Publications by authors named "Galili D"

Article Synopsis
  • In Drosophila, a specific olfactory channel detects the male pheromone cVA, which influences female attraction and male repulsion.
  • The study reveals that two separate processing pathways in the brain extract different types of information from cVA: one handles the concentration differences, while the other tracks the position of the male.
  • Researchers identified 47 distinct types of neurons that collectively manage responses to male scents, environmental cues, and integrate smell and taste to facilitate female mating behaviors, similar to visual processing in mammals.
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Methods to acquire and process synaptic-resolution electron-microscopy datasets have progressed very rapidly, allowing production and annotation of larger, more complete connectomes. More accurate neuronal matching techniques are enriching cell type data with gene expression, neuron activity, behaviour and developmental information, providing ways to test hypotheses of circuit function. In a variety of behaviours such as learned and innate olfaction, navigation and sexual behaviour, connectomics has already revealed interconnected modules with a hierarchical structure, recurrence and integration of sensory streams.

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A new study investigates the distinct male courtship songs of two related Drosophila species and the neurons controlling this behavior, localizing a site of evolutionary divergence to the motor system, downstream of the central brain.

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Midbrain neurons of the centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus (EWcp) are activated by alcohol, and enriched with stress-responsive neuropeptide modulators (including the paralog of corticotropin-releasing factor, urocortin-1). Evidence suggests that EWcp neurons promote behavioral processes for alcohol-seeking and consumption, but a definitive role for these cells remains elusive. Here we combined targeted viral manipulations and gene array profiling of EWcp neurons with mass behavioral phenotyping in C57BL/6 J mice to directly define the links between EWcp-specific urocortin-1 expression and voluntary binge alcohol intake, demonstrating a specific importance for EWcp urocortin-1 activity in escalation of alcohol intake.

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Background: Drosophila learn to avoid odors that are paired with aversive stimuli. Electric shock is a potent aversive stimulus that acts via dopamine neurons to elicit avoidance of the associated odor. While dopamine signaling has been demonstrated to mediate olfactory electric shock conditioning, it remains unclear how this pathway is involved in other types of behavioral reinforcement, such as in learned avoidance of odors paired with increased temperature.

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Trace conditioning is a form of associative learning that can be induced by presenting a conditioned stimulus (CS) and an unconditioned stimulus (US) following each other, but separated by a temporal gap. This gap distinguishes trace conditioning from classical delay conditioning, where the CS and US overlap. To bridge the temporal gap between both stimuli and to form an association between CS and US in trace conditioning, the brain must keep a neural representation of the CS after its termination-a stimulus trace.

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The neural representation of a sensory stimulus evolves with time, and animals keep that representation even after stimulus cessation (i.e., a stimulus "trace").

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Plasma membrane Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, which drives potassium into and sodium out of the cell, has important roles in numerous physiological processes. Cardiac steroids (CS), such as ouabain and bufalin, specifically interact with the pump and affect ionic homeostasis, signal transduction, and endocytosed membrane traffic. CS-like compounds are present in mammalian tissues, synthesized in the adrenal gland, and considered to be new family of steroid hormones.

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Background: Sodium and potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Na(+), K(+)-ATPase) and endogenous digitalis-like compounds (DLC) in the brain have been implicated in the pathogenesis of mood disorders. This hypothesis was examined by the determination of Na(+), K(+)-ATPase/DLC system in parietal cortex of patients with different mood disorders and two animal models of depression.

Methods: Na(+), K(+)-ATPase concentrations in human brain synaptosomal fractions, from patients with mood disorders, schizophrenia, and normal individuals, were determined by (3)H-ouabain binding assay.

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The synthesis and some pharmacological properties of 4-(3'alpha-15'beta-dihydroxy-5beta-estran-17'beta-yl)furan-2-methyl alcohol (16) have been described. The compound was synthesized by reacting a synthetic 3alpha- benzyloxy-5beta-estr-15-en-17-one with the ethylene acetal of 4-bromo-2-furancarboxyaldehyde, followed by hydrolysis of the ethylene acetal and reduction of the aldehyde. Despite its resemblance to the structure of cardiac steroids (CS), 16 does not bind to the CS receptor on Na(+),K(+)-ATPase and does not increase the force of contraction of heart muscle.

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This paper is the first to report the benefits of CO2 laser treatment for pain control in severe oral chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). A CO2 laser device was used during 17 treatment sessions in four patients. The CO2 laser was applied over the mucosal lesions using 1 W for 2-3 s/1 mm(2).

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Background: Adverse reactions to local anesthetics (LAs) are frequently reported. Although most of these reactions are not immune mediated, many patients are referred to allergy clinics and undergo extensive evaluation.

Objective: To determine the prevalence of true LA allergy among the patients referred for suspected hypersensitivity and to evaluate the usefulness of the currently used evaluation protocol.

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Goal: Oral-dental infection foci should be eradicated before the ablative chemo-radiotherapy regimen of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) commences. The rationale of oral-dental treatment is to prevent the future development and spread of infections in patients with compromised immune systems. This study aims to shed light on the challenges facing hospital dentists in the implementation of optimal oral-dental treatment prior to HSCT.

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The dentist has the ethical and legal responsibility to anticipate emergency situations in correlation with the patient's medical status. He has the obligation to do all in his power to prevent emergencies from happening and to be prepared to manage any emergency that might occur. This article also discusses the importance of monitoring and documentation.

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The extreme medical emergency situation in the dental setting is cardiac arrest. The need to provide dental treatment to the medically compromised patients, suffering from very high risk heart diseases at special oral medicine hospital dentistry units, expose the dental and medical teams to the possibility of patients' death. Cardiac and cardiorespiratory arrest in these units faces the dentists with the need to perform basic and/or advanced cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

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The symptoms of most endocrine system diseases are usually clearly recognizable and most of the times are accompanied by a rich medical history. Many general practitioners are reluctant to treat such cases and prefer to refer these patients to specialists who are trained in management of the medically compromised thus increasing the chances of dental treatment without complications. However, sometimes endocrinal diseases develop slowly and their clinical manifestations are hidden or subclinical in nature.

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Allergic reactions can develop to any of the drugs or materials commonly used in dentistry. They exhibit a broad range of clinical signs and symptoms ranging from mild, delayed reactions to immediate and life-threatening reactions developing within seconds. Allergies usually manifest themselves in reactions that are related to histamine release in one of three ways: skin reactions, respiratory problems and anaphylaxis.

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Chest pain does not necessarily indicate cardiac disease. The most common causes of acute chest pain encountered in dental situations include hyperventilation, pulmonary embolism, angina pectoris and myocardial infarction. Stress and fear often cause rapid breathing or hyperventilation.

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[Respiratory distress].

Refuat Hapeh Vehashinayim (1993)

January 2002

Dental treatment is usually conducted in the oral cavity and in very close proximity to the upper respiratory airway. The possibility of unintentionally compromising this airway is high in the dental environment. The accumulation of fluid (water or blood) near to the upper respiratory airway or the loosening of teeth fragmentations and fallen dental instruments can occur.

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Syncope or Fainting is, by far, the most common emergency situation in the dental practice. Syncope is defined as an abrupt, transient, short term loss of consciousness and postural tone, followed by spontaneous and complete recovery. The pathophysiology of syncope consists of a sudden cessation or decrease in cerebral perfusion.

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Local anesthesia is without doubt the most frequently used drug in dentistry and in medicine. In spite of records of safety set by using these drugs, there is evidence to adverse reactions ranging from 2.5%-11%.

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The relation between periodontal disease and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease was reported the first time at the end of the Eighties. Screening of the English written reported research papers revealed an increased risk of coronary artery disease and Cerebrovascular disease, in patients suffering from chronic periodontal infection. The same relation was found in patient who underwent multiple tooth extraction as a result of chronic advanced periodontal disease.

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The dental profession faces the problems of exaggerated bleeding on a daily basis. The hemostatic, as well as the fibrinolytic processes are better understood today, and the dentist should be familiar with them. The activation of coagulation factors and their clinical expression in the circulation are both described.

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Ultraviolet irradiation inhibits the proliferative responses of lymphoid cells to mitogens and alloantigens by inactivation of T lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells. Its immunosuppressive capacity led to the introduction of UV irradiation into clinical practice for the treatment of dermatologic manifestations of chronic graft-versus-host disease. The cumulative experience with psoralen-UV-A rays in the treatment of cutaneous and oral graft-versus-host disease was the incentive for the application of oral UV-B rays in 2 patients with oral graft-versus-host disease signs and symptoms after allogeneic marrow transplantation.

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This paper evaluates lidocaine absorption via oral mucosa following its topical application for symptomatic treatment of bone marrow transplantation (BMT)-induced oral mucositis. Five patients with high-grade oral mucositis after allogeneic BMT were entered consecutively into the study. Five healthy individuals served as controls.

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