone-like
molecules (related or synthetic hormones, endocrine disruptors etc.) causing disturbances
of the endocrine system, and the systems- influenced organs by it, for life. This
is the faulty hormonal imprinting. However, studying the medical database, PubMed,
a lot of data can be found on the harmful late (adult age) effects of medication in
the critical period of development with non-hormonal molecules, which are manifested
later in functional alterations or diseases. This could mean that in the process of
faulty imprinting, the openness of the developmental window could be more important
than the structural similarity of a molecule to hormones. As developmentally critical
period for faulty imprinting by hormone-like molecules is not exclusively the perinatal
one (this is justified in the case of faulty hormonal imprinting), the pubertal period
was also studied from this aspect and similarities to the impact of perinatal use
have been found (this could be called "Pubertal Origin of Health and Disease = POHaD).
While in the case of hormonal faulty imprinting, the mechanism seems to be clear (considering
the role of receptors), the mechanism of drug-provoked imprinting is presently uncleared
(considering the variety of medications which cause late-manifested alterations).
The medicaments-caused faulty imprinting conception calls attention to the dangers
of medication in the perinatal as well as the pubertal periods.