Publications by authors named "Ana C Barcelo"

This study was designed to explore the electrophysiological relationships between the globus pallidus (GP), the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) and the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) in urethane-anesthetized rats. The neuronal activity of the rostral part of the TRN was recorded by microelectrodes. Single pulse electrical stimulation of the GP and SNr produced inhibition of the spontaneous activity of the majority of TRN neurons.

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The aim of this review was to give a general aspect of the sensorial function of the striatum related to pain modulation, which was intensively studied in our laboratory. We analyse the effect of electrical and chemical stimulation of the striatum on the orofacial pain, especially that produced by tooth pulp stimulation of the lower incisors. We demonstrated specific sites within the nucleus which electrical or chemical stimulation produced inhibition of the nociceptive jaw opening reflex.

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High-frequency stimulation (HFS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) alleviates the cardinal symptoms of Parkinson's disease, but the mechanisms underlying these clinical results remain to be clarified. The HFS of STN is associated with the release of dopamine (DA) in the striatum. This study examines possible mechanisms by which HFS-STN release DA.

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Previous experimental data from this laboratory demonstrated the participation of the striatum and dopaminergic pathways in central nociceptive processing. The objective of this study was to examine the possible pathways and neural structures associated with the analgesic action of the striatum. The experiments were carried out in rats anesthetized with urethane.

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Stress erythropoiesis is usually considered as a compensatory effort to counteract tissue hypoxia. Its homeostatic importance in anemic hypoxia has not been questioned, but researchers, clinicians, and mountain climbers have had second thoughts on polycythemia as to its appropriateness for hypoxic or altitude hypoxia (HA). Therefore, polycythemia, one of the responses to HA seen in nongenetically adapted mammals, could or could not be considered beneficial.

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Current evidence suggests that a modulatory action on O(2)-dependent EPO secretion is exerted by the erythroid/precursor cell population in the erythropoietic organs through a negative feedback system. The hypothesis is based on studies of stimulated-EPO secretion performed in mice in whom the erythropoietic rates were either enhanced or depressed in the presence of normal plasma EPO half-lives. Since erythropoietic depression was elicited by cyclophosphamide administration, which could have altered EPO production directly, the aim of the present investigation was to estimate hypoxia-stimulated EPO secretion in a mouse model of functional depressed erythropoiesis induced by exposure to normobaric hyperoxia.

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Mice myocardia, in which plasma erythropoietin (EPO) concentrations were modified in response to different experimental conditions, were studied to evaluate contractility (dF/dt). CF1 mice were randomly separated into four main groups: group I, normocythaemic normoxic; group II-a, normocythaemic intermittently exposed to hypobaria for 72 h; group II-b, normocythaemic intermittently exposed to hypobaria for 3 weeks; group III, hypertransfused polycythaemic exposed to 72 h hypobaria; and group IV, hypertransfused polycythaemic maintained in normobaric air. Plasma EPO, contractile studies and binding assays were performed.

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