Search results for "Bulb"

showing 10 items of 179 documents

Reward and punishment: investigating cortico-bulbar excitability to disclose the value of goods

2013

A continuing challenge for neuroscientists is to develop new conceptual tools and methodologies for understanding, predicting and modelling the influences of rewarding/punishing outcomes on human behaviour and decision making. Reinforcement shapes behaviours from the most primitive (fight/flight, ingest/regurgitate, approach/avoid) to complex (buy/sell). Understanding the neural processes underlying reinforcement is critical for understanding economic and social decision-making. Moreover, comprehension of deranged processing and responses to reinforcing stimuli is crucial across a range of psychology fields and society as a whole, including psychiatric and neurological illness, eating disor…

Value (ethics)TONGUETRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATIONPunishment (psychology)Psychopathylcsh:BF1-990CORTICAL EXCITABILITYOpinion Articlemedicine.diseaseCortico-bulbar activtyComprehensionEating disorderslcsh:PsychologyPunishmentRewardTMSmedicineMotor Evocated PotentialsPsychologyReinforcementSocial psychologypsychological phenomena and processesGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceFrontiers in Psychology
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The "olfactostriatum" of snakes: a basal ganglia vomeronasal structure in tetrapods.

2005

The olfactostriatum is a portion of the basal ganglia of snakes situated ventromedially to the nucleus accumbens proper. It receives a major vomeronasal input from the nucleus sphericus, the primary target of accessory olfactory bulb efferents. Recently, the ophidian olfactostriatum has been characterized on the basis of chemoarchitecture (distribution of serotonin, neuropeptide Y and tyrosine hydroxylase) and hodology (afferent and efferent connections). In contrast to the nucleus accumbens proper, the olfactostriatum is densely immunoreactive for serotonin and neuropeptide Y and sparsely immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase. The nucleus accumbens proper and the olfactostriatum share mo…

Vomeronasal organTyrosine hydroxylaseGeneral NeuroscienceEfferentSnakesNucleus accumbensBiologyNeuropeptide Y receptorOlfactory BulbBasal GangliaCorpus StriatumVentral pallidummedicine.anatomical_structureBasal gangliaNeural PathwaysmedicineAnimalsVomeronasal OrganNeuroscienceNucleusBrain research bulletin
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Exposición de la oliva bulbar mediante los abordajes far lateral y retrosigmoideo bajo. Análisis comparativo de la superficie expuesta y ángulo de at…

2021

A lo largo de la historia neuroquirúrgica, el tratamiento de lesiones intrínsecas localizadas en el tronco cerebral ha sido tema de mucha controversia. El tronco cerebral es la estructura anatómica del sistema nervioso central (SNC) que presenta mayor concentración de núcleos y fibras, y su simple manipulación puede conllevar importante morbi-mortalidad. El presente trabajo de investigación, se desarrolla teniendo en cuenta los conocimientos del tronco cerebral desarrollados por el Prof. Evandro de Oliveria. Una vez establecido uno de los puntos de entrada seguros a nivel bulbar, hemos querido evaluar el abordaje más seguro a la oliva bulbar (la principal zona de entrada segura a la región …

abordaje far lateralabordaje retrosigmoideo:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Cirugía ::Neurocirugía [UNESCO]tronco cerebralUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Cirugía ::Neurocirugíaoliva bulbar
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Muscle Function Differences between Patients with Bulbar and Spinal Onset Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. Does It Depend on Peripheral Glucose?

2021

Background: One of the pathogenic mechanisms of ALS disease is perturbed energy metabolism particularly glucose metabolism. Given the substantial difference in the severity and the prognosis of the disease, depending on whether it has a bulbar or spinal onset, the aim of the study was to determine metabolic differences between both types of ALS, as well as the possible relationship with muscle function. Materials and Methods: A descriptive, analytical, quantitative, and transversal study was carried out in hospitals and Primary Care centers in the region of Valencia, Spain. Fasting glucose and alkaline phosphatase (AP) levels in venous blood, muscle percentage, fat percentage, muscle streng…

amyotrophic lateral sclerosis:Chemicals and Drugs::Carbohydrates::Monosaccharides::Hexoses::Glucose [Medical Subject Headings]lcsh:Medicine:Psychiatry and Psychology::Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms::Behavior::Feeding Behavior::Fasting [Medical Subject Headings]DiseaseGastroenterology:Organisms::Eukaryota::Animals::Chordata::Vertebrates::Mammals::Primates::Haplorhini::Catarrhini::Hominidae::Humans [Medical Subject Headings]0302 clinical medicineAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisglucosespinal onset ALS:Chemicals and Drugs::Enzymes and Coenzymes::Enzymes::Hydrolases::Esterases::Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases::Alkaline Phosphatase [Medical Subject Headings]:Health Care::Health Care Facilities Manpower and Services::Health Facilities::Hospitals [Medical Subject Headings]0303 health sciences:Anatomy::Musculoskeletal System::Muscles [Medical Subject Headings]General MedicineVenous bloodFuerza muscular:Health Care::Health Services Administration::Patient Care Management::Comprehensive Health Care::Primary Health Care [Medical Subject Headings]PeripheralAlkaline phosphataseFosfatasa alcalinaalkaline phosphatasemedicine.medical_specialtyBarthel indexbulbar onset ALS:Diseases::Nervous System Diseases::Neurodegenerative Diseases::Motor Neuron Disease::Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis [Medical Subject Headings]Carbohydrate metabolismResistencia a la insulinaArticle03 medical and health sciences:Diseases::Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases::Metabolic Diseases::Glucose Metabolism Disorders::Hyperinsulinism::Insulin Resistance [Medical Subject Headings]Insulin resistance:Analytical Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment::Diagnosis::Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures::Physical Examination::Muscle Strength [Medical Subject Headings]Internal medicinemedicine030304 developmental biology:Geographical Locations::Geographic Locations::Europe::Spain [Medical Subject Headings]Muscle strengthbusiness.industrylcsh:RInsulin resistance:Phenomena and Processes::Metabolic Phenomena::Metabolism::Energy Metabolism [Medical Subject Headings]medicine.diseaseAtrofia muscular espinalGlucosa:Analytical Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment::Diagnosis::Prognosis [Medical Subject Headings]businessEsclerosis amiotrófica lateral030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Ultrastructure of the conus arteriosus ofScyliorhinus stellaris

1989

The functional morphology of the fourth chamber of the fish heart, the bulbus arteriosus, differs in teleosts and elasmobranchs. In elasmobranchs, this chamber is referred to as the conus arteriosus because its wall is made up of myocardial tissue in addition to elastic tissue. As a result of this feature, the function of the conus is very specialized. We report the basic ultrastructure of the wall of the conus arteriosus in the elasmobranch Scyllium stellare. The wall consists of three layers: the outer epicardial, the middle myocardial, and the inner endocardial layer. The outer layer is composed of the visceral pericardium consisting of cuboidal mesothelial cells, beneath which numerous …

animal structuresBulbus arteriosusGeneral MedicineAnatomyBiologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.anatomical_structureVentricleCirculatory systemConusUltrastructuremedicineMyocyteAnimal Science and ZoologyMesothelial CellScyliorhinus stellarisJournal of Experimental Zoology
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Cellular Composition and Organization of the Subventricular Zone and Rostral Migratory Stream in the Adult and Neonatal Common Marmoset Brain

2011

The adult subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricle contains neural stem cells. In rodents, these cells generate neuroblasts that migrate as chains toward the olfactory bulb along the rostral migratory stream (RMS). The neural-stem-cell niche at the ventricular wall is conserved in various animal species, including primates. However, it is unclear how the SVZ and RMS organization in nonhuman primates relates to that of rodents and humans. Here we studied the SVZ and RMS of the adult and neonatal common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), a New World primate used widely in neuroscience, by electron microscopy, and immunohistochemical detection of cell-type-specific markers. The marmoset …

animal structuresRostral migratory streamNeurogenesisanimal diseasesSubventricular zoneArticlecommon marmosetNeural Stem CellsNeuroblastrostral migratory streamCell MovementLateral Ventriclesbiology.animalmedicineAnimalsHumansStem Cell NicheCell ProliferationbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceNeurogenesisBrainMarmosetsubventricular zoneCallithrixbiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryMagnetic Resonance ImagingCallithrixNeural stem cellOlfactory bulbMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureAnimals Newbornnervous systemNeuroscience
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Corrigendum to “Imaging of nitric oxide in a living vertebrate using a diaminofluorescein probe” [Free Radic. Biol. Med. 43 (2007) 619–627]

2008

Adrian Grimes and colleagues showed in a previous report that zebrafish bulbus arteriosus and the smooth muscle component of the chick cardiac outflow tract may be specifically labeled by DAF-2DA. Using this fluorescent dye they could distinguish the zebrafish bulbus arteriosus from "true" cardiac chambers, the atrium and ventricle (Grimes AC, Stadt HA, Shepherd IT, Kirby ML. Solving an enigma: arterial pole development in the zebrafish heart. Dev Biol 2006 Feb 15;290(2):265−76). The authors regret not including this information in the original version of their article.

animal structuresbiologyChemistryBulbus arteriosusAnatomybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structureSmooth muscleVentriclePhysiology (medical)Cardiac chamberembryonic structurescardiovascular systemmedicineAtrium (heart)ZebrafishFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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2015

AbstractGenomic imprinting is implicated in the control of gene dosage in neurogenic niches. Here we address the importance of Igf2 imprinting for murine adult neurogenesis in the subventricular zone (SVZ) and in the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the hippocampus in vivo. In the SVZ, paracrine IGF2 is a cerebrospinal fluid and endothelial-derived neurogenic factor requiring biallelic expression, with mutants having reduced activation of the stem cell pool and impaired olfactory bulb neurogenesis. In contrast, Igf2 is imprinted in the hippocampus acting as an autocrine factor expressed in neural stem cells (NSCs) solely from the paternal allele. Conditional mutagenesis of Igf2 in blood vessels co…

animal structuresendocrine system diseasesGeneral Physics and AstronomySubventricular zoneBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySubgranular zone03 medical and health sciencesParacrine signalling0302 clinical medicinemedicineAutocrine signalling030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryNeurogenesisGeneral ChemistryMolecular biologyfemale genital diseases and pregnancy complicationsNeural stem cellCell biologyOlfactory bulbmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemGenomic imprinting030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNature Communications
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Differential genomic imprinting regulates paracrine and autocrine roles of IGF2 in mouse adult neurogenesis

2015

Genomic imprinting is implicated in the control of gene dosage in neurogenic niches. Here we address the importance of Igf2 imprinting for murine adult neurogenesis in the subventricular zone (SVZ) and in the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the hippocampus in vivo. In the SVZ, paracrine IGF2 is a cerebrospinal fluid and endothelial-derived neurogenic factor requiring biallelic expression, with mutants having reduced activation of the stem cell pool and impaired olfactory bulb neurogenesis. In contrast, Igf2 is imprinted in the hippocampus acting as an autocrine factor expressed in neural stem cells (NSCs) solely from the paternal allele. Conditional mutagenesis of Igf2 in blood vessels confirms t…

animal structuresendocrine system diseasesNeurogenesisGene DosageEndothelial CellsGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayHippocampusImmunohistochemistryOlfactory Bulbfemale genital diseases and pregnancy complicationsArticleAutocrine CommunicationGenomic ImprintingMicenervous systemNeural Stem CellsInsulin-Like Growth Factor IIGene Knockdown TechniquesLateral VentriclesParacrine CommunicationAnimalsNature Communications
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The Forebrain of the Blind Cave Fish <i>Astyanax hubbsi </i>(Characidae)

1997

This paper presents a survey of the cell groups in the telencephalon of the teleost Astyanax hubbsi, based on series of transverse sections stained with the Nissl-Kluver-Barrera and Bodian procedures. The work was conducted for two reasons. Firstly, it was intended to determine the contribution of the forebrain of blind cave fish to certain forms of behavior. An understanding of the anatomy of the telencephalic organization is essential for such a neuroethological approach. The second purpose was to provide the cytoarchitectural basis for the experimental analysis of the fiber connectivity of the telencephalon of A. hubbsi. Furthermore, information about the forebrain of characids is widely…

biologyCerebrumAnterior commissureAnatomyCommissurebiology.organism_classificationOlfactory bulbCharacidaeBehavioral NeuroscienceProsencephalonmedicine.anatomical_structureDevelopmental NeuroscienceForebrainmedicineOptic nerveBrain, Behavior and Evolution
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