Search results for "Brainstem"

showing 10 items of 111 documents

Comparison of the brainstem auditory evoked responses during sevoflurane or alfaxalone anaesthesia in adult cats.

2017

Abstract Objective To compare the effects of general anaesthesia using sevoflurane or alfaxalone on the brainstem auditory evoked response (BAER) test in adult healthy cats. Study design Prospective, clinical, ‘blinded’, crossover study. Animals Ten feral adult healthy cats. Methods Premedication consisted of dexmedetomidine (0.01 mg kg –1 ) intramuscularly (IM). The first general anaesthesia was induced and maintained with sevoflurane (treatment S) for physical examination, BAER test, complete blood tests, thoracic radiographs and abdominal ultrasound. The second general anaesthesia was induced with alfaxalone (treatment A) IM (2 mg kg –1 ) and maintained with alfaxalone (10 mg kg –1 hour …

MaleMethyl Ethers040301 veterinary sciencesSevofluranePregnanediones0403 veterinary science03 medical and health sciencesSevoflurane0302 clinical medicine030202 anesthesiologymedicineEvoked Potentials Auditory Brain StemReaction TimeAnimalsGeneral anaesthesiaDexmedetomidineAnestheticsCATSCross-Over StudiesGeneral Veterinarybusiness.industryAlfaxalone04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesCrossover studyAuditory brainstem responseAnesthesiaCatsPremedicationbusinessmedicine.drugVeterinary anaesthesia and analgesia
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Anatomical evidence for a ponto-septal pathway via the nucleus incertus in the rat.

2008

Abstract Hippocampal theta activity is involved in sensory–motor integration and constitutes a functional basis for mnemonic functions. The medial septum–diagonal band of Broca (MS/DBv) is a key structure as pacemaker of the oscillation. In addition, some brainstem reticular structures are crucial for the activation of MS/DBv. Specifically, the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis (RPO) is considered the most effective pontine site for eliciting theta rhythm. Nevertheless, its connection with the MS/DBv is not direct. A previous study by our group pointed out that the nucleus incertus (NI) could be considered as a relay in this multisynaptic pathway. From this study, the stimulation of RPO inc…

MaleModels AnatomicStilbamidinesHippocampusAction PotentialsHippocampal formationRats Sprague-DawleyPonsNeural PathwaysTegmentummedicineAnimalsMolecular BiologyBrain MappingChemistryGeneral NeuroscienceDextransNucleus IncertusDiagonal band of BrocaElectric StimulationRatsElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structureReticular connective tissueFemaleSeptum of BrainNeurology (clinical)BrainstemNeuroscienceDevelopmental BiologyBrain research
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Gastric α-synuclein immunoreactive inclusions in Meissner's and Auerbach's plexuses in cases staged for Parkinson's disease-related brain pathology

2005

The progressive degenerative process associated with sporadic Parkinson's disease (sPD) is characterized by formation of alpha-synuclein-containing inclusion bodies in a few types of projection neurons in both the enteric and central nervous systems (ENS and CNS). In the brain, the process apparently begins in the brainstem (dorsal motor nucleus of the vagal nerve) and advances through susceptible regions of the basal mid-and forebrain until it reaches the cerebral cortex. Anatomically, all of the vulnerable brain regions are closely interconnected. Whether the pathological process begins in the brain or elsewhere in the nervous system, however, is still unknown. We therefore used immunocyt…

MaleNervous systemProtein FoldingPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPrionsModels NeurologicalCentral nervous systemMyenteric PlexusBiologyAxonal TransportCentral nervous system diseaseNeural PathwaysDisease Transmission InfectiousmedicineHumansAgedAged 80 and overInclusion BodiesNeuronsGeneral NeuroscienceBrainParkinson DiseaseVagus NerveSubmucous PlexusMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureDorsal motor nucleusGastric MucosaCerebral cortexForebrainalpha-SynucleinFemaleEnteric nervous systemBrainstemNerve NetNeuroscienceNeuroscience Letters
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Convergence of Cortical and Sensory Driver Inputs on Single Thalamocortical Cells

2013

Ascending and descending information is relayed through the thalamus via strong, "driver" pathways. According to our current knowledge, different driver pathways are organized in parallel streams and do not interact at the thalamic level. Using an electron microscopic approach combined with optogenetics and in vivo physiology, we examined whether driver inputs arising from different sources can interact at single thalamocortical cells in the rodent somatosensory thalamus (nucleus posterior, POm). Both the anatomical and the physiological data demonstrated that ascending driver inputs from the brainstem and descending driver inputs from cortical layer 5 pyramidal neurons converge and interac…

MalePatch-Clamp TechniquesCognitive NeuroscienceThalamusBiotinMice TransgenicSensory systemOptogeneticsBiologySomatosensory systemFunctional LateralityMembrane PotentialsMiceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceChannelrhodopsinsMicroscopy Electron TransmissionThalamusNeural PathwaysmedicineAnimalsPhytohemagglutininsRats WistarCerebral CortexNeuronsExcitatory Postsynaptic PotentialsDextransddc:Ratsmedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral cortexSynapsesRecurrent thalamo-cortical resonanceVesicular Glutamate Transport Protein 2BrainstemNucleusNeuroscienceCerebral Cortex
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A possible biomarker for methadone related deaths

2017

Abstract Methadone (MTH) concentrations in those dying of MTH toxicity totally overlap concentrations where the presence of MTH is only an incidental finding, making it very difficult to make distinctions in actual cases. A biomarker, be it anatomical or biochemical for MTH toxicity is badly needed, particularly if that markers were known to disrupt effective ventilation. Because the brainstem houses the regulatory centers for cardiorespiratory-control enters, it would seem to be the most likely anatomical site to seek abnormalities in cardiorespiratory control. Objective To locate and describe the cells of nucleus of the solitary tract (TS)(NTS) in human brainstem and determine if neuronal…

MalePathologyNecrosisApoptosisAutopsyCohort Studies0302 clinical medicineRetrospective StudieMedicineForensic PathologyNeuronsPoisoningSolitary tractGeneral MedicineRostral ventrolateral medullaNecrosiImmunohistochemistryCaspase 9Narcotic030220 oncology & carcinogenesisToxicityFemaleBrainstemmedicine.symptomBrainstemCaspase-9HumanNarcoticsAdultProgrammed cell deathmedicine.medical_specialty2734Pathology and Forensic MedicineNecrosisForensic ToxicologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesSettore MED/43 - Medicina LegaleSolitary NucleuSolitary NucleusNeurotoxicityHumansRetrospective Studiesbusiness.industryfungiApoptosiBiomarkerNeuronApoptosisApoptosis; Biomarker; Brainstem; Caspase-9; Methadone; Neurotoxicity; Adult; Apoptosis; Brain Stem; Caspase 9; Cohort Studies; Female; Forensic Pathology; Forensic Toxicology; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Male; Methadone; Narcotics; Necrosis; Neurons; Poisoning; Retrospective Studies; Solitary Nucleus; Young Adult; 2734; LawCohort StudiebusinessLawMethadone030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBrain Stem
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Blink reflex R2 changes and localisation of lesions in the lower brainstem (Wallenberg's syndrome): an electrophysiological and MRI study

1999

OBJECTIVES—Pathways of late blink reflexes are detected by high resolution MRI. Electronically matched stroke lesions superimposed to an anatomical atlas show the suspected course. METHODS—Fifteen patients with infarction of the lower brainstem, MRI lesions and electrically elicited blink reflexes were examined. The involved structures in patients with R2 and R2c blink reflex changes were identified by biplane high resolution MRI with individual slices matched to an anatomical atlas at 10 different levels using digital postprocessing methods. RESULTS—The blink reflexes were normal in five of 15 patients (33%) and showed loss or delay of R2 and R2c to stimulation ipsilaterally to lesion (R2-…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyTrigeminal NucleiCentral nervous system diseaseLesionCorrespondencemedicineHumansCorneal reflexLateral Medullary SyndromeMedullaAgedLateral medullary syndromeBlinkingmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryElectroencephalographyMagnetic resonance imagingAnatomyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingPsychiatry and Mental healthPapersReflexFemaleSurgeryNeurology (clinical)Brainstemmedicine.symptombusinessBrain StemJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
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A nitrergic projection from the superior olivary complex to the inferior colliculus of the rat

2003

The present study was conducted to test whether the ascending auditory projection from the superior olivary complex (SOC) of the brainstem to the inferior colliculus (IC) may use nitric oxide (NO) as a neuroactive compound. We identified olivo-collicular projection neurons in subnuclei of the SOC by retrograde neuronal tracing with Fluoro-Gold (FG) injected into the central nucleus of the IC. Sections containing retrograde labelled neurons were subjected to immunohistochemical incubation in an antiserum directed against the enzyme responsible for NO production in nerve cells, neuronal NO synthase (nNOS). The analysis showed that FG-containing neurons as well as nNOS-immunoreactive neurons w…

Maleinorganic chemicalsInferior colliculusStilbamidinesNitric Oxide Synthase Type IOlivary NucleusNitric OxideRats Sprague-Dawleyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineAnimalsTrapezoid bodyFluorescent DyesNeuronsAfferent PathwaysStaining and LabelingChemistryAnatomyImmunohistochemistryRetrograde tracingInferior ColliculiSensory SystemsRatsNeuronal tracingmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSuperior olivary complexBrainstemNitric Oxide SynthaseNitrergic NeuronNeuroscienceNucleusHearing Research
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Tumour-like presentation of atypical posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome with prominent brainstem involvement

2020

Typical posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a clinical-neuroradiological entity characterised by bilateral white matter oedema, which is usually symmetrical and totally reversible in 2–3 weeks. A 46-year-old man presented with a persistent headache and visual blurring in the right eye. On admission, the clinical examination revealed minimal unsteadiness of gait and elevated blood pressure. A brain MRI showed a hyperintense signal on T2-weighted sequences in the whole brainstem, extended to the spinal cord (C2–C6), the left insula and the right cerebellum. When his blood pressure was controlled, his symptoms gradually improved. The follow-up MRI scan at 3 weeks revealed a …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyCerebellumNeurologyNifedipinePhysical examination030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingWhite matterDiagnosis Differential03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRamiprilmedicineHumansAntihypertensive AgentsUnusual Presentation of More Common Disease/Injuryneuroimagingmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryneurologyBrain stem/cerebellumDoxazosinPosterior reversible encephalopathy syndromeGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedSpinal cordmedicine.diseaseCalcium Channel BlockersMagnetic Resonance ImagingWhite Matterradiologymedicine.anatomical_structureSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaRadiologyBrainstemPosterior Leukoencephalopathy SyndromeDifferential diagnosisbusinessneuro-oncology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBrain Stem
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Auditory Neuropathy in Children

2001

Auditory neuropathy is a sensorineural disorder characterized by absent or abnormal auditory brainstem evoked potentials and normal cochlear outer hair cell function. A variety of processes is thought to be involved in its pathophysiology and their influence on hearing may be different. We present here the diagnostic sequence and management of two new cases of auditory neuropathy in breastfeeding children.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyHearing lossHearing Loss SensorineuralOtoacoustic Emissions SpontaneousAuditory neuropathyAudiologyEvoked Potentials Auditory Brain StemVestibulocochlear Nerve Diseasesotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansCochlear Nervebusiness.industryAuditory Perceptual DisordersFollow up studiesInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePathophysiologyHair Cells Auditory Outermedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationOtorhinolaryngologyFemaleBrainstemHair cellmedicine.symptombusinessBrain StemFollow-Up StudiesActa Oto-Laryngologica
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Diabetic 3rd nerve palsy: evidence for a mesencephalic lesion.

1990

Eleven consecutive adult chronic diabetic patients presented with an isolated 3rd nerve palsy (8 with pupillary sparing) of which 10 had abnormal ipsilateral or bilateral masseter reflexes (MassR). Three patients had an MRI lesion in the ipsilateral oculomotor fasciculus and 3 had subsequent mild brainstem signs. An additional 13 patients with Weber's syndrome had similar ipsilateral or bilateral MassR abnormalities, while 7 patients with 3rd nerve palsies on a known extra-axial basis had none. The findings suggest that an isolated diabetic 3rd nerve palsy, with or without pupillary sparing, is much more likely on the basis of a focal mesencephalic infarct than a peripheral nerve lesion.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyMidbrainMasseter muscleLesionDiabetic NeuropathiesOculomotor NerveMesencephalonDiabetes mellitusFasciculusParalysisOculomotor Nerve DiseasesMedicineHumansAgedAged 80 and overbiologybusiness.industryCerebral InfarctionMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseSurgeryAnesthesiaReflexFemaleNeurology (clinical)Brainstemmedicine.symptombusinessNeurology
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