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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 36(12): 1685-1694, Dec. 2003. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-350462

ABSTRACT

Administration of pilocarpine causes epilepsy in rats if status epilepticus (SE) is induced at an early age. To determine in detail the electrophysiological patterns of the epileptogenic activity in these animals, 46 Wistar rats, 7-17 days old, were subjected to SE induced by pilocarpine and electro-oscillograms from the cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus and hypothalamus, as well as head, rostrum and vibrissa, eye, ear and forelimb movements, were recorded 120 days later. Six control animals of the same age range did not show any signs of epilepsy. In all the rats subjected to SE, iterative spike-wave complexes (8.1 ± 0.5 Hz in frequency, 18.9 ± 9.1 s in duration) were recorded from the frontal cortex during absence fits. However, similar spike-wave discharges were always found also in the hippocampus and, less frequently, in the amygdala and in thalamic nuclei. Repetitive or single spikes were also detected in these same central structures. Clonic movements and single jerks were recorded from all the rats, either concomitantly with or independently of the spike-wave complexes and spikes. We conclude that rats made epileptic with pilocarpine develop absence seizures also occurring during paradoxical sleep, showing the characteristic spike-wave bursts in neocortical areas and also in the hippocampus. This is in contrast to the well-accepted statement that one of the main characteristics of absence-like fits in the rat is that spike-wave discharges are never recorded from the hippocampal fields.


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Rats , Epilepsy, Absence , Muscarinic Agonists , Pilocarpine , Status Epilepticus , Electrodes, Implanted , Electroencephalography , Electrophysiology , Epilepsy, Absence , Rats, Wistar , Status Epilepticus
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 34(12): 1497-1508, Dec. 2001.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-301412

ABSTRACT

This article is an edited transcription of a virtual symposium promoted by the Brazilian Society of Neuroscience and Behavior (SBNeC). Although the dynamics of sensory and motor representations have been one of the most studied features of the central nervous system, the actual mechanisms of brain plasticity that underlie the dynamic nature of sensory and motor maps are not entirely unraveled. Our discussion began with the notion that the processing of sensory information depends on many different cortical areas. Some of them are arranged topographically and others have non-topographic (analytical) properties. Besides a sensory component, every cortical area has an efferent output that can be mapped and can influence motor behavior. Although new behaviors might be related to modifications of the sensory or motor representations in a given cortical area, they can also be the result of the acquired ability to make new associations between specific sensory cues and certain movements, a type of learning known as conditioning motor learning. Many types of learning are directly related to the emotional or cognitive context in which a new behavior is acquired. This has been demonstrated by paradigms in which the receptive field properties of cortical neurons are modified when an animal is engaged in a given discrimination task or when a triggering feature is paired with an aversive stimulus. The role of the cholinergic input from the nucleus basalis to the neocortex was also highlighted as one important component of the circuits responsible for the context-dependent changes that can be induced in cortical maps


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex , Neuronal Plasticity , Cerebral Cortex , Emotions , Learning , Motor Cortex , Neurons , Somatosensory Cortex , Visual Perception
3.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 34(12): 1509-1519, Dec. 2001.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-301413

ABSTRACT

This article is a transcription of an electronic symposium held on February 5, 2001 by the Brazilian Society of Neuroscience and Behavior (SBNeC) during which eight specialists involved in clinical and experimental research on sleep and dreaming exposed their personal experience and theoretical points of view concerning these highly polemic subjects. Unlike most other bodily functions, sleep and dreaming cannot, so far, be defined in terms of definitive functions that play an ascribable role in maintaining the organism as a whole. Such difficulties appear quite clearly all along the discussions. In this symposium, concepts on sleep function range from a protective behavior to an essential function for maturation of the nervous system. Kleitman's hypothesis [Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (1974), 159: 293-294] was discussed, according to which the basal state is not the wakeful state but sleep, from which we awake to eat, to protect ourselves, to procreate, etc. Dreams, on the other hand, were widely discussed, being considered either as an important step in consolidation of learning or simply the conscious identification of functional patterns derived from the configuration of released or revoked memorized information


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Sleep , Consciousness , Dreams , Neurobiology , Sleep, REM
4.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 32(4): 469-72, Apr. 1999. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-231740

ABSTRACT

Theta rhythm in many brain structures characterizes wakefulness and desynchronized sleep in most subprimate mammalian brains. In close relation to behaviors, theta frequency and voltage undergo a fine modulation which may involve mobilization of dorsal raphe nucleus efferent pathways. In the present study we analyzed frequency modulation (through instantaneous frequency variation) of theta waves occurring in three cortical areas, in hippocampal CA1 and in the dorsal raphe nucleus of Wistar rats during normal wakefulness and after injection of the 5-HT1a receptor agonist 8-OH-DPAT into the dorsal raphe. We demonstrated that in attentive states the variation of theta frequency among the above structures is highly congruent, whereas after 8-OH-DPAT injection, although regular signals are present, the variation is much more complex and shows no relation to behaviors. Such functional uncoupling after blockade demonstrates the influence of dorsal raphe nucleus efferent serotoninergic fibers on the organization of alertness, as evaluated by electro-oscillographic analysis.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus/physiology , Neocortex/physiology , Raphe Nuclei/physiology , Serotonin Receptor Agonists/pharmacology , Theta Rhythm , Wakefulness/physiology , Rats, Wistar
5.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 29(12): 1645-50, Dec. 1996. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-188448

ABSTRACT

Theta waves, which are the main electrophysiological expression of dreaming activity in many brain structures of rats, often undergo specific changes in voltage and frequency according to the oniric patterns. Much is known about their mechanisms but little is known regarding their origin, which has been ascribed to a specific activation of either the reticular formation or the septal nuclei or nucleus reticularis pontis oralis. In the present study, rats were prepared for chronic recording of the electro-oscillograms of cortical areas 10, 3 and 17, of hippocampal CA1 and CA3 fields, of nucleus reticularis thalami, nucleus reticularis pontis oralis and occasionally of nucleus reticularis caudalis. Head, rostrum, eye and forelimb movements were also recorded, so that the oniric behaviors could be precisely identified. The scatter diagrams and the corresponding correlation coefficients (r) of the voltage of concomitant waves were determined for each possible pair of leads. The potentials were analyzed at a frequency of 256 Hz over a period of 1 to 3 sec. A very high degree of correlation was observed between theta waves in nucleus reticularis pontis oralis, hippocampal fields and nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis; sometimes r approached unity. Although these data cannot be taken as proof of nucleus reticularis pontis oralis being the source of theta waves, they are at least compatible with this hypothesis.


Subject(s)
Rats , Animals , Male , Female , Dreams/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Reticular Formation/physiology , Thalamus/physiology , Theta Rhythm , Rats, Wistar , Sleep, REM/physiology
6.
Arq. neuropsiquiatr ; 47(4): 381-4, dez. 1989. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-80103

ABSTRACT

Transcallosal potentials evoked by electrical stimulation with rectangular pulses of 1 ms, 5 c/s and variable intensity were recorded from the cortical surface in cats anesthetized with ketamine hydrochloride. Sites of stimulation and recording were selected by means of a cartesian map of most of neocotex. In addition to the well known transcallosal projection pattern it was faund that stimulation of a restricted posterior area evokes low voltage potentials over the contralateral symmetric area while high voltage potentials are recorded from a few sites located at the ipsilateral anterior cortex and from the area symmetric as to the latter. This L-shaped transcallosal connection may be involved in complex cortical processes and is compatible with effective results of partial anterior callosotomies in patients whit multifocal epilepsy and frontal bisynchronism


Subject(s)
Cats , Animals , Male , Female , Brain Mapping , Corpus Callosum/physiology , Evoked Potentials , Electric Stimulation
7.
Arq. neuropsiquiatr ; 47(1): 1-7, mar. 1989. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-69617

ABSTRACT

Em dez gatos anestesiados com cetamina (Ketalar) o neocórtex foi exposto e pulsos retangulares (1 ms, 0,5Hz e intensidade variável) foram aplicados a pontos discretos de um lado enquanto se registravam os potenciais evocados no outro lado. As posiçöes de estimulaçäo e registro eram determinadas em mapa cartesiano que abrangia quase todo o neocórtex. Os potenciais foram analisados quanto aos dseus componentes, voltagem e latência. A difusäo passiva, potenciais eletrotônicos e e os efeitos do incremento da freqüência de estimulaçäo sobre os vários componentes foram analisados. Os resultados mostram a presença de grandes potenciais evocados transcalosos em algumas regiöes, com incremento de sua amplitude no sentido caudo-rostral, sendo máximos em áreas anteromediais do giro suprasilviano. Confirmando estudos anatômicos, em algumas regiöes do córtex somatomotor e visual foram registrados potenciais bastante reduzidos ou ausentes. A estimulaçäo de algumas áreas posteriores causava o aparecimento de pequenos potenciais em sua área homóloga contralateral ao mesmo tempo em que grandes potenciais eram registrados em áreas anteriores ipsi- e contralateralmente, constituindo uma conexäo em L ainda näo descrita. É possível que tal conexäo esteja implicada em alguns tipos de epilepsia e possa explicar em parte a eficácia de calosotomias parciais para seu tratamento


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Brain Mapping , Cats/physiology , Corpus Callosum/physiology , Evoked Potentials
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