J Neurophysiol
September 1979
1. The responses of primate spinothalamic tract cells innervating the glabrous skin of the foot to noxious thermal stimuli have been examined. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
September 1979
1. The responses of spinothalamic tract cells in the lumbosacral spinal cords of anesthetized monkeys were examined following electrical stimulation of the sural nerve or the application of noxious thermal and mechanical stimuli to the skin on the lateral aspect of the foot. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough postoperative constrictive pericarditis is rare, the diagnosis should be considered when unexplained right-sided heart failure develops after cardiac surgery. Within a 6 week interval, evidence of constrictive pericarditis developed in three patients who had recently undergone myocardial revascularization. One patient presented with biventricular failure, pericardial effusion and suspected tamponade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe organization of the oculomotor and electromotor systems was examined in the stargazer, a teleost. The electromotor system in these animals is a derivative of the oculomotor system. The extraocular motor nuclei and nerves consist of approximately equal numbers of motoneurons and axons (about 100 per muscle).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCourt cases involving the right of plaintiffs' lawyers to obtain copies of hospital incident reports turn on the particular privilege statute in the court's jurisdiction and on the hospital's advance consideration of the role of the report. Certain steps can be taken by hospitals to minimize the likelihood of a discoverable ruling in court.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Brain Res
November 1980
1. Injections of algesic chemicals were made into the arterial circulation of the triceps surae muscles in anaesthetized monkeys. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1. In anesthetized monkeys, stimulation of muscle afferents results in a sequence of cord dorsum potentials. These include a group I volley followed by several negative potentials called here the NI, NII and NIII waves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe substantia gelatinosa of the mammalian spinal cord is generally believed to be a closed system; that is its neurons are thought to project only to the substantia gelatinosa of the same or the contralateral side. Experiments in monkeys, using injections of the marker enzyme horseradish peroxidase, show that at least some neurons of the substantia gelatinosa project to the thalamus and thus belong to the spinothalamic tract. Such neurons include two cell types intrinsic to the gelatinosa, the central cells and the limitrophe cells of Cajal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurons of the medullary raphe nuclei in cats were retrogradely labelled following injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the L6 spinal cord segment. Brainstems were cut in sagittal section to facilitate examination of the rostral-caudal extent of raphe neurons projecting to the spinal cord. Large numbers of HRP-labelled neurons were found in nucleus raphe magnus, nucleus raphe pallidus, and nucleus raphe obscurus (as well as a few neurons in nucleus raphe pontis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of iontophoretic applications of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were tested upon primate spinothalamic tract neurons recorded extracellularly in the spinal cord of anesthetized monkeys. The activity of most high threshold and wide dynamic range spinothalamic tract cells was depressed. 5-HT also reduced the responses of the cells to glutamate pulses which by themselves had a powerful excitatory action.
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