Can J Physiol Pharmacol
February 1990
The relationship between vomiting and conditioned taste aversion was studied in intact cats and squirrel monkeys and in cats and squirrel monkeys in which the area postrema was ablated by thermal cautery. In cats conditioned 7-12 months after ablation of the area postrema, three successive treatments with xylazine failed to produce either vomiting or conditioned taste aversion to a novel fluid. Intact cats, however, vomited and formed a conditioned aversion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a cineradiographic analysis of the vomiting reflex in response to i.v. administration of an emetic drug (lanatoside C, 12 mg/kg) in cats, it was shown that the vomiting act is preceded by cyclic periods of abnormal peristaltic activity of the small bowel and inhibition of gastric peristalsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the intact conscious dog, intravenous methionine-enkephalin (ME) increases heart rate and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). These hemodynamic responses are produced at lower dosages when ME is injected into the vertebral artery, but not the carotid artery, suggesting that ME receptors are localized in the vertebrobasilar artery circulation. The area postrema (AP), a circumventricular organ devoid of a functional blood-brain barrier, represents a likely site for these receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Aging
March 1988
Evidence is reviewed regarding neuron numbers and dendritic extent in normal aging in rodent, monkey and human brain and in Alzheimer's disease (AD) in man. Neuron loss and change in dendritic extent appear to be regionally specific but not identical in rodents and primates. In AD there is excess neuron loss and dendritic regression in some but not all brain regions.
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