Publications by authors named "Pasik P"

Adapted sport participation can have many positive benefits for adults with disabilities. However, one barrier to implementing successful adapted sport programs is lack of knowledgeable volunteers who understand accessibility and disability. In fact, little is known about volunteers' experiences in adapted sport programs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Pediatric disability prevalence has increased to 17.8% in recent years. This youth population faces a range of individual, social, and environmental level barriers to a healthy lifestyle.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Actinomycosis is a rare, chronic infectious disease caused by anaerobic Gram-positive bacteria Actinomyces spp. They induces suppurative inflammation in tissues. They live as commensals in the oropharynx, interstitial tract and genital mucosa, causing almost exclusively endogenic infections.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The coexistence of the interstitial lung disease and respiratory failure is rarely associated with extrapulmonary pathology. In patients with liver cirrhosis, hypoxemia may develop in the course of hepato-pulmonary syndrome (HPS), but radiological pathology seen in the course of HPS is of vascular origin, and thus typically not classified as interstitial lung disease. We present a patient with severe hypoxemic respiratory insufficiency in whom hepato-pulmonary syndrome coexisted with interstitial lung disease of unknown etiology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

DYT1 dystonia is a severe form of young-onset dystonia caused by a mutation in the gene that encodes for the protein torsinA, which is thought to play a role in protein transport and degradation. We describe, for the first time to our knowledge, perinuclear inclusion bodies in the midbrain reticular formation and periaqueductal gray in four clinically documented and genetically confirmed DYT1 patients but not in controls. The inclusions were located within cholinergic and other neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus, cuneiform nucleus, and griseum centrale mesencephali and stained positively for ubiquitin, torsinA, and the nuclear envelope protein lamin A/C.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cytosolic calcium oscillations occur in a wide variety of cells and are involved in different cellular functions. We describe these calcium oscillations by a mathematical model based on the putative electrophysiological properties of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. The salient features of our membrane model are calcium-dependent calcium channels and calcium pumps in the ER membrane, constant entry of calcium into the cytosol, calcium dependent removal from the cytosol, and buffering by cytoplasmic calcium binding proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The identity of the neurotransmitter(s) in the mammalian retinogeniculate pathway is unclear. To investigate the possibility that some amino acids and certain dipeptides, such as N-acetyl-aspartyl-glutamate (NAAG), fulfill this function, changes in their concentration were measured in the optic tract, and the parvocellular and magnocellular segments of the LGNd of six monkeys (Macaca fascicularis), seven days after right optic tractotomy. The LGNd was studied also in two additional macaques, three months after occipital lobectomy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Monoclonal antibodies were raised against the L-enantiomer of baclofen conjugated by glutaraldehyde to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. Hybridoma clones were selected for their stability and their production of high titers of antibodies directed against the p-chlorophenyl moiety of the L-baclofen molecule. The chosen antibody showed no cross-reactivity with conjugates of GABA and other neurotransmitters to human or bovine serum albumin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cluster analysis of neuronal somal sizes in the subthalamic nucleus of rhesus monkeys from newborn to adult age allows the segregation of two territories with predominance of small and large cells, respectively. The topographic distribution of the 'parvocellular' and 'magnocellular' segments is similar when samples are obtained from coronal, horizontal and sagittal series of sections. The parvocellular component occupies the rostral pole, the entire rostrocaudal extent of the medial tip and dorsomedial border, and probably also the caudal cap.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acetyl-levo-carnitine (ALC) protects against 1-methyl, 4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-induced toxicity in the nonhuman primate. ALC pretreated monkeys do not show signs of parkinsonism or electroretinographic changes typical of dopaminergic deficiency when given MPTP. In addition, pilot neurochemical and morphological data confirm a partial protection effect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Characteristic synaptic complexes, the triadic synapses, were investigated in long series of sections of parvicellular and magnocellular laminae of the monkey lateral geniculate nucleus. Electron microscopic observations revealed the presence of different triadic types, the intercalated element being in all cases a presynaptic dendrite or soma of an interneuron (I-cell), and the output component being constantly a dendrite or soma of a geniculocortical projection or principal neuron (P-cell). The axonal input to the triads, however, was found to be of three different types: (1) the majority were retinal axon terminals; (2) a smaller fraction were the axonal endings of corticogeniculate fibers, always connected to thin, distal P-cell dendrites; (3) others were terminals with pleomorphic or flattened, small synaptic vesicles, probably belonging to axons of I-cells and/or of thalamic reticular nucleus origin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Computer simulations were carried out in an attempt to understand the possible operating modes of synaptic triadic arrangements as described in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus of the monkey. Small networks of "chaotic" units (piecewise linear internal maps) were used to investigate their performance as ON-gates for the transmission of spikes. "Chaotic" units have advantages over "logic" units because the former are asynchronous, it is possible to simulate temporal summation, and also to adjust subthreshold time-constants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The globus pallidus of 20 monkeys ranging in age from newborn to 4 months was examined in Golgi-impregnated material and ultrastructurally. There was no discernible difference between the lateral and medial segments of the structure. At the light microscope level, all neuronal types described in the adult are found at birth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An antibody raised in rabbits against a GABA-BSA conjugate was used together with the PAP technique to label elements in the neostriatum of three Old World monkeys. Light microscopy revealed numerous immunoreactive medium-size neurons of various staining intensities, some of which had indented nuclei, as well as an occasional large cell. The neuropil showed a plexus of fine processes with frequent puncta.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Serotonin-immunoreactivity in the monkey lateral geniculate nucleus appears as a plexus of fine, beaded fibers decreasing in density from magnocellular to parvocellular laminae. Ultrastructurally, these fibers show strictures and dilations, and are filled with dense round particles as well as granular material attached to outer mitochondrial membranes and microtubules. Most of the profiles followed in serial sections lack morphologically defined synapses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The subthalamic nuclei of 9 rhesus monkeys, ranging in age from newborn to 17 weeks, were examined at the light and/or electron microscopic levels, using computer assisted quantitative methods. The volume of the structure does not change significantly over the period of study. The mean cross-sectional area of neuronal somata, however, decreases by 33%, and most markedly during the first month.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA)-positive elements in the monkey substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) were identified using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunocytochemical technique with a direct GABA antibody. Light-microscopic examination revealed fine-caliber immunostained fibers piercing the cerebral peduncle and entering the SNr, where they formed a dense plexus. Ultrastructural observations included boutons with densely packed ovoid synaptic vesicles forming synapses with labeled and unlabeled dendritic elements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) of four normal monkeys (Macaca mulatta) and of two other such animals with total unilateral ablation of the visual cortices (4-6 days survival) were examined in serial thin sections with the electron microscope. In these materials we have observed a new neuropil component which has the cytologic characteristics of principal cell (P-cell) dendrites, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Profiles of retinal terminals, and of their synaptic and non-synaptic contacts, were measured in electron micrographs from magnocellular and parvocellular laminae of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) in newborn, 1-,4-,8- and 17-week-old rhesus monkeys. Morphologic criteria, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The postnatal growth of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) and the striate cortex (SCx) was compared in the same monkeys, by estimating LGNd volume, and the volume, surface area, and thickness of the SCx at birth, 1, 2, 4, 8 and 17 weeks. Shrinkage during histologic manipulations was determined in individual animals, and the above measurements were adjusted accordingly so that final volumes reflected a common, and, therefore, comparable state before processing. The volume of the LGNd increases approximately 17% between 2 and 4 weeks, and this growth primarily reflects that of the parvocellular laminae, the magnocellular components contributing a stable amount in absolute terms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF