Neuropharmacology
November 2024
Stimulation of the dorsal half of the rat periaqueductal gray (DPAG) with 60-Hz pulses of increasing intensity, 30-μA pulses of increasing frequency, or increasing doses of an excitatory amino acid elicits sequential defensive responses of exophthalmia, immobility, trotting, galloping, and jumping. These responses may be controlled by voltage-gated calcium channel-specific firing patterns. Indeed, a previous study showed that microinjection of the DPAG with 15 nmol of verapamil, a putative blocker of L-type calcium channels, attenuated all defensive responses to electrical stimulation at the same site as the injection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke is considered one of the leading causes of death worldwide. The treatment is limited; however, the Brazilian flora has a great source of natural products with therapeutic potentials. Studies with the medicinal plant Polygala sabulosa W.
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