Publications by authors named "Alba Gutierrez-Menendez"

Spatial memory is responsible for encoding spatial information to form a path, storing this mental representation, and evaluating and recovering spatial configurations to find a target location in the environment. It is mainly supported by the hippocampus and its interaction with other structures, such as the prefrontal cortex, and emerges in rodents around postnatal day (PND) 20. Sex differences in spatial tasks have been found in adults, with a supposedly better performance in males.

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The role of light in our biological processes and systems is extensively known. In addition, the use of light devices has been introduced in the field of healthcare as an opportunity to administer power light at specific wavelengths to improve our body functions and counteract light deficiency. One of these techniques is photobiomodulation (PBM), which uses red to infrared light in a non-invasive way to stimulate, heal, regenerate, and protect tissue.

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Photobiomodulation (PBM) or the use of red to near-infrared irradiation spectrum, is a non-invasive intervention that produces neurostimulatory effects and reaches benefits in several pathologies as well as in healthy subjects. The main objective of this study was to evaluate and compare the effects of PBM in a rat brain network on basal state and functional activity during the execution of a reversal task. Twenty-eight rats were divided into four groups: control group (n = 7), control photobiomodulation group (n = 8), behavioural group (n = 6) and behavioural photobiomodulation group (n = 7).

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Photobiomodulation is a brain modulation technique that has become a promising treatment for multiple pathologies. This systematic review collects studies up to 2019 about the beneficial effects of photobiomodulation as a therapy for treating psychological disorders and a tool for modulating cognitive processes. This technique is mostly used for the treatment of depression and stress, as well as to study its effects on psychological variables in healthy subjects.

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Unfortunately, adverse environments in early life are frequently found in most human populations. Early life stress leads to diverse cognitive impairments, some of them related to learning and memory and executive functions such as working memory (WM). We employ an animal model of early stress using repeated maternal separation (MS) for 4 h a day on 21 consecutive days, pre-weaning.

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Early life stress increases the risk of abnormal brain development, and it is associated with psychological disorders. Maternal separation is an established animal model of early life stress that produces changes in the development of the central nervous system. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of maternal separation on the rat cerebellum, both behaviourally and physiologically.

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