Search results for "CATS"
showing 10 items of 261 documents
Effects of motor cortex removal on circling behaviour.
1982
AbstractChemical stimulation of the dopaminergic nigro-striatal system induces circling behaviour also in animals in which an extensive telencephalic lesion has been performed. In order to avoid the effects linked to chemical stimulation, we have studied the circling behaviour means of electrical stimulation of the caudate nucleus in chronic cats with cortical lesions. The role of the motor cortex on the circling behaviour is emphasized.
Les Réponses évoquées Du Noyau Caudé A La Suite De Modifications De L'Excitabilité De L'Aire Auditive Primaire
1966
Interrelations between globus pallidus and hippocampal epilepsy in the cat (1)
1984
AbstractElectrically induced afterdischarge (ADs) were evoked in the cats' dorsal hippocampus. The action of the conditioning prestimulation of the pallidus nucleus on AD duration was studied. A significant facilitatory influence was observed when pallidal conditioning stimulation immediately preceded hippocampal test stimulation. The time course of the phenomenon showed a decrease of the conditioning action when the interval between the two stimulations increased: complete disappearance of the effect occurred after about 800 ms. Results are discussed as far as functional relationships between basal ganglia and rhinencephalic system are concerned.
Color choice behavior in cats and the effect of changes in the color of the illuminant.
1993
Experimental „Luxury Perfusion” in the Cerebral Cortex of the Cat
1968
Publisher Summary Preliminary studies have been performed, on the changes of cortical rCBF (Krypton- 85 Beta clearance technique) in response to a localized pressure applied to the cerebral cortex (suprasylvian gyrus) of 8 cats under Nembutal anesthesia (30 to 40 mg/kg bodyweight). No change in rCBF is found at regions as distant as the contralateral hemisphere. The increase of rCBF at the compressed site, during the compression, seems to be more marked in animals with higher blood (i.e. perfusion) pressure, and may be absent in cats with blood pressure of about 80 mm Hg. The augmentation of rCBF around the compressed area during the compression is always very marked, and after some time fl…
Le château des Carpathes ou le financement du syndicalisme
2013
International audience; Depuis 2011 et 2012, les principales organisations syndicales (confédérations, fédérations, unions territoriales et gros syndicats) doivent publier leurs comptes. Du fait d'un cadre comptable peu adapté et lacunaire, les données publiées sont difficilement analysables. Les cotisations semblent peser d'un poids important dans les ressources d'une majorité d'organisation mais il s'agit d'un artifice comptable. En réalité, l'essentiel des ressources provient des aides des employeurs (privés comme publics), des collectivités territoriales et de l'Etat, des prélèvements sur les organismes de sécurité sociale et surtout des personnels mis à disposition. Mais ces ressources…
Measurement of brain tissue pressure in cold induced cerebral oedema.
1973
Experiments were performed in order to evaluate the concept that brain oedema is associated with an increase in local interstitial fluid pressure. Assuming that the pressure measured by the cotton wick technique represents the hydrostatic interstitial fluid pressure, the tissue pressure was recorded with pressure transducers in the white matter adjacent and remote to a local cold injury, in the opposite hemisphere, and in the cisterna magna. In 9 cats during steady-state conditions mean tissue pressures between 1.20±0.30 mm Hg and 2.33±0.80 mm Hg were found, as compared to a mean CSF pressure of 5.17±0.82 mm Hg. The tissue pressure was found to increase significantly adjacent to the lesion …
Late steps of parvoviral infection induce changes in cell morphology.
2008
Previously, virus-induced non-filopodial extensions have not been encountered in connection with viral infections. Here, we report emergence of long extensions protruding from Norden laboratory feline kidney (NLFK) and A72 (canine fibroma) cells infected with canine parvovirus for 72 h. These extensions significantly differ in length and number from those appearing in control cells. The most striking feature in the extensions is the length, reaching up to 130 microm, almost twice the average length of a healthy NLFK cell. In A72 cells, the extensions were even longer, up to 200 microm. The results presented here also suggest that the events leading to the growth of these extensions start ea…
Accumbens-caudate-septal circuit as a system for hippocampal regulation: involvement of a GABAergic neurotransmission.
1992
Hippocampal-based epileptiform activity may reach the basal ganglia via the nucleus accumbens. Previous data suggested that caudate nucleus is able to influence hippocampal epilepsy, probably sending a projection to the septum. In order to test the hypothesis of a retrograde activation of accumbens-caudate pathway in hippocampal regulation, we electrically stimulated both caudate nucleus and nucleus accumbens and studied modifications of hippocampal EEG in the feline focal epilepsy model. We also performed bilateral electrolytic lesion of nucleus accumbens and repeated caudate stimulation. Results showed that nucleus accumbens stimulation was ineffective in modifying hippocampal epilepsy; o…
Release of canine parvovirus from endocytic vesicles
2003
Canine parvovirus (CPV) is a small nonenveloped virus with a single-stranded DNA genome. CPV enters cells by clathrin-mediated endocytosis and requires an acidic endosomal step for productive infection. Virion contains a potential nuclear localization signal as well as a phospholipase A(2) like domain in N-terminus of VP1. In this study we characterized the role of PLA(2) activity on CPV entry process. PLA(2) activity of CPV capsids was triggered in vitro by heat or acidic pH. PLA(2) inhibitors inhibited the viral proliferation suggesting that PLA(2) activity is needed for productive infection. The N-terminus of VP1 was exposed during the entry, suggesting that PLA(2) activity might have a …