Publications by authors named "Kara Furman"

Article Synopsis
  • Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs), such as rivaroxaban and dabigatran, are increasingly used in pediatric populations, offering benefits like reduced lab monitoring and safer profiles compared to other anticoagulants.
  • The rise in DOAC usage has resulted in more pediatric patients needing perioperative care, which poses challenges due to the lack of clear management guidelines balancing thrombotic and bleeding risks.
  • This review aims to educate pediatric anesthesiologists on current DOACs, their perioperative management, and potential reversal strategies, highlighting the need for more expert consensus guidelines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Decades of research have shown that the NAc is a critical region influencing addiction, mood, and food consumption through its effects on reinforcement learning, motivation, and hedonic experience. Pharmacological studies have demonstrated that inhibition of the NAc shell induces voracious feeding, leading to the hypothesis that the inhibitory projections that emerge from the NAc normally act to restrict feeding. While much of this work has focused on projections to the lateral hypothalamus, the role of NAc projections to the VTA in the control food intake has been largely unexplored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a hypothalamic neuropeptide that plays a prominent role in feeding and energy homeostasis. Expression of the NPY Y1 receptor (Y1R) is highly concentrated in the nucleus accumbens (Acb), a region important in the regulation of palatable feeding. In this study, we performed a number of experiments to investigate the actions of NPY in the Acb.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optogenetics is an extremely powerful tool for selective neuronal activation/inhibition and dissection of neural circuits. However, a limitation of in vivo optogenetics is that an animal must be tethered to an optical fiber for delivery of light. Here, we describe a new method for in vivo, optogenetic inhibition of neural activity using an internal, animal-generated light source based on firefly luciferase.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF