Publications by authors named "H van Riezen"

A brief review of the development and the state-of-the-art of EEG methods used to study drug effects is presented. Classification systems based on drug effects in animals kept awake artificially, and based on drug effects on the sleep-wake state duration and distribution are discussed. It is concluded that the techniques are there and the time is ripe to develop animal EEG-based drug classification systems with high predictive ability.

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The extrapolation from recent neurophysiological findings concerning the dependency of spindle and slow-wave oscillations of thalamocortical neurons on membrane potential to macroscopic EEG events, predicts a reciprocal relation between spindle activity and slow-wave activity (SWA) in thalamic and cortical EEG during non-rapid-eye-movement sleep (NREMS). To test this hypothesis, the EEG recorded in 8 cats, from the nucleus centralis lateralis of the thalamus and from the skull during a 12-h baseline dark period and during a 12-h recovery dark period, following a 12-h sleep deprivation, were analyzed. Per 12-s epoch, sleep-wake behaviour was determined and spectral power density was computed in the slow-wave frequency range (0.

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Electroencephalograms (EEGs) of the cortex and of seven subcortical structures were recorded during two baseline days and during a recovery day following a 12-hour period of sleep deprivation (SD) in eight cats. The EEGs were analyzed by visual scoring and by spectral analysis. The following subcortical structures were studied: hippocampus, amygdala, hypothalamus, nucleus centralis lateralis of the thalamus, septum, nucleus caudatus and substantia nigra.

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The electroencephalogram (EEG) of cats was recorded under baseline conditions (LD 12:12) and after 4 and 8 h of sleep deprivation (SD). The EEG was analyzed by visual scoring and by spectral analysis. Under baseline conditions the 24-h distribution of sleep was bimodal: the smallest amounts of sleep occurred at the light-dark and dark-light transitions.

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The biochemical, electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of the new GABAB receptor blocker CGP 35348 are described. In a variety of receptor binding assays CGP 35348 showed affinity for the GABAB receptor only. CGP 35348 had an IC50 of 34 microM at the GABAB receptor.

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