43 results match your criteria: "SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn[Affiliation]"
Front Neural Circuits
July 2016
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
To make precise and prompt action in a dynamic environment, the sensorimotor system needs to integrate all related information. The inflow of somatosensory information to the cerebral cortex is regulated and mostly suppressed by movement, which is commonly referred to as sensory gating or gating. Sensory gating plays an important role in preventing redundant information from reaching the cortex, which should be considered when designing somatosensory neuroprosthetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
October 2015
Ophthalmology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
The surrealist movement aimed to blur the distinction between the real and the imagined. Such lack of a border between demonstrable truth and fantasy is perhaps most apparent in the art of Spanish painter Salvador Dali (1904-1989). Dali included numerous illusions in his artworks, with the intent to challenge the viewers' perceptions of reality and to enable them to see beyond the surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav
July 2015
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health Bethesda, Maryland.
Background: A novel feature extraction technique, Relative-Brain-Signature (RBS), which characterizes subjects' relationship to populations with distinctive neuronal activity, is presented. The proposed method transforms a set of Electroencephalography's (EEG) time series in high dimensional space to a space of fewer dimensions by projecting time series onto orthogonal subspaces.
Methods: We apply our technique to an EEG data set of 77 abstinent alcoholics and 43 control subjects.
Ann Clin Transl Neurol
February 2015
Department of Neurology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, New York, 11203 ; Department of Ophthalmology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, New York, 11203 ; SUNY Eye Institute Brooklyn, New York.
Inner foveal thinning and intracellular alpha-synuclein were demonstrated in the retina in Parkinson disease. While pathognomonic alpha-synuclein is associated with embryonic dopaminergic (DA) neurons, postmortem studies in the nervous system and retina show prominent effect also in non-DA neurons. We evaluated foveal capillaries and foveal thickness in 23 Parkinson disease subjects and 13 healthy controls using retinal fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Behav Neurosci
September 2014
Division of Neuroscience, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
The hippocampal CA1 field processes spatial information, but the relative importance of intra- vs. extra-hippocampal sources of input into CA1 for spatial behavior is unclear. To characterize the relative roles of these two sources of input, originating in the hippocampal field CA3 and in the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC), we studied effects of discrete neurotoxic lesions of CA3 or MEC on concurrent spatial and nonspatial navigation tasks, and on synaptic transmission in afferents to CA1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ophthalmic Vis Res
January 2014
Departments of Ophthalmology, Physiology and Pharmacology, SUNY Eye Institute, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Front Synaptic Neurosci
February 2014
Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, MA, USA ; Department of Neuroscience and Physiology, New York University School of Medicine New York, NY, USA.
Superfusion of the squid giant synapse with artificial seawater (ASW) based on isotonic saline containing oxygen nanobubbles (RNS60 ASW) generates an enhancement of synaptic transmission. This was determined by examining the postsynaptic response to single and repetitive presynaptic spike activation, spontaneous transmitter release, and presynaptic voltage clamp studies. In the presence of RNS60 ASW single presynaptic stimulation elicited larger postsynaptic potentials (PSP) and more robust recovery from high frequency stimulation than in control ASW.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pediatr
March 2013
Molecular Biology/Immunology, University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth, TX, USA.
Despite major advances in pediatric cancer research, there has been only modest progress in the survival of children with high risk neuroblastoma (NB) (HRNB). The long term survival rates of HRNB in the United States are still only 30-50%. Due to resistance that often develops during therapy, development of new effective strategies is essential to improve the survival and overcome the tendency of HRNB patients to relapse subsequent to initial treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bronchology Interv Pulmonol
January 2014
*University of Maryland Medical Center College Park, MD †Divisions of Thoracic Surgery and Pulmonary Medicine SUNY-Downstate University Hospital of Brooklyn at Long Island College Hospital, and SUNY-Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY ‡The Brooklyn Hospital Center New York, NY.
Front Neural Circuits
April 2014
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
The onset of puberty is associated with alterations in mood as well as changes in cognitive function, which can be more pronounced in females. Puberty onset in female mice is associated with increased expression of α4βδ γ-amino-butyric acid-A (GABAA) receptors (GABARs) in CA1 hippocampus. These receptors, which normally have low expression in this central nervous system (CNS) site, emerge along the apical dendrites as well as on the dendritic spines of pyramidal neurons, adjacent to excitatory synapses where they underlie a tonic inhibition that shunts excitatory current and impairs activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, the trigger for synaptic plasticity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvest Educ Enferm
January 2012
RN, Ph.D., ARNP, Lehman College of the City University of New York, United States.
This topic review employed Walker and Avant's method of concept analysis to explore the construct of hope in elderly adults with chronic heart failure. The articles analyzed revealed that hope, as the belief of the occurrence of a positive result without any guarantee that it will be produced, is necessary for the survival and wellbeing of the elderly adults enduring this disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
October 2012
Department of Cell Biology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
The crisp organization of the "firing bumps" of entorhinal grid cells and conjunctive cells leads to the notion that the entorhinal cortex may compute linear navigation routes. Specifically, we propose a process, termed "linear look-ahead," by which a stationary animal could compute a series of locations in the direction it is facing. We speculate that this computation could be achieved through learned patterns of connection strengths among entorhinal neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Synaptic Neurosci
July 2011
Departments of Neurology and Physiology/Pharmacology, The Robert F. Furchgott Center for Neural and Behavioral Science, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Cardiology
January 2010
Division of Cardiology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
Objectives: Controversy exists regarding utility of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) in predicting significant coronary artery disease (CAD) in hemodialysis (HD) patients with chest pain and no acute ischemia on electrocardiogram (non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction, non-STEMI). We sought to determine if cTnI elevation predicts significant CAD (>70% stenosis) in these patients.
Methods: Ninety patients with non-STEMI referred for cardiac catheterization were included, divided equally into HD and non-HD groups.
J Clin Sleep Med
October 2008
Sleep Disorders Center, Department of Neurology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY 11203-2098, USA.
Objectives: Few minority patients with sleep apnea have been evaluated or treated. This study ascertained adherence rate to referrals for sleep apnea evaluation by primary care physicians in a community-based sample of black patients; it also examined baseline characteristics likely to influence adherence rates.
Methods: A retrospective chart audit was conducted at a hospital-based sleep clinic.
J Clin Sleep Med
June 2008
Brooklyn Center for Health Disparities, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY 11203-2098, USA.
Although obstructive sleep apnea and cardiovascular disease have common risk factors, epidemiologic studies show that sleep apnea increases risks for cardiovascular disease independently of individuals' demographic characteristics (i.e., age, sex, and race) or risk markers (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes Dev
November 2003
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, New York 11203, USA.
Eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF) eIF1 maintains the fidelity of initiation codon selection by enabling 43S complexes to reject codon-anticodon mismatches, to recognize the initiation codon context, and to discriminate against establishing a codon-anticodon interaction with AUGs located <8 nt from the 5'-end of mRNA. To understand how eIF1 plays its discriminatory role, we determined its position on the 40S ribosomal subunit using directed hydroxyl radical cleavage. The cleavage of 18S rRNA in helices 23b, 24a, and 44 by hydroxyl radicals generated from Fe(II) tethered to seven positions on the surface of eIF1 places eIF1 on the interface surface of the platform of the 40S subunit in the proximity of the ribosomal P-site.
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