Search results for "Ley"

showing 10 items of 1218 documents

Nitric oxide synthase neurons in the rodent spinal cord: distribution, relation to Substance P fibers, and effects of dorsal rhizotomy.

2001

The indirect immunofluorescent method was employed to investigate the distribution of neuronal nitric oxide synthase-like immunoreactivity(nNOS-LI) in the spinal cord of the golden hamster and to compare it to data obtained from rats. Immunoreactive neurons were found throughout the cervico-sacral extent in the dorsal horn (mainly in laminae I-III) and in the preganglionic autonomic regions, i.e., the sympathetic intermediolateral nucleus (IML), lateral funicle (LF), intercalated region (IC), the area surrounding the central canal (CA), and the sacral preganglionic parasympathetic cell group. While the distribution of immunoreactive cells was generally similar in both species, some differen…

MaleSuperior cervical ganglionAutonomic Fibers PreganglionicPopulationHamsterNitric Oxide Synthase Type ISubstance PRhizotomyRats Sprague-DawleyCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceNerve FibersCricetinaemedicineAnimalseducationNeuronseducation.field_of_studybiologyMesocricetusChemistryIntermediolateral nucleusAnatomySpinal cordbiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryRatsPerfusionmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSpinal CordAxoplasmic transportNitric Oxide SynthaseMesocricetusGolden hamsterJournal of chemical neuroanatomy
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Nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive vagal afferent fibers in rat superior cervical ganglia

1995

Abstract Chronic (5–14 days) preganglionic denervation of the rat superior cervical ganglia by sectioning the cervical sympathetic trunk resulted in a time-related partial or complete loss of nitric oxide synthase (isoform I)-immunoreactive fibers and terminals surrounding many sympathetic ganglionic neurons. Unexpectedly, denervation unmasked many varicose nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive fibers, some of which could be traced the entire length of the superior cervical ganglia. Injection of the retrograde tracer Fluorogold into the superior cervical ganglia labeled a population of nodose ganglion cells and of dorsal root ganglion cells from C8 to T3 segments. When the same sections were…

MaleSuperior cervical ganglionSympathetic nervous systemPopulationSuperior Cervical GanglionNitric oxideRats Sprague-Dawleychemistry.chemical_compoundDorsal root ganglionmedicineAnimalseducationDenervationAfferent Pathwayseducation.field_of_studyChemistryGeneral NeuroscienceVagus NerveNodose GanglionAnatomyImmunohistochemistryRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureCervical gangliaFemaleNodose GanglionAmino Acid OxidoreductasesNitric Oxide SynthaseNeuroscience
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Resection of C6 gliomas in rats with the aid of the waterjet technique

2016

While clinically the safety and efficacy of waterjet resection of brain tumors have been shown, evidence that waterjet dissection improves tumor resection radicality in comparison with conventional techniques is still missing. In the present study, resection radicality and tumor-free long-term survival of both techniques were evaluated in a C6-glioma model.Fifty-thousand C6-glioma cells were stereotactically transplanted in the left frontal lobe of 100 male Sprague-Dawley rats. After MRI-scanning for evaluation of tumor extension, microsurgical tumor resection was performed with conventional techniques (n=50) or with the waterjet dissector at pressures of 6bar (n=50). Twenty-five animals of…

MaleSurgical resultsmedicine.medical_specialtyTumor resectionLeft frontal lobeDirect transferNeurosurgical ProceduresResectionRats Sprague-Dawley03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnimalsMedicinePostoperative outcomeConventional techniqueBrain Neoplasmsbusiness.industryGliomaGeneral MedicineRatsSurgeryDisease Models AnimalDissection030220 oncology & carcinogenesisSurgeryNeurology (clinical)business030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
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The development and predictive relations of play and language across the second year

1999

The play and language development of 171 toddlers was examined at 14 and 18 months by observing their activities on the Symbolic Play Test and by assessing their language skills using the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (MCDI) and the Reynell Developmental Language Scales. Additionally, data from the Bayley Scales of Infant Development and the MCDI were obtained at 24 months, in order to investigate how play and language measures taken at 14 and 18 months predict children's development at the age of 2 years. The results showed that the vocabulary production and symbolic play of the 14-month-old toddlers made a unique contribution to their language and cognitive skills at the…

MaleSymbolismVocabularymedia_common.quotation_subjectLanguage DevelopmentBayley Scales of Infant DevelopmentDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansLongitudinal StudiesCognitive skillGeneral Psychologymedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceInfantRegression analysisGeneral MedicinePlay and PlaythingsTest (assessment)Language developmentChild PreschoolInfant BehaviorRegression AnalysisFemaleThe SymbolicPsychologyScandinavian Journal of Psychology
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Glucose-induced alterations of cytosolic free calcium in cultured rat tail artery vascular smooth muscle cells

1995

We have previously suggested that hyperglycemia per se may contribute to diabetic hypertensive and vascular disease by altering cellular ion content. To more directly investigate the potential role of glucose in this process, we measured cytosolic free calcium in primary cultures of vascular smooth muscle cells isolated from Sprague-Dawley rat tail artery before and after incubation with 5 (basal), 10, 15, and 20 mM glucose. Glucose significantly elevated cytosolic free calcium in a dose- and time-dependent manner, from 110.0 +/- 5.4 to 124.5 +/- 9.0, 192.7 +/- 20.4, and 228.4 +/- 21.9 nM at 5, 10, 15, and 20 mM glucose concentrations, respectively. This glucose-induced cytosolic free calci…

MaleTailmedicine.medical_specialtyVascular smooth muscleTime Factorschemistry.chemical_elementCalciumBiologyMuscle Smooth VascularImpaired glucose toleranceRats Sprague-DawleyCytosolLanthanumInternal medicinemedicineExtracellularAnimalsMannitolCells CulturedCellular calcium ion homeostasisDose-Response Relationship DrugGeneral MedicineArteriesmedicine.diseaseRatsCalcium ATPaseCytosolKineticsEndocrinologyGlucosechemistryCalciumMannitolmedicine.drugResearch Article
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Differential effect of beta-N-oxalylamino-L-alanine, the Lathyrus sativus neurotoxin, and (+/-)-alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate …

2000

We studied the effect of beta-oxalylamino-L-alanine, a glutamate analog present in Lathyrus sativus seeds and implicated in the etiopathogenesis of neurolathyrism, and (+/-)-alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate on the extracellular levels of aspartate, glutamate and taurine in the primary motor cortex of freely moving rats. We found that while both neurotoxins increase the level of aspartate and glutamate, only (+/-)-alpha(-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate is able to modulate the level of taurine. GYKI-52466, a non-competitive non-NMDA antagonist, inhibited beta-oxalylamino-L-alanine-induced increase of aspartate, but not that of glutamate. Conversely, this ant…

MaleTaurineTaurineMicrodialysisGlutamic AcidTetrodotoxinReceptors N-Methyl-D-AspartateRats Sprague-DawleyCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundGlutamate aspartate transporterNeurotoxinAnimalsNeurotransmitteralpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic AcidAlaninechemistry.chemical_classificationAspartic AcidbiologyGlutamate receptorMotor CortexAmino Acids DiaminoBrainCell BiologyCorpus StriatumAmino acidRatschemistryBiochemistrybiology.proteinPotassiumbeta-AlanineNMDA receptorExtracellular SpaceExcitatory Amino Acid AntagonistsNeurochemistry international
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Chronic antidepressant treatment induces contrasting patterns of synaptophysin and PSA-NCAM expression in different regions of the adult rat telencep…

2007

Structural modifications occur in the brain of severely depressed patients and they can be reversed by antidepressant treatment. Some of these changes do not occur in the same direction in different regions, such as the medial prefrontal cortex, the hippocampus or the amygdala. Differential structural plasticity also occurs in animal models of depression and it is also prevented by antidepressants. In order to know whether chronic fluoxetine treatment induces differential neuronal structural plasticity in rats, we have analyzed the expression of synaptophysin, a protein considered a marker of synaptic density, and the expression of the polysialylated form of the neural cell adhesion molecul…

MaleTelencephalonNeuropilNeuriteSynaptophysinHippocampusPrefrontal CortexNeural Cell Adhesion Molecule L1AmygdalaHippocampusRats Sprague-DawleyAnimal models of depressionFluoxetinemedicineAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Prefrontal cortexBiological PsychiatryPharmacologyNeuronal PlasticitybiologyCerebrumAmygdalaImmunohistochemistryAntidepressive AgentsRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypenervous systemNeurologySynaptophysinbiology.proteinSialic AcidsAntidepressive Agents Second-GenerationNeural cell adhesion moleculeNeurology (clinical)NeuroscienceEuropean neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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Convergence of olfactory and vomeronasal projections in the rat basal telencephalon

2007

Olfactory and vomeronasal projections have been traditionally viewed as terminating in contiguous non-overlapping areas of the basal telencephalon. Original reports, however, described areas such as the anterior medial amygdala where both chemosensory afferents appeared to overlap. We addressed this issue by injecting dextran amines in the main or accessory olfactory bulbs of rats and the results were analyzed with light and electron microscopes. Simultaneous injections of different fluorescent dextran amines in the main and accessory olfactory bulbs were performed and the results were analyzed using confocal microscopy. Similar experiments with dextran amines in the olfactory bulbs plus Fl…

MaleTelencephalonOlfactory systemVomeronasal organBiologyAmygdalaRats Sprague-DawleyOlfactory MucosamedicineAnimalsNeurons AfferentBrain MappingCerebrumGeneral NeuroscienceOlfactory tubercleOlfactory PathwaysAnatomyOlfactory BulbRetrograde tracingChemoreceptor CellsRatsStria terminalismedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemFemaleSeptal NucleiVomeronasal OrganNeuroscienceOlfactory tractThe Journal of Comparative Neurology
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Unconditioned stimulus pathways to the amygdala: Effects of lesions of the posterior intralaminar thalamus on foot-shock-induced c-Fos expression in …

2008

The lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA) is a site of convergence for auditory (conditioned stimulus) and foot-shock (unconditioned stimulus) inputs during fear conditioning. The auditory pathways to LA are well characterized, but less is known about the pathways through which foot shock is transmitted. Anatomical tracing and physiological recording studies suggest that the posterior intralaminar thalamic nucleus, which projects to LA, receives both auditory and somatosensory inputs. In the present study we examined the expression of the immediate-early gene c-fos in the LA in rats in response to foot-shock stimulation. We then determined the effects of posterior intralaminar thalamic lesio…

MaleThalamusCell CountStimulus (physiology)BiologySomatosensory systemAmygdalaFunctional LateralityArticleRats Sprague-DawleyConditioning PsychologicalNeural PathwaysBasal gangliamedicineAnimalsFear conditioningBrain MappingElectroshockBehavior AnimalFootGeneral NeuroscienceAnatomyPosterior Thalamic NucleiMedial geniculate bodyAmygdalaRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression RegulationPosterior Thalamic NucleiProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosNeuroscienceNeuroscience
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Thyroid hormone induction of the adrenoleukodystrophy-related gene (ABCD2).

2003

X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is a demyelinating disorder associated with impaired very-long-chain fatty-acid (VLCFA) beta-oxidation caused by mutations in the ABCD1 (ALD) gene that encodes a peroxisomal membrane ABC transporter. ABCD2 (ALDR) displays partial functional redundancy because when overexpressed, it is able to correct the X-ALD biochemical phenotype. The ABCD2 promoter contains a putative thyroid hormone-response element conserved in rodents and humans. In this report, we demonstrate that the element is capable of binding retinoid X receptor and 3,5,3'-tri-iodothyronine (T3) receptor (TRbeta) as a heterodimer and mediating T3 responsiveness of ABCD2 in its promoter conte…

MaleThyroid HormonesReceptors Retinoic AcidGene ExpressionATP-binding cassette transporterRetinoid X receptorRats Sprague-DawleyMiceABCD3Gene expressionABCD2medicineAnimalsHumansReceptorAdrenoleukodystrophyPromoter Regions GeneticGeneCells CulturedRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidPharmacologyChemokine CCL22Mice KnockoutReceptors Thyroid Hormonebiologymedicine.diseaseCell biologyRatsUp-RegulationOligodendrogliaRetinoid X ReceptorsLiverAstrocytesChemokines CCbiology.proteinCancer researchMolecular MedicineTriiodothyronineAdrenoleukodystrophyChemokine CCL17Transcription FactorsMolecular pharmacology
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