Receptor mechanisms underlying heterogenic reflexes among the triceps surae muscles of the cat. (1/700)

The soleus (S), medial gastrocnemius (MG), and lateral gastrocnemius (LG) muscles of the cat are interlinked by rapid spinal reflex pathways. In the decerebrate state, these heterogenic reflexes are either excitatory and length dependent or inhibitory and force dependent. Mechanographic analysis was used to obtain additional evidence that the muscle spindle primary ending and the Golgi tendon organ provide the major contributions to these reflexes, respectively. The tendons of the triceps surae muscles were separated and connected to independent force transducers and servo-controlled torque motors in unanesthetized, decerebrate cats. The muscles were activated as a group using crossed-extension reflexes. Electrical stimulation of the caudal cutaneous sural nerve was used to provide a particularly strong activation of MG and decouple the forces of the triceps surae muscles. During either form of activation, the muscles were stretched either individually or in various combinations to determine the strength and characteristics of autogenic and heterogenic feedback. The corresponding force responses, including both active and passive components, were measured during the changing background tension. During activation of the entire group, the excitatory, heterogenic feedback linking the three muscles was found to be strongest onto LG and weakest onto MG, in agreement with previous results concerning the strengths of heteronymous Ia excitatory postsynaptic potentials among the triceps surae muscles. The inhibition, which is known to affect only the soleus muscle, was dependent on active contractile force and was detected essentially as rapidly as length dependent excitation. The inhibition outlasted the excitation and was blocked by intravenous strychnine. These results indicate that the excitatory and inhibitory effects are dominated by feedback from primary spindle receptors and Golgi tendon organs. The interactions between these two feedback pathways potentially can influence both the mechanical coupling between ankle and knee.  (+info)

Contribution of sensory feedback to the generation of extensor activity during walking in the decerebrate Cat. (2/700)

In this investigation we have estimated the afferent contribution to the generation of activity in the knee and ankle extensor muscles during walking in decerebrate cats by loading and unloading extensor muscles, and by unilateral deafferentation of a hind leg. The total contribution of afferent feedback to extensor burst generation was estimated by allowing one hind leg to step into a hole in the treadmill belt on which the animal was walking. In the absence of ground support the level of activity in knee and ankle extensor muscles was reduced to approximately 70% of normal. Activity in the ankle extensors could be restored during the "foot-in-hole" trials by selectively resisting extension at the ankle. Thus feedback from proprioceptors in the ankle extensor muscles probably makes a large contribution to burst generation in these muscles during weight-bearing steps. Similarly, feedback from proprioceptors in knee extensor appears to contribute substantially to the activation of knee extensor muscles because unloading and loading these muscles, by lifting and dropping the hindquarters, strongly reduced and increased, respectively, the level of activity in the knee extensors. This conclusion was supported by the finding that partial deafferentation of one hind leg by transection of the L4-L6 dorsal roots reduced the level of activity in the knee extensors by approximately 50%, but did not noticeably influence the activity in ankle extensor muscles. However, extending the deafferentation to include the L7-S2 dorsal roots decreased the ankle extensor activity. We conclude that afferent feedback contributes to more than one-half of the input to knee and ankle extensor motoneurons during the stance phase of walking in decerebrate cats. The continuous contribution of afferent feedback to the generation of extensor activity could function to automatically adjust the intensity of activity to meet external demands.  (+info)

Inhibition of effects of flow on potassium permeability in single perfused frog mesenteric capillaries. (3/700)

1. We have investigated the effects of various potential inhibitors on flow-dependent K+ permeability (PK) of single perfused mesenteric microvessels in pithed frogs. 2. Neither superfusion with a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (10 or 100 micromol l-1), nor the addition of indomethacin (30 micromol l-1) to both perfusate and superfusate reduced the positive correlation between PK and flow velocity (U). 3. In the presence of agents known to raise intracellular levels of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (noradrenaline, 8-bromo-cAMP and a combination of forskolin and rolipram) the slope of the relation between PK and U was no longer significant, so that PK was no longer flow dependent. 4. These results confirm that the flow dependence of PK is a biological process and not an artefact of measurement and suggest a role for intracellular cAMP rather than nitric oxide or prostacyclin in the flow-dependent modulation of PK in frog mesenteric microvessels.  (+info)

Effect of the cannabinoid receptor agonist WIN55212-2 on sympathetic cardiovascular regulation. (4/700)

1. The aim of the present study was to analyse the cardiovascular actions of the synthetic CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonist WIN55212-2, and specifically to determine its sites of action on sympathetic cardiovascular regulation. 2. Pithed rabbits in which the sympathetic outflow was continuously stimulated electrically or which received a pressor infusion of noradrenaline were used to study peripheral prejunctional and direct vascular effects, respectively. For studying effects on brain stem cardiovascular regulatory centres, drugs were administered into the cisterna cerebellomedullaris in conscious rabbits. Overall cardiovascular effects of the cannabinoid were studied in conscious rabbits with intravenous drug administration. 3. In pithed rabbits in which the sympathetic outflow was continuously electrically stimulated, intravenous injection of WIN55212-2 (5, 50 and 500 microg kg(-1)) markedly reduced blood pressure, the spillover of noradrenaline into plasma and the plasma noradrenaline concentration, and these effects were antagonized by the CB1 cannabinoid receptor-selective antagonist SR141716A. The hypotensive and the sympathoinhibitory effect of WIN55212-2 was shared by CP55940, another mixed CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonist, but not by WIN55212-3, the enantiomer of WIN55212-2, which lacks affinity for cannabinoid binding sites. WIN55212-2 had no effect on vascular tone established by infusion of noradrenaline in pithed rabbits. 4. Intracisternal application of WIN55212-2 (0.1, 1 and 10 microg kg(-1)) in conscious rabbits increased blood pressure and the plasma noradrenaline concentration and elicited bradycardia; this latter effect was antagonized by atropine. 5. In conscious animals, intravenous injection of WIN55212-2 (5 and 50 microg kg(-1)) caused bradycardia, slight hypotension, no change in the plasma noradrenaline concentration, and an increase in renal sympathetic nerve firing. The highest dose of WIN55212-2 (500 microg kg(-1)) elicited hypotension and tachycardia, and sympathetic nerve activity and the plasma noradrenaline concentration declined. 6. The results obtained in pithed rabbits indicate that activation of CB1 cannabinoid receptors leads to marked peripheral prejunctional inhibition of noradrenaline release from postganglionic sympathetic axons. Intracisternal application of WIN55212-2 uncovered two effects on brain stem cardiovascular centres: sympathoexcitation and activation of cardiac vagal fibres. The highest dose of systemically administered WIN55212-2 produced central sympathoinhibition; the primary site of this action is not known.  (+info)

In vitro and in vivo characterization of intrinsic sympathomimetic activity in normal and heart failure rats. (5/700)

Clinical studies conducted with carvedilol suggest that beta-adrenoceptor antagonism is an effective therapeutic approach to the treatment of heart failure. However, many beta-adrenoceptor antagonists are weak partial agonists and possess significant intrinsic sympathomimetic activity (ISA), which may be problematic in the treatment of heart failure. In the present study, the ISAs of bucindolol, xamoterol, bisoprolol, and carvedilol were evaluated and compared in normal rats [Sprague-Dawley (SD)], in rats with confirmed heart failure [spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF)], and in isolated neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. At equieffective beta1-adrenolytic doses, the administration of xamoterol and bucindolol produced a prolonged, equieffective, and dose-related increase in heart rate in both pithed SD rats (ED50 = 5 and 40 microgram/kg, respectively) and SHHF rats (ED50 = 6 and 30 microgram/kg, respectively). The maximum effect of both compounds in SHHF rats was approximately 50% of that observed in SD rats. In contrast, carvedilol and bisoprolol had no significant effect on resting heart rate in the pithed SD or SHHF rat. The maximum increase in heart rate elicited by xamoterol and bucindolol was inhibited by treatment with propranolol, carvedilol, and betaxolol (beta1-adrenoceptor antagonist) but not by ICI 118551 (beta2-adrenoceptor antagonist) in neonatal rat. When the beta-adrenoceptor-mediated cAMP response was examined in cardiomyocytes, an identical partial agonist/antagonist response profile was observed for all compounds, demonstrating a strong correlation with the in vivo results. In contrast, GTP-sensitive ligand binding and tissue adenylate cyclase activity were not sensitive methods for detecting beta-adrenoceptor partial agonist activity in the heart. In summary, xamoterol and bucindolol, but not carvedilol and bisoprolol, exhibited direct beta1-adrenoceptor-mediated ISA in normal and heart failure rats.  (+info)

Multifunctional laryngeal motoneurons: an intracellular study in the cat. (6/700)

We studied the patterns of membrane potential changes in laryngeal motoneurons (LMs) during vocalization, coughing, swallowing, sneezing, and the aspiration reflex in decerebrate paralyzed cats. LMs, identified by antidromic activation from the recurrent laryngeal nerve, were expiratory (ELMs) or inspiratory (ILMs) cells that depolarized during their respective phases in eupnea. During vocalization, most ELMs depolarized and most ILMs hyperpolarized. Some ILMs depolarized slightly during vocalization. During coughing, ELMs depolarized abruptly at the transition from the inspiratory to the expiratory phase. In one-third of ELMs, this depolarization persisted throughout the abdominal burst. In the remainder ("type A"), it was interrupted by a transient repolarization. ILMs exhibited a membrane potential trajectory opposite to that of type A ELMs during coughing. During swallowing, the membrane potential of ELMs decreased transiently at the onset of the hypoglossal burst and then depolarized strongly during the burst. ILMs hyperpolarized sharply at the onset of the burst and depolarized as hypoglossal activity ceased. During sneezing, ELMs and ILMs exhibited membrane potential changes similar to those of type A ELMs and ILMs during coughing. During the aspiration reflex, ELMs and ILMs exhibited bell-shaped hyperpolarization and depolarization trajectories, respectively. We conclude that central drives to LMs, consisting of complex combinations of excitation and inhibition, vary during vocalization and upper airway defensive reflexes. This study provides data for analysis of the neuronal networks that produce these various behaviors and analysis of network reorganization caused by changes in dynamic connections between the respiratory and nonrespiratory neuronal networks.  (+info)

Recruitment order among motoneurons from different motor nuclei. (7/700)

Recruitment order among motoneurons from different motor nuclei. The principles by which motoneurons (MNs) innervating different multiple muscles are organized into activity are not known. Here we test the hypothesis that coactivated MNs belonging to different muscles in the decerebrate cat are recruited in accordance with the size principle, i.e., that MNs with slow conduction velocity (CV) are recruited before MNs with higher CV. We studied MN recruitment in two muscle pairs, the lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and medial gastrocnemius (MG) muscles, and the MG and posterior biceps femoris (PBF) muscles because these pairs are coactivated reliably in stretch and cutaneous reflexes, respectively. For 29/34 MG-LG pairs of MNs, the MN with lower CV was recruited first either in all trials (548/548 trials for 22 pairs) or in most trials (225/246 trials for 7 pairs), whether the MG or the LG MN in a pair was recruited first. Intertrial variability in the force thresholds of MG and LG MNs recruited by stretch was relatively low (coefficient of variation = 18% on average). Finally, punctate stimulation of the skin over the heel recruited 4/4 pairs of MG-LG MNs in order by CV. By all of these measures, recruitment order is as consistent among MNs from these two ankle muscles as it is for MNs supplying the MG muscle alone. For MG-PBF pairings, the MN with lower CV was recruited first in the majority of trials for 13/24 pairs and in reverse order for 9/24 pairs. The recruitment sequence of coactive MNs supplying the MG and PBF muscles was, therefore, random with respect to axonal conduction velocity and not organized as predicted by the size principle. Taken together, these findings demonstrate for the first time, that the size principle can extend beyond the boundaries of a single muscle but does not coordinate all coactive muscles in a limb.  (+info)

Endothelial cell shrinkage increases permeability through a Ca2+-dependent pathway in single frog mesenteric microvessels. (8/700)

1. We tested whether calcium (Ca2+)-dependent mechanisms were essential for our previous observation that a change in the endothelial cell (EC)-extracellular matrix (ECM) attachment caused an increase in microvessel hydraulic permeability (Lp) after exposure to hypertonic solutions in single perfused mesenteric microvessels in pithed frogs (Rana pipiens). 2. In microvessels where integrin-dependent EC-ECM attachments were disrupted by pretreatment with the peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Thr-Pro (GRGDTP; 0.3 mmol l-1), we measured microvessel Lp after exposure to hypertonic solutions under experimental conditions that reduced Ca2+ influx into endothelial cells. 3. High K+ solutions (59.7 and 100 mmol l-1 K+) were used to depolarize the endothelial membrane and therefore to reduce the electrochemical driving force for Ca2+ influx through conductive Ca2+ channels. These solutions abolished the increase in Lp caused by hypertonic solutions in the microvessels pretreated with GRGDTP. 4. We previously suggested that the removal of albumin from the perfusate may reduce EC-ECM attachment because hypertonic solutions increased the Lp of microvessels above that due to removal of albumin alone. This additional increase in Lp was attenuated by the 59.7 mmol l-1 K+ solution and was completely abolished by the 100 mmol l-1 K+ solution. 5. Bumetanide, an inhibitor of the Na+-K+-2Cl- co-transporter and one of the mechanisms of regulatory volume increase after exposure to hypertonic solutions in endothelial cells, did not change the response of microvessels to high K+ solutions. 6. Our findings indicate that Ca2+ entry into endothelial cells via passive conductance channels is necessary to increase microvessel Lp after exposure to hypertonic solutions in microvessels where EC-ECM attachments are disrupted.  (+info)

"Decerebrate State" by people in UAMS Profiles by year, and whether "Decerebrate State" was a major or minor topic of these ... "Decerebrate State" is a descriptor in the National Library of Medicines controlled vocabulary thesaurus, MeSH (Medical Subject ... Below are the most recent publications written about "Decerebrate State" by people in Profiles over the past ten years. ... Below are MeSH descriptors whose meaning is more general than "Decerebrate State". ...
... networks has been developed from observations obtained during fictive locomotion in decerebrate cats. Sens … ... Decerebrate State * Locomotion* * Models, Neurological* * Motor Neurons / physiology* * Muscle, Skeletal / innervation * Neural ... networks has been developed from observations obtained during fictive locomotion in decerebrate cats. Sensory afferents have ...
Clinically, this is manifested by an altered state of consciousness, abnormalities in pupil reflexes, and decerebrate or ... Bacterial meningitis in the United States, 1998-2007. N Engl J Med. 2011 May 26. 364(21):2016-25. [QxMD MEDLINE Link]. ... Its value is independent of blood lactate, probably because lactate in its ionised state crosses the blood- CSF barrier very ... Table 4. Changing Epidemiology of Acute Bacterial Meningitis in United States*. *Other Exposures and Organisms Associated with ...
10] This pattern must be distinguished from normal alpha rhythm in the locked-in state and from slower segments of 10- to 18-Hz ... The patient was on a respirator, was deeply comatose, and responded to painful stimulation with decerebrate posturing. Later, ... Later, he improved to a neurovegetative state. He could open his eyes and could breathe without the respirator, but he could ... Generalized decreased cortical activity can be transient from drug-induced coma, syncope, or in postictal states, or it can be ...
... decerebrate state MeSH C23.888.592.350 - dyskinesias MeSH C23.888.592.350.090 - ataxia MeSH C23.888.592.350.090.200 - ... The following is a partial list of the "C" codes for Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), as defined by the United States National ... persistent vegetative state MeSH C23.888.592.604.359.800.600 - syncope MeSH C23.888.592.604.359.800.600.500 - syncope, ...
Both of them wish to decerebrate the scientist, even as the Byzantine State emasculated its civil servants. Moreover, the great ... There is no use in seeking for a final knowledge in an asymptotic state of the universe at the end of time, for this asymptotic ... Yet even this gratifying news left me in a state of profound disquiet. I knew very well the tendency (which is not confined to ... It is a world which lacks both the rigidity of the Newtonian model of physics and the detail-less flexibility of a state of ...
Intraspinally mediated state-dependent enhancement of motoneurone excitability during fictive scratch in the adult decerebrate ... The authors state that C-bouton activation recruits Kv2.1 channels (Discussion, seventh paragraph), and Figure 9 implies a ... The authors state that C-bouton activation recruits Kv2.1 channels (Discussion, seventh paragraph), and Figure 9 implies a ... The authors state that calcium/calcineurin dependent Kv2.1 channel dephosphorylation results in "reduced K+ conductance". ...
Decerebrate Posturing Decorticate Rigidity Decorticate State Rigidity, Decerebrate Rigidity, Decorticate Date Established. 1966 ... Decorticate State Related Concept UI. M0337607. Terms. Decorticate State Preferred Term Term UI T372998. Date11/04/1999. ... Decerebrate Posturing Related Concept UI. M0337609. Terms. Decerebrate Posturing Preferred Term Term UI T373000. Date11/04/1999 ... Decerebrate State Preferred Term Term UI T010647. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1966). ...
As you enter the room of the comatose patient you might notice that the patient is probably in a position known as "de-cerebrate ... Coma: A State of Profound Unconsciousness. by NACD International on June 15, 1982 with No Comments ... nearly naked child who lay before me in a state of deep coma. Noticing her anxiety, I sent her out of the room in order to ... to those patients who respond very little and never totally come out of their comatose state to the point of being able to ...
The events in Algeria are the logical consequence of an abortive attempt to decerebrate a people.12 ... a territory whose relation to France was on the order of Puerto Ricos to the United States). During the Second World War, ... lives in a state of absolute depersonalization. ...
Comparison of the effects of hypercapnia on phrenic and hypoglossal activity in anesthetized decerebrate and decorticate ... Comparison of the effects of hypercapnia on phrenic and hypoglossal activity in anesthetized decerebrate and decorticate ... Comparison of the effects of hypercapnia on phrenic and hypoglossal activity in anesthetized decerebrate and decorticate ...
Ramachandran, R., & May, B. J. (2002). Functional segregation of ITD sensitivity in the inferior colliculus of decerebrate cats ... Ramachandran, R & May, BJ 2002, Functional segregation of ITD sensitivity in the inferior colliculus of decerebrate cats, ... Functional segregation of ITD sensitivity in the inferior colliculus of decerebrate cats. Journal of neurophysiology. 2002 Nov ... Dive into the research topics of Functional segregation of ITD sensitivity in the inferior colliculus of decerebrate cats. ...
Action Potentials, Animals, Decerebrate State, Electric Stimulation, Female, Graft Survival, Immunohistochemistry, Methysergide ...
5] This pattern must be distinguished from normal alpha rhythm in the locked-in state and from slower segments of 10- to 18-Hz ... The patient was on a respirator, was deeply comatose, and responded to painful stimulation with decerebrate posturing. Later, ... Later, he improved to a neurovegetative state. He could open his eyes and could breathe without the respirator, but he could ... Many of these patterns occur in encephalopathic states, which themselves can lower a patients threshold for seizures. Some ...
Decerebrate State. Dyskinesias. Gait Disorders, Neurologic. Meningism. Neurobehavioral Manifestations. Neurogenic Inflammation ...
Vegetative State and Minimally Conscious State - Etiology, pathophysiology, symptoms, signs, diagnosis & prognosis from the MSD ... typically decorticate or decerebrate posturing) but no purposeful avoidance. Patients have fecal and urinary incontinence. ... The vegetative state must be distinguished from the minimally conscious state. Both states can be permanent or temporary, and ... Vegetative state Patients in a vegetative state show no evidence of awareness of self or environment and cannot interact with ...
Decerebrate State [C23.888.592.298] Decerebrate State * Dyskinesias [C23.888.592.350] Dyskinesias * Gait Disorders, Neurologic ...
Decerebrate State. *Dyskinesias. *Gait Disorders, Neurologic. *Meningism. *Neurobehavioral Manifestations. *Neurogenic ...
... the model trained on anaesthetized rat and decerebrate cat data has broad applicability to other species and behavioural states ... The internal state, is defined not only by ongoing activity (the active state) but by time-varying synaptic properties, such as ... Title: Tuning the brain - Treating mental states through microtubule vibrations. *Abstract: Do mental states derive entirely ... I will show that when combined with independent subspace analysis, it is able to compete with the state of the art for modeling ...
... the model trained on anaesthetized rat and decerebrate cat data has broad applicability to other species and behavioural states ... The internal state, is defined not only by ongoing activity (the active state) but by time-varying synaptic properties, such as ... Title: Tuning the brain - Treating mental states through microtubule vibrations. *Abstract: Do mental states derive entirely ... I will show that when combined with independent subspace analysis, it is able to compete with the state of the art for modeling ...
... the model trained on anaesthetized rat and decerebrate cat data has broad applicability to other species and behavioural states ... The internal state, is defined not only by ongoing activity (the active state) but by time-varying synaptic properties, such as ... Title: Tuning the brain - Treating mental states through microtubule vibrations. *Abstract: Do mental states derive entirely ... I will show that when combined with independent subspace analysis, it is able to compete with the state of the art for modeling ...
Decerebrate State. *Dyskinesias. *Gait Disorders, Neurologic. *Meningism. *Neurobehavioral Manifestations. *Neurogenic ...
Decerebrate State. *Dyskinesias. *Gait Disorders, Neurologic. *Meningism. *Neurobehavioral Manifestations. *Neurogenic ...
Decerebrate State. *Dyskinesias. *Gait Disorders, Neurologic. *Meningism. *Neurobehavioral Manifestations. *Neurogenic ...
... this effect was not elicited in the decerebrate cat in which the ascending reticular activating system had been cut in the ... of chlorpromazine and promazine on ATP and nucleic acid levels in the rat brain suggested that these drugs induce a state of ...
Decerebrate Posturing use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Posturings use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Rigidity use Decerebrate ... Decorticate Rigidities use Decerebrate State Decorticate Rigidity use Decerebrate State Decorticate State use Decerebrate State ...
Decerebrate Posturing use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Posturings use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Rigidity use Decerebrate ... Decorticate Rigidities use Decerebrate State Decorticate Rigidity use Decerebrate State Decorticate State use Decerebrate State ...
Decerebrate Posturing use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Posturings use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Rigidity use Decerebrate ... Decorticate Rigidities use Decerebrate State Decorticate Rigidity use Decerebrate State Decorticate State use Decerebrate State ...
Decerebrate Posturing use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Posturings use Decerebrate State Decerebrate Rigidity use Decerebrate ... Decorticate Rigidities use Decerebrate State Decorticate Rigidity use Decerebrate State Decorticate State use Decerebrate State ...
  • Clinically, this is manifested by an altered state of consciousness, abnormalities in pupil reflexes, and decerebrate or decorticate posturing. (medscape.com)
  • Comparison of the effects of hypercapnia on phrenic and hypoglossal activity in anesthetized decerebrate and decorticate animals. (uchicago.edu)
  • Neurologic findings may include hemiparesis, decorticate or decerebrate posturing, and unequal pupillary response. (lifenurses.com)
  • A person can also have decorticate posture on one side of the body and decerebrate posture on the other side. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Typically, a vegetative state occurs because the function of the brain stem and diencephalon resumes after coma, but cortical function does not. (msdmanuals.com)
  • A comatose state can be caused by a multitude of conditions, making the precise epidemiology and prognosis of coma difficult to determine. (lecturio.com)
  • Coma: unconscious state. (thomasjhenrylaw.com)
  • It concluded that the state of brainstem death was a state of unsurvivable coma, but stopped short of equating it to death itself (Wace and Kai, 2000). (scialert.net)
  • Many of these patterns occur in encephalopathic states, which themselves can lower a patient's threshold for seizures. (medscape.com)
  • However, a diagnosis of persistent vegetative state does not imply permanent disability because in very rare cases (eg, after traumatic brain injury), patients can improve, reaching a minimally conscious state or a higher level of consciousness. (msdmanuals.com)
  • On my initial assessment her skin had a grey tinge to it, her eyes were closed, and her only movements were decerebrate posturing , an extraordinarily bad sign indicating very severe brain damage. (docbastard.net)
  • A severe injury to the brain is the usual cause of decerebrate posture. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Opisthotonos (a severe muscle spasm of the neck and back) may appear the same as decerebrate posture. (medlineplus.gov)
  • More severe cases can leave a person incapable of performing routine tasks, leaving them dependent on others, or can cause a person to fall into a vegetative state. (thomasjhenrylaw.com)
  • Prevalence/Incidence of aneurysms: Discussion of current state of aneurysm prevalence and how it differs in different populations 3. (intechopen.com)
  • Decerebrate State" is a descriptor in the National Library of Medicine's controlled vocabulary thesaurus, MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) . (uams.edu)
  • The following is a partial list of the "C" codes for Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), as defined by the United States National Library of Medicine (NLM). (wikipedia.org)
  • A computational model of the mammalian spinal cord circuitry incorporating a two-level central pattern generator (CPG) with separate half-centre rhythm generator (RG) and pattern formation (PF) networks has been developed from observations obtained during fictive locomotion in decerebrate cats. (nih.gov)
  • This study extends our characterization of the functional segregation of single-unit activity in the ICC by investigating how sensitivity to interaural time differences (ITDs) is related to the response types that are observed in decerebrate cats. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • Ramachandran, R & May, BJ 2002, ' Functional segregation of ITD sensitivity in the inferior colliculus of decerebrate cats ', Journal of neurophysiology , vol. 88, no. 5, pp. 2251-2261. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • In decerebrate unanesthetized cats we tested the hypothesis that glutamatergic-receptor blockade in the lumbosacral spinal cord attenuated the reflex increases in mean arterial pressure, inspired minute ventilation, and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) evoked by static contraction of the triceps surae muscles. (psu.edu)
  • The patient was on a respirator, was deeply comatose, and responded to painful stimulation with decerebrate posturing. (medscape.com)
  • A vegetative state is absence of responsiveness and awareness due to overwhelming dysfunction of the cerebral hemispheres, with sufficient sparing of the diencephalon and brain stem to preserve autonomic and motor reflexes and sleep-wake cycles. (msdmanuals.com)
  • 1 month is considered to be a persistent vegetative state. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Decerebrate posture can occur on one side, on both sides, or in just the arms. (medlineplus.gov)
  • A minimally conscious state, unlike a vegetative state, is characterized by some evidence of awareness of self and/or the environment, and patients tend to improve. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The vegetative state is a chronic condition that preserves the ability to maintain blood pressure (BP), respiration, and cardiac function, but not cognitive function. (msdmanuals.com)
  • However, any disorder that results in brain damage can cause a vegetative state. (msdmanuals.com)
  • In the minimally conscious state, unlike the vegetative state, there is evidence that patients are aware of themselves and/or their environment. (msdmanuals.com)
  • This state may be the first indication of brain damage or may follow a vegetative state as people recover some function. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients can transition between the vegetative state and minimally conscious state, sometimes for years after the original brain damage. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients in a vegetative state show no evidence of awareness of self or environment and cannot interact with other people. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Decerebrate posture is an abnormal body posture that involves the arms and legs being held straight out, the toes being pointed downward, and the head and neck being arched backward. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Conditions related to decerebrate posture need to be treated right away in a hospital. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The old man behind the young Https En Wikipedia Org Wiki Spirulina Dietary Supplement looked at Augustine Mischke and said, Who are you? (edu.ua)
  • Akinetic Mutism - A condition of silent, alert-appearing, immobility that characterizes certain subacute or chronic states of altered consciousness. (silverneurosurgery.com)
  • This graph shows the total number of publications written about "Decerebrate State" by people in UAMS Profiles by year, and whether "Decerebrate State" was a major or minor topic of these publications. (uams.edu)
  • Additionally, it is estimated that there are 5.3 million people in the United States living with TBI-related disabilities. (thomasjhenrylaw.com)
  • She was in her usual state of health at work when she had a sudden onset of headache and nausea and lost consciousness and collapsed. (snacc.org)
  • The effects of chlorpromazine and promazine on ATP and nucleic acid levels in the rat brain suggested that these drugs induce a state of decreased activity in selected subcortical areas. (erowid.org)
  • If psychiatry is the medical technique that aims to enable man no longer to be a stranger in his own environment, I affirm that the Arab, permanent alien in his own country, lives in a state of absolute depersonalization. (versobooks.com)
  • Frantz Fanon was born and raised on the West Indian island of Martinique, then a French overseas department (a territory whose relation to France was on the order of Puerto Rico's to the United States). (versobooks.com)
  • Catatonic rigidity is a condition of diminished responsiveness usually characterized by a trancelike state with constantly maintained immobility, often with flexibilitas cerea or a waxy rigidity of muscles. (wordinfo.info)
  • Finally, total muscular atony such as is found in paradoxical sleep, may occur periodically in states of rigidity due to decortication or to decerebration. (univ-lyon1.fr)
  • Infants have developed dermatitis, irritability, generalized clonic muscular contractions and decerebrate rigidity following application of a 6 percent hexachlorophene powder. (fda.gov)
  • Decerebrate rigidity Deja Entendu A sensation of familiarity akin to deja vu but referring to auditory somewhat than visual experiences. (ehd.org)
  • Typically, a vegetative state occurs because the function of the brain stem and diencephalon resumes after coma, but cortical function does not. (msdmanuals.com)
  • A comatose state can be caused by a multitude of conditions, making the precise epidemiology and prognosis of coma difficult to determine. (lecturio.com)
  • where would decerebrate damage be in a coma pt? (freezingblue.com)
  • how would decerebrate posturing look in a coma pt? (freezingblue.com)
  • why is decerebrate damage uncommon in coma pts? (freezingblue.com)
  • Other symptoms of reye syndrome loss of consciousness or coma mental changes unusual placement of arms and legs decerebrate posture the arms are extended straight and turned toward the body. (bionicwookiee.com)
  • Coma can be defined in many ways, but a standard definition is: any decrease in level of consciousness, where consciousness represents a state of awareness of self and the environment. (cancertherapyadvisor.com)
  • Clinically, this is manifested by an altered state of consciousness, abnormalities in pupil reflexes, and decerebrate or decorticate posturing. (medscape.com)
  • Decerebrate posturing signifies a lesion in the midbrain. (mhmedical.com)
  • In decerebrate cats, we examined the responses of single renal sympathetic postganglionic efferents to stimulation of the MLR and the exercise pressor reflex (i.e., static contraction of the triceps surae muscles). (psu.edu)
  • Hayes, SG & Kaufman, MP 2002, ' MLR stimulation and exercise pressor reflex activate different renal sympathetic fibers in decerebrate cats ', Journal of applied physiology , vol. 92, no. 4, pp. 1628-1634. (psu.edu)
  • Both disorders must be left open to pain abnormal extension decerebrate no response is to prevent or minimize congestion. (easternpropane.com)
  • But this lesion, which causes considerable prolongation of the waking state, induces no disturbances of perceptivity or of reactivity in animals. (univ-lyon1.fr)
  • Here, to characterize the operation of the spinal locomotor network during FW and backward walking (BW), we recorded the activity of individual spinal interneurons from L4 to L6 during both FW and BW evoked by epidural stimulation (ES) of the spinal cord at L5-L6 in decerebrate cats of either sex. (jneurosci.org)
  • Sensory symptoms is usually mild and treatable disease state clinical review: Diagnosis organs. (umbc.edu)
  • In decerebrate cats 50 pairs of Purkinje cells and nuclear neurons were identified and simultaneously recorded during spontaneous activity and during peripheral inputs. (umn.edu)
  • The present pharmacologic experiments were conducted on either decerebrate unanesthetized or chloralose anesthetized cats to identify the location of the PMC and to examine the neurotransmitter mechanism controlling micturition. (psu.edu)
  • We compared the effects of massive inspiratory loading on saline- and NAC-treated groups of decerebrate unanesthetized rats with loading continuing until respiratory arrest occurred. (uky.edu)
  • However, a diagnosis of persistent vegetative state does not imply permanent disability because in very rare cases (eg, after traumatic brain injury), patients can improve, reaching a minimally conscious state or a higher level of consciousness. (msdmanuals.com)
  • 1) Lesions of the sleep systems in animals result in a state of prolonged insomnia, without disorders of perceptivity. (univ-lyon1.fr)
  • This child will go on to become an adult who can self-regulate energy states, pay attention, create new ideas, form meaningful relationships, and be a productive, high achiever in workplace settings. (movingtolearn.ca)
  • More formally, given an agent with a repertoire of available actions, some knowledge of its internal state, and some sensory information concerning environmental context, the task is to decide what action (or action sequence) to perform in order for that agent to best achieve its goals. (scholarpedia.org)
  • A minimally conscious state, unlike a vegetative state, is characterized by some evidence of awareness of self and/or the environment, and patients tend to improve. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients in a vegetative state show no evidence of awareness of self or environment and cannot interact with other people. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Epidural anaesthesia is the m ost efficient way of relieving the ache of childbirth, and provides com plete relief of contraction pain in 95% of labouring wom en. (dnahelix.com)
  • NET Database, the Urology Care Foundation estimates that this condition affects 30 million men in the United States. (bionicwookiee.com)
  • However, any disorder that results in brain damage can cause a vegetative state. (msdmanuals.com)
  • This state may be the first indication of brain damage or may follow a vegetative state as people recover some function. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients can transition between the vegetative state and minimally conscious state, sometimes for years after the original brain damage. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The term 'behavior switching' is sometimes used as a synonym for action selection but will be used here to describe the sub-problem of managing the transition between two behavioral states in a smooth and timely manner. (scholarpedia.org)
  • It is generally recognized that the appearance of the decerebrate state in patients harboring space-occupying intracranial lesions is of grave prognostic import. (jamanetwork.com)
  • In the minimally conscious state, unlike the vegetative state, there is evidence that patients are aware of themselves and/or their environment. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients with NEHS initially may exhibit a hyperdynamic circulatory state, but, in severe cases, hypodynamic states may be noted. (medscape.com)
  • In addition, the findings from laboratory-based exercise performance trials are hampered by the absence of objective measures of the motivational state of subjects. (springer.com)
  • Thyroid function tests should be considered or palliative care as early as the disease state is improved. (easternpropane.com)
  • Stopping the heart in the fully contracted state as a result of poisoning with calcium. (wordinfo.info)
  • It has been shown that these states of sleep are the result of an active process of inactivation of the waking system. (univ-lyon1.fr)
  • The disadvantages of epidural anaesthesia are that a few wom en com plain of dizziness or shivering, and that it m ay increase the length of the second stage and result in a rise in operative vaginal deliveries. (dnahelix.com)
  • The pudendal nerve, derived from S2, S3 and S4, leaves the pelvis m edial to the sciatic nerve via the higher sciatic foram en. (dnahelix.com)
  • Ian Hughes states in his article "How do early relationships shape our brains" that there are three core ideas that lie at the center of psychoanalytic thought. (movingtolearn.ca)
  • If psychiatry is the medical technique that aims to enable man no longer to be a stranger in his own environment, I affirm that the Arab, permanent alien in his own country, lives in a state of absolute depersonalization. (versobooks.com)
  • Destruction of these systems causes elective suppression of the sleeping states. (univ-lyon1.fr)
  • Lethargy is a state of reduced wakefulness in which the patient displays disinterest in the environment and is easily distracted but is easily aroused and can communicate. (mhmedical.com)

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