Search results for "ganglion"

showing 10 items of 282 documents

Intermittent Horner's syndrome on alternate sides: a hint for locating spinal lesions.

1980

A patient with a cervical intramedullary ependymoma is described who exhibited a Horner's syndrome on alternate sides. Pharmacological study demonstrated damage to the pre-ganglionic sympathetic neurons. Disregarding cases with the Shy-Drager syndrome, three comparable case reports have been found in the literature where the fluctuating expression of Horner's syndrome, alternating from one side to the other, was attributable to a lesion of the cervical spinal cord. In contrast to the present patient, the pharmacological responses of these patients indicated a lesion of the central sympathetic pathway.

EpendymomaAdultAtropineMalemedicine.medical_specialtySympathetic nervous systemPathologyNeurologyHorner SyndromeSympathetic Nervous SystemEpinephrineAutonomic Fibers PreganglionicSpinal Cord NeoplasmHorner syndromeReflex PupillaryLesionCocaineMedicineHumansSpinal Cord Neoplasmsbusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseSpinal cordmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyEpendymomaCiliospinal reflexNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessJournal of neurology
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Histone post-translational modifications as potential therapeutic targets for pain management

2021

Effective pharmacological management of pain associated with tissue pathology is an unmet medical need. Transcriptional modifications in nociceptive pathways are pivotal for the development and the maintenance of pain associated with tissue damage. Accumulating evidence has shown the importance of the epigenetic control of transcription in nociceptive pathways via histone post-translational modifications (PTMs). Hence, histone PTMs could be targets for novel effective analgesics. Here, we discuss the current understanding of histone PTMs in the modulation of gene expression affecting nociception and pain phenotypes following tissue injury. We also provide a critical view of the translationa…

Farmacologiadorsal root ganglionPharmacological managementPainToxicologyBioinformaticsHistonesTissue damageHumansPain ManagementMedicinenociceptionPharmacology & PharmacyEpigeneticsspinal dorsal horn11 Medical and Health Sciencesneuropathic painPharmacologyepigeneticsbiologybusiness.industry06 Biological SciencesPain managementgene transcriptionNociceptionHistoneNeuropathic painPosttranslational modificationbiology.proteinbusinessProtein Processing Post-TranslationalGenèticaTrends in Pharmacological Sciences
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Grupos ganglionares superficiales

2010

Los grupos ganglionares son los puntos hacia los cuales se debe dirigir la linfa, y por lo tanto la dirección y el sentido de las manipulaciones del drenaje linfático manual. Estos se distribuyen por todo el cuerpo: cara y cuello, pecho, miembro superior, abdomen y miembro inferior.

Fisioterapialinfedemagrupos ganglionares superficialesFisioterapia3213.11- Farmacia Medicina
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Ontogeny of the human amygdala.

2003

Data on the fetal development of the human amygdala is reviewed with special reference to major ontogenetic events. In the fifth gestational month, the inferior portion of the amygdala reveals cell-dense columns merging with the ganglionic eminence (proliferative zone) in Nissl-stained sections. These columns contain vimentin-positive fibers and can therefore be regarded as migrational routes. In the sixth and seventh months, distinct reorganization of the cytoarchitectonics takes place. The sequential occurrence of afferens can be visualized using anti-GAP-43; moreover, outgrowing axons appear to reach the periphery of the ganglionic eminence. The latter may thus represent an intermediate …

Ganglionic eminenceGeneral NeuroscienceGlutamate receptorGestational AgeNerve Tissue ProteinsAnatomyBiologyAmygdalaCalbindinAmygdalaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEmbryonic and Fetal Developmentmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCytoarchitecturePostsynaptic potentialmedicineHumansCalretininNeuroscienceImmunostainingBiomarkersAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Young neurons from medial ganglionic eminence disperse in adult and embryonic brain.

1999

In this study, we identified neuronal precursors that can disperse through adult mammalian brain tissue. Transplanted neuronal precursors from embryonic medial ganglionic eminence (MGE), but not from lateral ganglionic eminence (LGE) or neocortex, dispersed and differentiated into neurons in multiple adult brain regions. In contrast, only LGE cells were able to migrate efficiently from the adult subventricular zone to the olfactory bulb. In embryonic brain slices, MGE cells migrated extensively toward cortex. Our results demonstrate that cells in different germinal regions have unique migratory potentials, and that adult mammalian brain can support widespread dispersion of specific populati…

Ganglionic eminenceSubventricular zoneMice Inbred StrainsNeocortexBrain damageBiologyInterneuron migrationMiceCell MovementFetal Tissue TransplantationCortex (anatomy)medicineAnimalsBrain Tissue TransplantationBrain Tissue TransplantationNeuronsNeocortexGeneral NeuroscienceMedian EminenceOlfactory BulbCorpus StriatumOlfactory bulbmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemLac Operonmedicine.symptomNeuroscienceStem Cell TransplantationNature neuroscience
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Immunohistochemical localization of cyclooxygenase isoforms in the organ of Corti and the spiral ganglion cells of guinea pig cochlea.

2003

Prostaglandins have been used in experimental models and clinical studies for the therapy of sudden hearing loss and tinnitus with conflicting results. However, little is known about the rate-limiting enzymes of prostaglandin synthesis in the inner ear, the generally constitutively expressed cyclooxygenase 1 (COX-1) and the distress-inducible cycloxygenase 2 (COX-2). To extend our knowledge concerning the physiological expression and localization of these two enzymes, immunohistochemical stainings of the guinea pig cochlea were performed. Light microscopical analysis revealed a homogenous distribution of COX-1 within nearly all cell types of the organ of Corti, but no COX-1 expression in th…

Gene isoformCell typePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyGuinea PigsBiologyGuinea pigTinnitusProstaglandins Syntheticotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineAnimalsInner earOrgan of CortiSpiral ganglionCochleaHearing Loss SuddenImmunohistochemistryCell biologyDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyOrgan of CortiCyclooxygenase 2Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide SynthasesCyclooxygenase 1Deiters cellssense organsSpiral GanglionORL; journal for oto-rhino-laryngology and its related specialties
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Cellular distribution in the rat telencephalon of mRNAs encoding for the alpha 3 and alpha 4 subunits of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.

1995

Pharmacological and electrophysiological studies provide evidence for the involvement of different nicotinic acetylcholine receptor isoforms in rat neocortical and hippocampal signal transduction. Yet, rather little is known on the cellular localization of these isoforms. With the availability of isoform specific nucleic acid probes and sensitive non-isotopic detection systems, nicotinic receptors can be studied on the mRNA level in individual neurons. In this way, we have paradigmatically studied the distribution of the alpha 3 and alpha 4 isoform mRNAs of the nicotinic receptor in the rat telencephalon. In the cerebral cortex, alpha 3 transcripts were mainly located in pyramidal neurons o…

Gene isoformMaleTelencephalonGene ExpressionBiologyReceptors NicotinicHippocampusRNA ComplementaryCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceGanglion type nicotinic receptorAnimalsRNA MessengerRats WistarMolecular BiologyCellular localizationIn Situ HybridizationAcetylcholine receptorCerebral CortexDentate gyrusCell biologyRatsNicotinic acetylcholine receptorNicotinic agonistnervous systemAlpha-4 beta-2 nicotinic receptorNeuroscienceBrain research. Molecular brain research
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Modulatory control by non-competitive agonists of nicotinic cholinergic neurotransmission in the central nervous system

1995

Abstract Several exogenous and endogenous compounds have been discovered that act on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors as non-competitive agonists (NCA) of low efficacy, and probably also as allosteric regulators of the receptor's sensitivity to acetylcholine. Nicotinic NCAs may be viewed as another facet in the increasingly complex picture of vertebrate brain organization, i.e. they may be part of a higher level ‘chemical’ network that overlays the neuronal network of the CNS. Furthermore, exogenous NCAs may provide a new therapeutic approach to Alzheimer's dementia.

General NeurosciencePharmacologyBiologyNicotinic agonistGanglion type nicotinic receptorMuscarinic acetylcholine receptor M5Muscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineAlpha-4 beta-2 nicotinic receptorReceptorNeuroscienceAcetylcholineAcetylcholine receptormedicine.drugSeminars in Neuroscience
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Pineal 'synaptic' ribbon numbers and melatonin synthesis of rat are resistant to guanethidine sympathectomy.

1995

Chemical sympathectomy is widely used to study the impact of the noradrenergic system on neuronal and neuroendocrine circuits. We tested the effects of intraperitoneal injections of guanethidine, an adrenergic neuron blocking agent, on selected functional parameters of the rat pineal gland which are known to be under sympathetic influence. The reliability of the method was demonstrated by the clear enophthalmus developed by experimental animals. However, neither the numbers of 'synaptic' ribbons nor melatonin synthesis differed between treated and control rats, both parameters exhibiting the nocturnal increase seen in intact animals. These results are in striking contrast to those obtained …

GuanethidineMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentAdrenergicPineal GlandMelatoninRats Sprague-DawleyCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceInternal medicineMedicineAnimalsMelatonin synthesisGanglionectomyMolecular BiologyGuanethidineMelatoninPharmacologySynaptic ribbonbusiness.industrySympathectomy ChemicalCell BiologyRatsEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureSympathectomySynapsesMolecular MedicineNeuronbusinessmedicine.drugExperientia
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Spatial shaping of cochlear innervation by temporally regulated neurotrophin expression.

2001

Previous work suggested qualitatively different effects of neurotrophin 3 (NT-3) in cochlear innervation patterning in different null mutants. We now show that all NT-3 null mutants have a similar phenotype and lose all neurons in the basal turn of the cochlea. To understand these longitudinal deficits in neurotrophin mutants, we have compared the development of the deficit in the NT-3 mutant to the spatial–temporal expression patterns of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and NT-3, using lacZ reporters in each gene and with expression of the specific neurotrophin receptors, trkB and trkC. In the NT-3 mutant, almost normal numbers of spiral ganglion neurons form, but fiber outgrowth t…

HeterozygoteCell SurvivalCell CountNeurotrophin-3Tropomyosin receptor kinase BTropomyosin receptor kinase CArticleMiceNeurotrophin 3Neurotrophic factorsGenes ReportermedicineAnimalsReceptor trkBReceptor trkCNeurons AfferentCochleaSpiral ganglionBrain-derived neurotrophic factorAfferent PathwaysbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceBrain-Derived Neurotrophic FactorHomozygoteGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalImmunohistochemistryMice Mutant StrainsCochleamedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypenervous systemAnimals NewbornLac OperonMutationbiology.proteinSpiral GanglionNeuroscienceNeurotrophin
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