1 In unanaesthetized dogs, cholinomimetic drugs and their antagonists were injected into the inferior horn of the left lateral cerebral ventricle. Injection volumes of 5 mul were used to limit spread of the drugs beyond the inferior horn. The effects on EEG and behaviour were recorded and compared with the effects of the same doses given into the body of the right lateral ventricle a little behind the foramen on Monro. 2 injections of cholinomimetic drugs into the inferior horn (acetylcholine 1-2 mug, physostigmine 1.0 mug, pilocarpine 100 mug and nicotine 10 mug) induced sleep during the following hour. The same doses injected into the body of the lateral ventricle did not produce sleep. 3 Cholinolytic drugs (atropine 10-20 mug, hyoscine 0.4-1.6 mug (+/-)-tubocuraine 10-20 ng and hexamethonium 40 mug) injected into the inferior horn also produced sleep, but the same doses injected into the body of the lateral ventricle were without effect. The EEG recorded after tubocurarine showed high voltage slow waves during sleep and desynchronized activation during rapid eye movement sleep. 4 Noradrenaline (10 mug) injected into the inferior horn produced sleep whereas the same dose given into the body of lateral ventricle did not produce sleep. The results with 5-hydroxytryptamine were equivocal. 5 It is suggested that the site for induction of sleep lies in structures lining the inferior horn of the lateral cerebral ventricle and that the cholinomimetic drugs probably act by a depolarizing block and the acetlycholine antagonists by a competitive block.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1667742PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1977.tb07483.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

inferior horn
28
injected inferior
16
body lateral
16
lateral ventricle
16
lateral cerebral
12
cerebral ventricle
12
cholinomimetic drugs
12
sleep
9
horn lateral
8
drugs inferior
8

Similar Publications

Objective: The most common medically resistant epilepsy (MRE) involves the temporal lobe (TLE), and children designated as temporal plus epilepsy (TLE+) have a five-times increased risk of postoperative surgical failure. This retrospective, blinded, cross-sectional study aimed to correlate visual and computational analyses of magnetoencephalography (MEG) virtual sensor waveforms with surgical outcome and epilepsy classification (TLE and TLE+).

Methods: Patients with MRE who underwent MEG and iEEG monitoring and had at least 1 year of postsurgical follow-up were included in this retrospective analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The effect of varying brain ventricular volume on the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteome has been discussed as possible confounding factors in comparative protein level analyses. However, the relationship between CSF volume and protein levels remains largely unexplored. Moreover, the few existing studies provide conflicting findings, indicating the need for further research.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The microvasculature of the human meniscus has been previously described by Arnoczky and Warren. However, to date, the qualitative and quantitative extra-articular vascular anatomy of the medial meniscus has not been characterized.

Purposes: To perform a qualitative and quantitative anatomic study of the extra-articular medial meniscal vasculature and to introduce the novel "medial meniscal artery" (MMA), potentially providing future guidelines for the treatment of meniscal abnormalities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rationale And Objectives: Misregistration artifacts between the PET and attenuation correction CT (CTAC) exams can degrade image quality and cause diagnostic errors. Deep learning (DL)-warped elastic registration methods have been proposed to improve misregistration errors.

Materials And Methods: 30 patients undergoing routine oncologic examination (20 F-FDG PET/CT and 10 Cu-DOTATATE PET/CT) were retrospectively identified and compared using unmodified CTAC, and a DL-augmented spatial transformation CT attenuation map.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Competition is one of the most critical factors affecting animal behaviors. Aggressive interactions are central to acquiring resources or mating partners. Agonistic behavior is more common among males than females.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!