1,720,962 research outputs found

    Tonic pain time-dependently affects β-endorphin-like immunoreactivity in the ventral periaqueductal gray matter of the rat brain

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    β-Endorphin-like immunoreactivity (B-EP-LI) levels have been investigated in the ventral periaqueductal gray matter (vPAG) of rats killed 30, 60 or 120 min after the subcutaneous injection of dilute formalin (0.08 ml, 5%) in one fore- or hindpaw, or comparable handling. B-EP-LI was estimated by radioimmunoassay, using an anti-camel B-EP serum directed against the C-terminal portion of B-EP molecule. In both fore- and hindlimb groups vPAG B-EP-LI values were significantly increased 60 and 120 min after the injection relative to controls. Values from animals killed 120 min after formalin injection were higher than the ones at 30 and 60 min, forelimb effects being quantitatively more pronounced. The increase in B-EP-LI appeared distributed along the whole rostrocaudal extent of the region. © 1988

    Metabolic activity changes in the cervical spinal cord upon acute forepaw pain

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    Metabolic activity pattern in the cervical enlargement of the spinal cord has been investigated by the quantitative 14C-2-deoxyglucose technique in unanaesthetized, unrestrained rats injected with a small amount of dilute formalin (0.06 ml, 5%) in the right forepaw. Control animals were similarly handled but no injection was performed. In the Formalin group a significant increase of mean glucose utilization was observed in the dorsal horn of the injected side, both with respect to controls and to the opposite side. Analyses of spatial distribution of the isotope uptake ascertained that the superficial region, corresponding approximately to laminae I-II, and the neck (V-VI) of the dorsal horn showed the highest increase in glucose utilization. This technique appears potentially useful for investigating pain mechanisms in conscious animals

    Computer-assisted analyses of [14C]2-DG autoradiographs employing a general purpose image processing system

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    A general purpose image processing system is described including B/W TV camera, high resolution image processor and display system (TESAK VDC 501), computer (DEC PDP 11/23), and monochrome and color monitors. Images may be acquired from a microscope equipped with a TV camera or using the TV in direct viewing; the A/D converter and the image processor provides fast (40 ms) and precise (512×512 data points) digitization of TV signal with a 256 gray levels maximum resolution. Computer programs have been developed in order to perform qualitative and quantitative analyses of autoradiographs obtained with the 2-DG method, which are written in FORTRAN and MACRO 11 Assembly Language. They include: (1) procedures designed to recognize errors in acquisition due to possible image shading and correct them via software; (2) routines suitable for qualitative analyses of the whole image or selected regions of it, providing the opportunity for pseudocolor coding, statistics, graphic overlays; (3) programs permitting the conversion of gray levels into metabolic rates of glucose utilization and the display of gray- or color-coded metabolic maps. © 1984

    Ketamine effects on local cerebral blood flow and metabolism in the rat

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    The effects of an anesthetic dose (100 mg/kg) of ketamine, a phencyclidine derivative, on local rates of cerebral glucose utilization (LCGU) and CBF (LCBF) have been investigated by the quantitative [14C]iodoantipyrine techniques in the unparalyzed, spontaneously breathing rat. In ketamine-injected animals, LCGU was significantly increased in some limbic structures and decreased in inferior colliculus, vestibular, and cerebellar nuclei. The degree and spatial distribution of drug-induced changes was similar for local blood flow rates, LCBF being increased in limbic regions and decreased in the inferior colliculus. Although P(a)CO2 values were higher in anesthetized animals, the pattern of LCBF/LCGU ratios was not significantly affected by ketamine in the 36 brain regions examined in this study. So, at least in the rat and at the anesthetic level studied here, a net vasodilatory in vivo effect was not observed. These results support the hypothesis that CBF changes induced by the drug in animals and man are primarily related to the metabolic effects exerted by ketamine on cerebral structures

    Vertical and horizontal visual whole-field motion differently affect the metabolic activity of the rat medial terminal nucleus

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    The metabolic activity of the medial terminal nucleus (MTN) of the Accessory Optic System was studied by means of the [14C]2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) method in Long-Evans rats exposed to moving and stationary visual stimuli. In particular we explored the rate of local cerebral glucose utilization (LCGU) and the spatial distribution of 2-DG uptake within MTN related to visual stimuli capable of triggering optokinetic nystagmus. It was found that increases in MTN metabolism accompanied the retinal slip signals evoked by whole-field visual patterns moving in the vertical as well as in the horizontal direction. At the same level of luminous flux neither the same but stationary pattern, nor constant, diffuse illumination were able to elicit comparable changes in MTN metabolic rates. The effects of vertical and horizontal motions differed, however, from each other. In binocular testing LCGU rates resulted significantly higher after vertically moving patterns and upon the same stimulus condition the spatial distribution of 2-DG matched very closely the spatial distribution of the retinal afferents and the cellular density within MTN, in sharp contrast with the diffuse spreading out of the label across the nucleus following horizontal motion. In monocular testings only the vertically moving patterns were able to increase LCGU rates significantly and then in contralateral MTN alone. However, comparison between the levels of glucose consumption measured in binocular and in monocular vision also showed the involvement of the uncrossed retinal path in relaying the retinal slip signals to MTN. No difference in LCGU and in spatial distribution of the label were finally observed in relation to the upward or to the downward direction of the moving pattern. © 1987
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