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1.
La Habana; s.n; 1995. 9 p. ilus, graf.
Non-conventional in English | LILACS | ID: lil-223642

ABSTRACT

Association of different psychological and neurological disturbances with gluten intake in coeliac patients was repeatedly described. In the present study gluten-induced enteropathy was elicited in rats by prolonged intragastric administration of gliadin from birth to 10 weeks. Various neurological (contact and visual placing reactions, equilibrium on horizontal bar) and behavioral tests (open field and Morris water maze task) were used to assess the possible deficits. No substantial differences were found in the behavior of rats fed with gliadin compared with those fed with bovine serum albumin (control group). The only difference found between control and experimental rats was that gliadin-fed rats showed slightly higher emotionality in the open field test. It is concluded that prolonged application of gliadin to young rats at enteropathy-inducing dosages does not modify their behavior


Subject(s)
Animals , Behavior , Celiac Disease , Gliadin , Rats , Disease Models, Animal
2.
La Habana; s.n; 1994. 4 p. graf.
Non-conventional in English | LILACS | ID: lil-223638

ABSTRACT

The relative contribution of allocentric and egocentric orientation to place navigation was studied in Long-Evans rats trained in the Morris water maze in permanent light, permanent darkness or flickering light (1 Hz, flash duration 25, 100, 300, 500 and 800 ms). After 3 days of training (nine blocks of four trials), escape latencies were 38 and 7 s in the dark- and light-trained groups, respectively, and corresponded to the light-dark ratio in the flicker-trained groups. Shorter-than-predicted latencies in the 25- and 100-ms groups reflected visual persistence of 200 ms. The difference between flickerin light (100 ms) and permanent light performance during acquisition of place navigation to a new target was significantly smaller in rats previously trained in light than in naive animals. It is concluded that longer flash duration gives the animals more opportunities to locate levant landmarks and to estimate their distance


Subject(s)
Animals , Hippocampus , Memory , Rats , Disease Models, Animal
3.
s.l; s.n; 1990. 10 p. ilus, graf.
Non-conventional in English | LILACS | ID: lil-223643

ABSTRACT

Rats (n=11) with bilateral kainate lesions of the caudate nucleus and subsequen unilateral transplantation of embryonic striatal tissue into the damaged area prefered 4 months later to reach for food with the forepaw contralateral to the graft. No such asymmetry was observed in lesioned, nontransplanted (n=8) or unoperated (n=5) control rats. Good integration of the graft with the host brain was indicated by the fnding that cortical spreading depression did not enter the lesioned caudate nucleus but did penetrate into the lesioned caudate with the graft almos as regulary as in intact rats. Behavioral asymmetry produced by unilateral grafts in bilaterally lesioned animals reveals the effects of transplantation with more sensitivity than the graft-induced compensation of the asymmetries caused by unilateral lesions


Subject(s)
Animals , Caudate Nucleus , Corpus Striatum , Rats , Transplants , Disease Models, Animal
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