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1
Hyperinsulinemia induces hypertension associated with neurogenic vascular dysfunction resulting from abnormal perivascular innervations in rat mesenteric resistance arteries.
2011-07-28

We previously reported that chronic hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance induced by fructose-drinking loading elicited hypertension associated with abnormal neuronal regulation of vascular tone in an in vivo study using pithed rats. Therefore, to further clarify the detailed mechanisms of perivascular nervous system malfunction induced by chronic ...

PubMed

2
Development of the adrenergic innervation in the myocardium and coronary arteries of the dog.
1990-01-01

The development of the adrenergic cardiac innervation was studied in premature dog fetuses, puppies and adult dogs by means of the formalin-induced fluorescence technique. A point-counting technique was used to evaluate the density of innervation. Two types of fluorescent profiles can be observed in the heart during development: (1) sprouting axons, and ...

PubMed

3
Cerebral white matter abnormalities in 6p25 deletion syndrome.
2006-03-01

Submicroscopic deletion of the terminal part of the short arm of chromosome 6, including 6p25, leads to developmental retardation, hearing impairment, ocular dysgenesis, and dysmorphic features. We diagnosed 3 patients referred because of white matter abnormalities of unknown origin. MR imaging showed multifocal areas of abnormal signal and enlarged ...

PubMed

4
The absence of autonomic perivascular nerves in human colorectal liver metastases.
1996-02-01

The peptidergic/aminergic innervation of normal liver and tumour blood vessels was investigated in order to determine vascular control with a view to improving the efficacy of hepatic arterial cytotoxic infusion in the treatment of colorectal liver metastases. Selected areas of liver metastases and macroscopically normal liver from resection specimens (n = 13) were studied ...

PubMed Central

5
Ontogeny of the conus papillaris of the lizard Gallotia galloti and cellular response following transection of the optic nerve: an immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study.
2011-02-24

Spontaneous regrowth of the axons of retinal ganglion cells (RGC) occurs after unilateral optic nerve transection (ONT) in the lizard Gallotia galloti. We have performed an immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study of the conus papillaris (CP) of this lizard during ontogeny and after ONT in order to characterize its cell subpopulations, innervation and putative blood-brain ...

PubMed

6
Abnormalities of the exercise pressor reflex in heart failure.
2011-10-01

Abnormal cardiovascular responses to exercise in heart failure contribute significantly to the morbidity and mortality in the patient population. These abnormal responses may be the result of peripheral impairment in the skeletal muscle and the neurons that innervate the muscle. We present the current literature on the role of muscle ...

PubMed

7
The aging colon: the role of enteric neurodegeneration in constipation.
2010-12-01

Constipation is a common problem in the elderly, and abnormalities in the neural innervation of the colon play a significant role in abnormalities in colonic motility leading to delayed colonic transit. The scope of this review encompasses the latest advances to enhance our understanding of the aging colon with emphasis on enteric ...

PubMed

8
Noradrenergic sympathetic innervation of the spleen: III. Development of innervation in the rat spleen.
1987-01-01

The ontogeny of noradrenergic innervation and its compartmental development were studied in the rat spleen using glyoxylic acid histofluorescence and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Noradrenergic nerves were present at birth in bundles adjacent to the splenic artery and vein. On days 1-3, fluorescent profiles largely were associated with the vasculature and with ...

PubMed

9
Innervation of the rat uterus at estrus: a study in full-thickness, immunoperoxidase-stained whole-mount preparations.
2011-03-01

The innervation of the nonpregnant rat uterus has been studied in histological sections, which contain only small samples of nerves and are unlikely to afford a complete picture of uterine innervation. Here we used whole-mount preparations of entire full-thickness uterine horns from nonpregnant rats in estrus to visualize autonomic or sensory nerves with ...

PubMed

10
Perivascular fluid cuffs decrease lung compliance by increasing tissue resistance
2010-06-01

ObjectiveLung inflammation causes perivascular fluid cuffs to form around extra-alveolar blood vessels; however, the physiologic consequences of such cuffs remain poorly understood. Herein, we tested the hypothesis that perivascular fluid cuffs, without concomitant alveolar edema, are sufficient to decrease lung compliance.DesignProspective, randomized, ...

PubMed Central

11
An epizootic of cerebrospinal nematodiasis in cottontail rabbits.
1975-10-01

A progressively debilitating neurologic syndrome characterized by torticollis, ataxia, circling, and abnormal posture was observed in 16 of approximately 60 cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus) captured in a 12-hectare portion of a woodlot in southwestern Virginia. Inflammatory and degenerative alterations in cerebellum and midbrain regions were characterized principally ...

PubMed

12
Retinal projections to the superior colliculus and dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii): II. Topography after rotation of an eye prior to retinal innervation of the brain.
1988-05-01

Retinal projections to visual centers in a marsupial mammal, the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii), have been investigated after an eye rotation prior to retinal innervation of the brain. Retinal topography to the superior colliculus and dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus was mapped by using laser lesions of the retina and horseradish peroxidase histochemistry. Despite the ...

PubMed

13
Abnormalities of the innervation of the urethral striated sphincter musculature in incontinence.
1984-08-01

Perineal nerve and transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation have been used to study 17 patients with idiopathic neurogenic faecal incontinence, 12 of whom also had urinary incontinence. Significant increases in spinal, perineal and pudendal nerve motor latencies were demonstrated in all 17 patients. These results suggest that there is damage to the nerves innervating both the ...

PubMed

14
Bladder muscle biopsy and urethral sphincter EMG in patients with bladder dysfunction after pelvic surgery.
1986-05-01

Eleven patients who suffered persistent bladder dysfunction after pelvic surgery have been investigated by needle urethral sphincter electromyography (EMG) and bladder muscle biopsy, and the results compared with those obtained in a series of controls. Individual motor units recorded from the urethral sphincter in patients who had undergone pelvic surgery were strikingly ...

PubMed Central

15
Endothelin in the middle cerebral artery: a case of multiple system atrophy.
2002-10-01

In this study, we show the changes in the wall of the middle cerebral artery of a subject who suffered multiple system atrophy with autonomic failure. An electron-immunocytochemical approach was employed to reveal the presence of endothelin-1. Our results demonstrate the presence of immunoreactive endothelin-1 in the endothelial cells of the intima, vascular smooth muscle cells and macrophages of ...

PubMed

16
The role of nuclear imaging in the failing heart: myocardial blood flow, sympathetic innervation, and future applications.
2011-07-01

Heart failure represents a common disease affecting approximately 5 million patients in the United States. Several conditions play an important role in the development and progression of heart failure, including abnormalities in myocardial blood flow and sympathetic innervation. Nuclear imaging represents the only imaging modality with sufficient ...

PubMed

17
Early monocular enucleations in fetal ferrets produce a decrease of uncrossed and an increase of crossed retinofugal components: a possible model for the albino abnormality.
1989-06-01

The terminal distributions of retinofugal axons to geniculate laminae or cell groups have been studied in monocular ferrets that had had one eye removed on the 28th or 29th day of intrauterine life and survived until the end of the fourth postnatal week. Normally pigmented and albino animals were studied and the patterns of retinogeniculate terminations in these were compared with earlier accounts ...

PubMed

18
Neural pathways regulating Brunner's gland secretion in guinea pig duodenum in vitro.
2000-11-01

This study examined the neural pathways innervating Brunner's glands using a novel in vitro model of acinar secretion from Brunner's glands in submucosal preparations from the guinea pig duodenum. Neural pathways were activated by focal electrical stimulation and excitatory agonists, and videomicroscopy was used to monitor dilation of acinar lumen. Electrical stimulation of ...

PubMed

19
Structural neuroplasticity following T5 spinal cord transection: increased cardiac sympathetic innervation density and SPN arborization.
2010-07-28

When the spinal cord is injured at or below thoracic level 5 (T5), cardiovascular control is markedly unbalanced as the heart and blood vessels innervated by upper thoracic segments remain under brain stem control, whereas the vasculature of the lower body is affected by unregulated spinal reflexes. Importantly, the regulation of heart rate and cardiac function is ...

PubMed

20
Epithelial-derived brain-derived neurotrophic factor is required for gustatory neuron targeting during a critical developmental period.
2009-03-18

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is expressed in epithelial targets of gustatory neurons (i.e., fungiform papillae) before their innervation, and BDNF overexpression in nontaste regions of the tongue misdirects gustatory axons to these sites, suggesting that BDNF is necessary for gustatory axons to locate and innervate their correct targets during ...

PubMed

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First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 Next Page Last Page
 
21
Comparison of surgical and electrodiagnostic findings in single root lumbosacral radiculopathies.
2003-01-01

To identify the segmental innervation of L-2-S-1 muscles, we compared the preoperative electrodiagnostic examinations of 45 patients with single-level lumbosacral radiculopathies confirmed radiologically and surgically. The electrodiagnostic findings were classified as abnormal only by the needle examination and only if muscles demonstrated active ...

PubMed

22
Histamine H(3) receptor-mediated modulation of perivascular nerve transmission in rat mesenteric arteries.
2011-01-25

The rat mesenteric artery has been shown to be innervated by adrenergic vasoconstrictor nerves and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-containing (CGRPergic) vasodilator nerves. The present study was designed to investigate the involvement of histamine H(3) receptors in the neurotransmission of perivascular adrenergic and CGRPergic nerves. The ...

PubMed

23
Epoxyeicosanoids as mediators of neurogenic vasodilation in cerebral vessels.
2009-03-20

Epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) are potent vasodilators produced from arachidonic acid by cytochrome P-450 (CYP) epoxygenases and metabolized to vicinal diols by soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH). In the brain, EETs are produced by astrocytes and the vascular endothelium and are involved in the control of cerebral blood flow (CBF). Recent evidence, however, suggests that epoxygenases and sEH are ...

PubMed

24
Factors Regulating Vagal Sensory Development: Potential Role in Obesities of Developmental Origin
2007-11-22

Contributors to increased obesity in children may include perinatal under- or overnutrition. Humans and rodents raised under these conditions develop obesity, which like obesities of other etiologies has been associated with increased meal size. Since vagal sensory innervation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract transmits satiation signals that regulate meal size, one mechanism ...

PubMed Central

25
Pathological findings correlated with MRI in HIV infection.
1993-01-01

MRI forms an important part of the assessment of patients with HIV-related disease presenting with cerebral symptoms. Eleven formalin-fixed brains were studied at 0.5 T using T2- and T1-weighted sequences. In two cases of progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy and one case each of toxoplasmosis and lymphoma, the extent of white matter abnormality seen on MRI corresponded ...

PubMed

26
Proton acts as a neurotransmitter for nicotine-induced adrenergic and calcitonin gene-related peptide-containing nerve-mediated vasodilation in the rat mesenteric artery.
2009-05-29

Nicotine stimulates presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in perivascular adrenergic nerves and releases unknown transmitter(s) that activate transient receptor potential vanilloid-1 (TRPV1) located on calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-containing (CGRPergic) nerves, resulting in vasodilation. The present study investigated a potential transmitter transmitting ...

PubMed

27
Is Rolandic Epilepsy Associated With Abnormal Findings On Cranial MRI?
2007-07-01

Rolandic epilepsy (RE) is designated an idiopathic epilepsy syndrome, and hence no lesional abnormalities are expected on MRI exam. Recent reports suggest that MRI abnormalities are not only common, but may be specific for temporal lobe epilepsy, and lateralized to the side of EEG discharges. However, no controlled study has been performed to test the ...

PubMed Central

28
Second order Horner's syndrome in a cat.
2009-03-03

This case report describes the clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of a 3.5-year-old, male neutered, domestic shorthair cat with second order Horner's syndrome as the only clinical abnormality. The neuroanatomical pathway of the sympathetic innervation to the eye, differential diagnoses for Horner's syndrome in cats, and the ...

PubMed

29
Imaging of the heart using metaiodobenzylguanidine
1990-07-01

Catecholamines have profound influences on cardiac function. Mechanisms relating abnormalities in sympathetic innervation to myocardial dysfunction are poorly understood, however. Recent studies have demonstrated the feasibility of noninvasively imaging the sympathetic nerves of the heart using radiolabeled MIBG. This article examines some of the ...

Energy Citations Database

30
Evidence for a role of dystroglycan regulating the membrane architecture of astroglial endfeet.
2011-04-19

The dystrophin-dystroglycan complex (DDC) is a molecular array of proteins in muscle and brain cells. The central component of the DDC is dystroglycan, which comprises ?- and ?-subunits. ?-Dystroglycan (?-DG) binds to extracellular matrix components such as agrin, whereas ?-dystroglycan (?-DG) is a membrane-spanning protein linking ?-DG to the cytoskeleton and other intracellular components such ...

PubMed

31
Psoralen-UVA-treated psoriatic lesions
1978-05-01

Psoralen-ultraviolet light (PUVA)-treated psoriatic lesions were studied for ultrastructural changes. In early stages of treatment, sunburn cells in the epidermis and bizarre giant cells in the dermis were more frequently observed. When clinical improvement was apparent, these changes had subsided. Dermal abnormality in long-term therapy consisted of a thick ...

Energy Citations Database

32
Neuropathological Changes and Clinical Features of Autism Spectrum Disorder Participants Are Similar to that Reported in Congenital and Chronic Cerebral Toxoplasmosis in Humans and Mice
2009-12-01

Anatomic, histopathologic, and MRI/SPET studies of autistic spectrum disorders (ASD) patients' brains confirm existence of very early developmental deficits. In congenital and chronic murine toxoplasmosis several cerebral anomalies also have been reported, and worldwide, approximately two billion people are chronically infected with T. "gondii" with largely yet unknown consequences. The aim of the ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

33
Neurological and behavioral abnormalities, ventricular dilatation, altered cellular functions, inflammation, and neuronal injury in brains of mice due to common, persistent, parasitic infection
2008-10-23

BackgroundWorldwide, approximately two billion people are chronically infected with Toxoplasma gondii with largely unknown consequences.MethodsTo better understand long-term effects and pathogenesis of this common, persistent brain infection, mice were infected at a time in human years equivalent to early to mid adulthood and studied 5�12 months later. Appearance, behavior, neurologic function ...

PubMed Central

34
Innervation of the avian pineal organ. A comparative study.
1983-01-01

The innervation of the pineal organ was studied in 26 avian species under particular consideration of comparative aspects. A population of nerve cells and their pinealofugal (afferent) fiber systems were stained by means of the acetylcholinesterase method, while catecholamine-containing pinealopetal (efferent) fibers were demonstrated with the use of the glyoxylic acid method. ...

PubMed

35
Developmental neurotoxicity targeting hepatic and cardiac sympathetic innervation: effects of organophosphates are distinct from those of glucocorticoids.
2011-03-29

Early-life exposure to organophosphate pesticides leads to subsequent hyperresponsiveness of ?-adrenergic receptor-mediated cell signaling that regulates hepatic gluconeogenesis, culminating in metabolic abnormalities resembling prediabetes. In the current study, we evaluated the effects of chlorpyrifos or parathion on presynaptic sympathetic innervation ...

PubMed

36
Innervation of the human gastric wall.
1980-10-01

The intrinsic innervation of the human gastric wall was studied by means of (1) demonstration of the acetylcholinesterase activity, (2) fluorescence microscopy, and (3) electron microscopy. The cholinergic innervation was rich: in the mucosa, a dense three dimensional network consisting of single delicate varicose acetylcholinesterase-positive axons and ...

PubMed Central

37
Serotonin in Autism and Pediatric Epilepsies
2004-05-01

Serotonergic abnormalities have been reported in both autism and epilepsy. This association may provide insights into underlying mechanisms of these disorders because serotonin plays an important neurotrophic role during brain development--and there is evidence for abnormal cortical development in both autism and some forms of epilepsy. This review ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

38
Dense-Core Plaques in Tg2576 and PSAPP Mouse Models of Alzheimer�s Disease Are Centered on Vessel Walls
2005-08-01

Occurrence of amyloid ? (A?) dense-core plaques in the brain is one of the chief hallmarks of Alzheimer�s disease (AD). It is not yet clear what factors are responsible for the aggregation of A? in the formation of these plaques. Using Tg2576 and PSAPP mouse models that exhibit age-related development of amyloid plaques similar to that observed in AD, we showed that ?95% of dense plaques in ...

PubMed Central

39
Unnoticed dysautonomic syndrome of the face: Harlequin syndrome.
2007-06-13

Harlequin sign and harlequin syndrome, which are used interchangeably in the literature, are characterized by sudden onset of hemifacial sweating and flushing, induced by exercise and heat. Hemifacial sweating and flushing with normal ocular sympathetic innervation, known as harlequin syndrome, is rarely associated with tonic pupils, parasympathetic oculomotor lesion and pre- ...

PubMed

40
Hypersensitivity and hyperinnervation of the rat hind paw following carrageenan-induced inflammation.
2011-03-23

Studies of human tissue show that many chronic pain syndromes are accompanied by abnormal increases in numbers of peripheral sensory nerve fibers. It is not known if sensory nerve sprouting occurs as a result of inflammation present in these conditions, or other factors such as infection or extensive tissue damage. In the present study, we used a well established model of ...

PubMed

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41
EphA4 is necessary for spatially selective peripheral somatosensory topography.
2010-02-01

Somatosensation is the primary sensory modality employed by rodents in navigating their environments, and mystacial vibrissae on the snout are the primary conveyors of this information to the murine brain. The layout of vibrissae is spatially stereotyped and topographic connections faithfully maintain this layout throughout the neuraxis. Several factors have been shown to influence general ...

PubMed

42
EphA4 is Necessary for Spatially Selective Peripheral Somatosensory Topography
2010-02-01

Somatosensation is the primary sensory modality employed by rodents in navigating their environments, and mystacial vibrissae on the snout are the primary conveyors of this information to the murine brain. The layout of vibrissae is spatially stereotyped and topographic connections faithfully maintain this layout throughout the neuraxis. Several factors have been shown to influence general ...

PubMed Central

43
The efferent innervation of the vestibular receptors
1974-01-01

The efferent innervation of the vestibular receptors is discussed in the light of current literature

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

44
THE ADRENERGIC INNERVATION OF THE VAS DEFERENS ...

... The adrenergic innervation of the vas deferens and the accessory male glands of some mammals, and the presence of adrenaline and chromaffin ...

DTIC Science & Technology

45
Sympathetic overdrive in obesity involves purinergic hyperactivity in the resistance vasculature.
2011-05-16

While a close correlation exists in obese humans between sympathetic, adrenergic hyperactivity and structural and functional organ damage, a role for the co-transmitter, ATP, in vascular function remains unexplored. We therefore studied sympathetic nerve-mediated responses of pressurised small mesenteric arteries from control and obese rats. Diet-induced obesity significantly increased the ...

PubMed

46
Pregnancy prevents hypertensive remodeling and decreases myogenic reactivity in posterior cerebral arteries from Dahl salt-sensitive rats: a role in eclampsia?
2006-10-20

Previous studies have demonstrated that pregnancy prevents protective hypertension-induced remodeling of cerebral arteries using nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibition to raise mean arterial pressure (MAP). In the present study, we investigated whether this effect of pregnancy was specific to NOS inhibition by using the Dahl salt-sensitive (SS) rat as a model of hypertension. Nonpregnant (n = 16) ...

PubMed

47
Paracrine control of mesenteric perivascular axo-axonal interaction.
2010-11-09

Immunohistochemical study of rat mesenteric arteries showed dense innervation of adrenergic nerves, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-containing nerves (CGRPergic nerves), nitric oxide-containing nerves (nitrergic nerves). Double-immunostaining revealed that most CGRPergic or nitrergic nerves were in close contact with adrenergic nerves. CGRPergic and transient receptor ...

PubMed

48
Abnormal sympathetic nervous system development and physiological dysautonomia in Egr3-deficient mice.
2008-07-24

Sympathetic nervous system development depends upon many factors that mediate neuron migration, differentiation and survival. Target tissue-derived nerve growth factor (NGF) signaling-induced gene expression is required for survival, differentiation and target tissue innervation of post-migratory sympathetic neurons. However, the transcriptional regulatory mechanisms mediated ...

PubMed

49
Abnormal sympathetic nervous system development and physiologic dysautonomia in Egr3-deficient mice
2008-07-24

SummarySympathetic nervous system development depends upon many factors that mediate neuron migration, differentiation and survival. Target tissue-derived nerve growth factor (NGF) signaling-induced gene expression is required for survival, differentiation and target tissue innervation of post-migratory sympathetic neurons. However, the transcriptional regulatory mechanisms ...

PubMed Central

50
Structural and Ultrastructural Analysis of Cerebral Cortex, Cerebellum, and Hypothalamus from Diabetic Rats
2009-10-01

Autonomic and peripheral neuropathies are well-described complications in diabetes. Diabetes mellitus is also associated to central nervous system damage. This little-known complication is characterized by impairment of brain functions and electrophysiological changes associated with neurochemical and structural abnormalities. The purpose of this study was to investigate brain ...

PubMed Central

51
Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy showing prominent microvacuolation and necrosis of intestinal smooth muscle cells: a case diagnosed by rectal biopsy.
1998-07-01

A 40-year-old woman who developed intestinal dysmobility was found, at rectal biopsy, to have marked microvacuolation of mucosal muscle layer cells, which corresponded to increased accumulation of abnormal mitochondria. Skeletal muscle biopsy specimens showed ragged-red fibers, vessels strongly reactive for succinic dehydrogenase, and focal deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase. ...

PubMed

52
Extrapancreatic spread of acute pancreatitis: New observations with real-time US
1986-06-01

Real-time ultrasonography (US) was compared with abdominal computed tomography (CT) in 40 patients with moderate to severe acute pancreatitis. Emphasis was placed on the ability of US to disclose peri-pancreatic involvement of the anterior pararenal spaces, lesser sac, and transverse mesocolon. When a real-time US scanning technique emphasizing semierect patient positioning and coronal views was ...

Energy Citations Database

53
Conditional deletion of N-Myc disrupts neurosensory and non-sensory development of the ear.
2011-03-29

Ear development requires interactions of transcription factors for proliferation and differentiation. The proto-oncogene N-Myc is a member of the Myc family that regulates proliferation. To investigate the function of N-Myc, we conditionally knocked out N-Myc in the ear using Tg(Pax2-Cre) and Foxg1(KiCre). N-Myc CKOs had reduced growth of the ear, abnormal morphology including ...

PubMed

54
Age-related cerebral white matter changes and pulse-wave encephalopathy: observations with three-dimensional MRI.
2005-11-07

Our purpose was to investigate leukoara�osis (LA) using three-dimensional MR imaging combined with advanced image-processing technology to attempt to group signal abnormalities according to their etiology. Coronal T2-weighted fast fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) sequences and three-dimensional T1-weighted fast spoiled gradient recalled echo sequences were used to ...

PubMed

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