Publications by authors named "J S TINDAL"

A stereotaxic atlas has been prepared for the medulla oblongata of the adult goat's brain using the technique described previously (Tindal et al. 1968). The atlas consists of transverse stereotaxic planes passing caudally at 1 mm intervals from posterior 10 mm (P10) at the level of the junction between brainstem and cerebellum to posterior 20 mm (P20) at the level of the obex.

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Transection of the ventral central grey and surrounding midbrain tegmentum in anaesthetized lactating rabbits caused repeated milk ejections which, on comparison with the effects of i.v. infusions of synthetic oxytocin, synthetic arginine-vasopressin or a mixture of the two, were attributed to continuous release of 1.

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Six rumen-fistulated, overnight-fasted, female British Saanen goats were used. In preliminary experiments on two of the goats, evidence was obtained that inflation of a balloon with water in the cranial sac of the rumen was accompanied by inhibition of GH release. In a definitive series of experiments on the other four goats (one goat on 1 day = one experiment), a total of 96 experiments were carried out, 48 of which were balloon inflations with 2.

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Removal of discrete parts of the forebrain of the anaesthetized lactating rabbit by suction caused repeated milk-ejection responses. These were associated with transection or removal of the subiculum, which represents the major efferent pathway from the hippocampal formation to the diencephalon. It is suggested that the hippocampus may exert a tonic, inhibitory influence over oxytocin release, that this inhibition may represent a cascade of events which originates in the brainstem and culminates in the subiculum and that removal of this inhibition may lead to release of oxytocin.

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It was confirmed that, as in overnight-fasted castrate male sheep, plasma growth hormone (GH) levels also fell in overnight-fasted castrate male goats shortly after they were given hay the following morning and that GH levels could also fall in anticipation of being fed. A further observation was that plasma GH levels usually remained low for 2--3 hours if the goats were allowed to continue eating but that if the hay was removed after only one hour of eating the plasma GH level rose 20--50 min later. Although initial attempts to determine the role of visceral stimuli in the regulation of GH release in castrate male goats by bilateral cooling of exteriorized vagi were inconclusive because of side-effects, they drew attention to the role of rumen distension and activation of stretch receptors in the modulation of GH release.

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