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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 39(2): 297-304, Feb. 2006.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-420283

ABSTRACT

We tested the hypothesis that the inability to increase cardiac output during exercise would explain the decreased rate of oxygen uptake (VO2) in recent onset, ischemia-induced heart failure rats. Nine normal control rats and 6 rats with ischemic heart failure were studied. Myocardial infarction was induced by coronary ligation. VO2 was measured during a ramp protocol test on a treadmill using a metabolic mask. Cardiac output was measured with a flow probe placed around the ascending aorta. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was higher in ischemic heart failure rats compared with normal control rats (17 ± 0.4 vs 8 ± 0.8 mmHg, P = 0.0001). Resting cardiac index (CI) tended to be lower in ischemic heart failure rats (P = 0.07). Resting heart rate (HR) and stroke volume index (SVI) did not differ significantly between ischemic heart failure rats and normal control rats. Peak VO2 was lower in ischemic heart failure rats (73.72 ± 7.37 vs 109.02 ± 27.87 mL min-1 kg-1, P = 0.005). The VO2 and CI responses during exercise were significantly lower in ischemic heart failure rats than in normal control rats. The temporal response of SVI, but not of HR, was significantly lower in ischemic heart failure rats than in normal control rats. Peak CI, HR, and SVI were lower in ischemic heart failure rats. The reduction in VO2 response during incremental exercise in an ischemic model of heart failure is due to the decreased cardiac output response, largely caused by depressed stroke volume kinetics.


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Cardiac Output/physiology , Heart Failure/physiopathology , Heart Rate/physiology , Myocardial Infarction/physiopathology , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Physical Conditioning, Animal/physiology , Disease Models, Animal , Heart Failure/etiology , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Rats, Wistar , Rest/physiology
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 36(7): 907-911, July 2003. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-340678

ABSTRACT

Simple reaction time (SRT) in response to visual stimuli can be influenced by many stimulus features. The speed and accuracy with which observers respond to a visual stimulus may be improved by prior knowledge about the stimulus location, which can be obtained by manipulating the spatial probability of the stimulus. However, when higher spatial probability is achieved by holding constant the stimulus location throughout successive trials, the resulting improvement in performance can also be due to local sensory facilitation caused by the recurrent spatial location of a visual target (position priming). The main objective of the present investigation was to quantitatively evaluate the modulation of SRT by the spatial probability structure of a visual stimulus. In two experiments the volunteers had to respond as quickly as possible to the visual target presented on a computer screen by pressing an optic key with the index finger of the dominant hand. Experiment 1 (N = 14) investigated how SRT changed as a function of both the different levels of spatial probability and the subject's explicit knowledge about the precise probability structure of visual stimulation. We found a gradual decrease in SRT with increasing spatial probability of a visual target regardless of the observer's previous knowledge concerning the spatial probability of the stimulus. Error rates, below 2 percent, were independent of the spatial probability structure of the visual stimulus, suggesting the absence of a speed-accuracy trade-off. Experiment 2 (N = 12) examined whether changes in SRT in response to a spatially recurrent visual target might be accounted for simply by sensory and temporally local facilitation. The findings indicated that the decrease in SRT brought about by a spatially recurrent target was associated with its spatial predictability, and could not be accounted for solely in terms of sensory priming


Subject(s)
Humans , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time , Space Perception , Visual Fields , Analysis of Variance , Probability
3.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 35(8): 979-983, Aug. 2002. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-325547

ABSTRACT

When two stimuli are presented simultaneously to an observer, the perceived temporal order does not always correspond to the actual one. In three experiments we examined how the location and spatial predictability of visual stimuli modulate the perception of temporal order. Thirty-two participants had to report the temporal order of appearance of two visual stimuli. In Experiment 1, both stimuli were presented at the same eccentricity and no perceptual asynchrony between them was found. In Experiment 2, one stimulus was presented close to the fixation point and the other, peripheral, stimulus was presented in separate blocks in two eccentricities (4.8º and 9.6º). We found that the peripheral stimulus was perceived to be delayed in relation to the central one, with no significant difference between the delays obtained in the two eccentricities. In Experiment 3, using three eccentricities (2.5º, 7.3º and 12.1º) for the presentation of the peripheral stimulus, we compared a condition in which its location was highly predictable with two other conditions in which its location was progressively less predictable. Here, the perception of the peripheral stimulus was also delayed in relation to the central one, with this delay depending on both the eccentricity and predictability of the stimulus. We argue that attentional deployment, manipulated by the spatial predictability of the stimulus, seems to play an important role in the temporal order perception of visual stimuli. Yet, under whichever condition of spatial predictability, basic sensory and attentional processes are unavoidably entangled and both factors must concur to the perception of temporal order


Subject(s)
Humans , Attention , Temporal Lobe , Visual Perception , Analysis of Variance , Psychophysics , Reaction Time
4.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 35(8): 969-972, Aug. 2002. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-325548

ABSTRACT

If a dot is flashed in perfect alignment with a pair of dots rotating around the visual fixation point, most observers perceive the rotating dots as being ahead of the flashing dot (flash-lag effect). This perceptual effect has been interpreted to result from the perceptual extrapolation of the moving dots, the differential visual latencies between flashing and moving stimuli, as well as the modulation of attentional mechanisms. Here we attempted to uncouple the attentional effects brought about by the spatial predictability of the flashing dot from the sensory effects dependent on its visual eccentricity. The stimulus was a pair of dots rotating clockwise around the fixation point. Another dot was flashed at either the upper right or the lower left of the visual field according to three separate blocked situations: fixed, alternate and random positions. Twenty-four participants had to judge, in all three situations, the location of the rotating dots in relation to the imaginary line connecting the flashing dot and the fixation point at the moment the dot was flashed. The flash-lag effect was observed in all three situations, and a clear influence of the spatial predictability of the flashing dot on the magnitude of the perceptual phenomenon was revealed, independently of sensory effects related to the eccentricity of the stimulus in the visual field. These findings are consistent with our proposal that, in addition to sensory factors, the attentional set modulates the magnitude of the differential latencies that give rise to the flash-lag phenomenon


Subject(s)
Humans , Adult , Attention , Fixation, Ocular , Photic Stimulation , Visual Perception , Motion Perception , Reaction Time
5.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 23(10): 1037-40, 1990. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-91648

ABSTRACT

This electrophysiological study analyzes the influence of the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) of the avian accessory optic sustem on units within the lentiform nucleus (LM), which is the avian equivalent of the pretectal nucleus of the optic trat. A prominent depression of the spontaneous firing rat of neurons within the LM occurred following electrical stimulation of the ipsilateral nBOR. A close correlation was also found between the directional selectivity of LM units and the apparent displacements generated by rotations of the head around the horizontal semicircular canal axis. This is consistent with a possible rolo of the LM in the coordinate transformation from visual imputs to a vestibular referense system


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Optic Chiasm/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Superior Colliculi/physiology , Columbidae , Electrophysiology , Visual Fields/physiology
6.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 23(9): 915-7, 1990. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-92454

ABSTRACT

The spatial orientation of the semicircular canals (SCC) was measured in the pigeon by fitting the best plane over 10 to 15 stereotaxically determined points to each canal. The vectores definign eah canal plane are presented in the standard stereotaxical position and for free moving behavior, and the coplanarity or orthogonality of pairs of semicircular canals are discussed


Subject(s)
Animals , Semicircular Canals , Spatial Behavior , Vestibule, Labyrinth , Columbidae
7.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 22(6): 775-7, June 1989. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-75238

ABSTRACT

In order to study the relationship the apparent motion of the visual field as a function of head motion, we have developed an equation that describes the apparent displacement of objects in the visual field produced by a general movement of the head consisting of a rotation plus a translation. We then used this equation to simulate the apparent motion of the visual field of a pigeon produced by rotation of the head about axes parallel to those of its anterior semicircular canals


Subject(s)
Animals , Head/physiology , Movement , Visual Fields/physiology , Columbidae , Mathematics
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