نتایج جستجو برای: medullary nucleus

تعداد نتایج: 123268  

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2012
Kathryn M Pate Paul W Davenport

Airway obstruction in animals leads to compensation and avoidance behavior and elicits respiratory mechanosensation. The pattern of respiratory load compensation and neural activation in response to intrinsic, transient, tracheal occlusions (ITTO) via an inflatable tracheal cuff are unknown. We hypothesized that ITTO would cause increased diaphragm activity, decreased breathing frequency, and a...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 1999
P Telgkamp J M Ramirez

The response of the neonatal respiratory system to hypoxia is characterized by an initial increase in ventilation, which is followed within a few minutes by a depression of ventilation below baseline levels. We used the transverse medullary slice of newborn mice as a model system for central respiratory control to investigate the effects of short-lasting periods of anoxia. Extracellular populat...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2007
Mirela B Dias Tatiane B Nucci Lisandra O Margatho José Antunes-Rodrigues Luciane H Gargaglioni Luiz G S Branco

There is evidence that serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] is involved in the physiological responses to hypercapnia. Serotonergic neurons represent the major cell type (comprising 15-20% of the neurons) in raphe magnus nucleus (RMg), which is a medullary raphe nucleus. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis 1) that RMg plays a role in the ventilatory and thermal responses to hyperca...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2005
M H Park B J Kim S B Koh M K Park K W Park D H Lee

BACKGROUND Hiccups are an infrequent result of lateral medullary infarction. Their importance may be underestimated and they can cause distress, exhaustion, and aspiration. Hiccups in lateral medullary infarction remain poorly understood OBJECTIVE To evaluate the relation between the lesional loci of lateral medullary infarction and hiccups. METHODS 51 patients with lateral medullary infarc...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1990
M Kawasaki W Heiligenberg

Gymnotiform electric fish generate distinct communicatory signals by modulating the rate of their electric organ discharges (EODs). Each EOD is triggered by a command pulse from the medullary pacemaker nucleus (PN), which contains pacemaker cells and relay cells. The firing rate of this nucleus is modulated by inputs from the diencephalic prepacemaker nucleus (PPN). The NMDA receptor blocker AP...

2014
Günther K.H. Zupanc Iulian Ilieş Ruxandra F. Sîrbulescu Marianne M. Zupanc

25 Sexually dimorphic behaviors develop under the influence of sex steroids, which induce 26 reversible changes in the underlying neural network of the brain. However, little is known about 27 the proteins that mediate these activational effects of sex steroids. Here, we used a proteomics 28 approach for large-scale identification of proteins involved in the development of a sexually 29 dimorph...

2013
Courtney Premer Courtney Lamondin Ann Mitzey Robert C. Speth Mark S. Brownfield

Angiotensin II increases blood pressure and stimulates thirst and sodium appetite in the brain. It also stimulates secretion of aldosterone from the adrenal zona glomerulosa and epinephrine from the adrenal medulla. The rat has 3 subtypes of angiotensin II receptors: AT1a, AT1b, and AT2. mRNAs for all three subtypes occur in the adrenal and brain. To immunohistochemically differentiate these re...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 2007
Glenda C Harris Gary Aston-Jones

Previously we reported that during protracted morphine abstinence rats show reduced conditioned place preferences (CPP) for food-associated environments, compared to non-dependent subjects. To determine the brain regions involved in this altered reward behavior, we examined neural activation (as indexed by Fos-like proteins) induced by a preference test for a food-associated environment in 5-we...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1983
S Cummings R Elde J Ells A Lindall

The discovery of a 41-amino acid peptide with potent corticotropin-releasing factor properties has prompted a search for neurons that contain this substance and potentially utilize it in intercellular communication. The present study utilized immunohistochemical methods and an antiserum directed against a synthetic replica of ovine corticotropin-releasing factor. The rat hypothalamus was found ...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2001
O E Malakhova P W Davenport

Phrenic nerve afferents (PNa) have been shown to activate neurons in the spinal cord, brain stem, and forebrain regions. The c-Fos technique has been widely used as a method to identify neuronal regions activated by afferent stimulation. This technique was used to identify central neural areas activated by PNa. The right phrenic nerve of urethane-anesthetized rats was stimulated in the thorax. ...

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