Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 22
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Cytopathology ; 28(6): 495-502, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28868665

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Due to the recent proposal of the non-invasive follicular thyroid neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear feature (NIFTP) category, the authors analyse the state of the art in the challenging diagnosis of follicular thyroid neoplasms in routine practice. METHODS AND RESULTS: A consecutive series of 200 histological diagnoses, with complete cytological correlation, was analysed following the introduction of the NIFTP definition. The study was conducted in a general hospital with a high prevalence of thyroid benign nodules that accounted for approximately 60% of surgically-treated nodules. The significant incidence of the new NIFTP category was 7%. Concurrently, a gradual decrease of the follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (fvPTC) was observed (3.5%). When evaluating the FNA biopsies within the NIFTP group, despite the systematic evaluation of nuclear crowding, enlargement, irregularities and clearing, the final cytological class was often indeterminate for malignancy (Thy3/III-IV, 71%). At histology, the application of the semiquantitative NIFTP score for the evaluation of the PTC-like nuclear features was able to discriminate benign lesions (score 0/1) from fvPTC (score 2/3). A certain degree of overlapping still persisted between NIFTP and fvPTC (score 2) or between NIFTP and benign lesions (score 1). CONCLUSIONS: In the routine evaluation of FNA biopsies, the presence of subtle and questionable PTC-like nuclear features still remains a controversial aspect of the diagnostic workflow. Given that the NIFTP category was introduced to stratify the low-risk group of thyroid tumours more precisely, pathologists should force themselves to apply the nuclear score rigorously and to classify cases assigned a score of 1 as benign proliferations.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma, Follicular/pathology , Carcinoma, Papillary/pathology , Neoplasm Invasiveness/pathology , Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology , Adenocarcinoma, Follicular/diagnosis , Adult , Aged , Biopsy, Fine-Needle/methods , Carcinoma, Papillary/diagnosis , Cell Nucleus/pathology , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasm Invasiveness/diagnosis , Retrospective Studies , Thyroid Neoplasms/diagnosis
2.
Cytopathology ; 26(5): 318-24, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25040579

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) is a unique proteomic technology that explores the spatial distribution of biomolecules directly in situ, thus integrating molecular and morphological information. The possibility of correlating distribution maps of multiple analyses with cytological features makes it an ideal research tool for discovering new diagnostic markers. A previous study showed that MALDI-IMS could help discrimination between different types of thyroid lesions, especially papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC); the present feasibility study on ex vivo fine needle aspiration (FNA) smears describes its potential in detecting new proteomic targets of other thyroid lesions (follicular lesions, medullary carcinoma). METHODS: MALDI-IMS was conducted on ex vivo FNAs obtained from surgical specimens and corresponding in vivo samples. Differences between proteomic profiles of different thyroid lesions were compared. RESULTS: Comparing the protein profiles of hyperplastic nodules obtained from three different patients with each other, and with a new PTC, showed a high degree of concordance, indicating good reproducibility of the IMS technology on cytological samples, suggesting its potential as a tool for biomarker discovery. Furthermore, comparison of the average proteomic profiles of hyperplastic nodules with a Hürthle cell adenoma revealed significant differences, underlying the capability of MALDI-IMS to distinguish between different thyroid lesions. Finally, the proteomic profile of medullary thyroid carcinoma was also characterized. CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirmed the possible role of MALDI-IMS in the search for diagnostic targets of PTC and follicular lesions, which could be applied in larger trials aimed at the identification of proteins, convertible to cost-effective diagnostic tools such as immunohistochemistry. These tests could be used to analyse in vivo cytological smears, improving the preoperative diagnosis of indeterminate thyroid nodules.


Subject(s)
Thyroid Gland/metabolism , Thyroid Gland/pathology , Thyroid Neoplasms/diagnosis , Thyroid Neoplasms/metabolism , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Biomarkers/metabolism , Biopsy, Fine-Needle/methods , Carcinoma/metabolism , Carcinoma/pathology , Carcinoma, Medullary/metabolism , Carcinoma, Medullary/pathology , Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine/metabolism , Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine/pathology , Carcinoma, Papillary , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Proteomics/methods , Thyroid Cancer, Papillary , Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology
3.
Placenta ; 32(3): 264-8, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21216005

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To study the expression of Annexin A5 (A5) in relation to preeclampsia using immunohistochemical Tissue Microarray (TMA) technique. STUDY DESIGN: Case-control study of 66 singleton preeclamptic (PE) patients matched for gestational age (GA) at delivery with 63 normotensive controls with normally grown fetuses. Immunohistochemical expression of A5 and other population characteristics were compared between the two groups using Chi-square, One-way ANOVA, Spearman's Correlation, and Linear Regression. RESULTS: The two groups were similar for maternal age and rate of corticosteroid administration, but differed for nulliparity, Body Mass Index (BMI), blood pressure, presence of placental histological lesions, and placental weight. Expression of A5 was similar in PE and controls (p = 0.10); however it was found to be lower in PE cases complicated by fetal growth restriction (FGR, n = 34) compared with matched controls (n = 55) (p = 0.04). An inverse correlation was found between A5 and GA in cases but not in controls (p = 0.04 vs p = 0.71). The association was even more significant in the subgroup of PE complicated by FGR (p = 0.02). A5 expression was not influenced by blood pressure, proteinuria, or placental weight. CONCLUSIONS: Annexin A5 expression seems to be related only to FGR and not to PE or its clinical severity.


Subject(s)
Annexin A5/biosynthesis , Placenta/metabolism , Pre-Eclampsia/metabolism , Case-Control Studies , Female , Fetal Growth Retardation/metabolism , Gestational Age , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Pregnancy , Prospective Studies , Tissue Array Analysis
5.
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci ; 7(5): 147-9, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15214590

ABSTRACT

Twenty-four hour esophageal pH-monitoring is gold standard for evaluate pathological GERD. Role of radiography and ultrasonography in the diagnosis of gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD) has been studied. Our results have been shown that radiography and ultrasonography have a limited role in the diagnosis of pathological GERD. However, such investigations an useful the follow-up of patients affected by pathological GERD.


Subject(s)
Esophagogastric Junction/diagnostic imaging , Gastroesophageal Reflux/diagnostic imaging , Child , Esophagogastric Junction/physiopathology , Humans , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Radiography , Ultrasonography
7.
Behav Brain Res ; 38(3): 243-61, 1990 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2114120

ABSTRACT

Three experiments compared the effects of dopamine depletion from the caudate-putamen (CAUD; dorsal striatum) or nucleus accumbens septi (NAS; ventral striatum), or a systemically administered dopamine receptor antagonist (alpha-flupenthixol) on the acquisition and performance of a conditional discrimination task involving temporal frequency. In Expt. 1, rats receiving 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesions of the CAUD were impaired in the acquisition of a visual version of the task, and rats with 6-OHDA lesions of the NAS were not reliably impaired. Even when the rats with CAUD lesions had acquired the discrimination, they were still significantly slower to collect earned food pellets. Both CAUD and NAS lesions reduced a bias to respond to the faster of the two discriminative stimuli. In Expt. 2, rats with 6-OHDA lesions of CAUD were markedly impaired in their accuracy and speed of responding when they had been trained to criterion preoperatively. These effects could not be mimicked in controls by prefeeding (which had only minor effects on performance). Rats with 6-OHDA-induced lesions of the NAS were unimpaired in either visual or auditory discrimination performance, but were slower to extinguish responding than controls. In Expt. 3, alpha-flupenthixol (0.1-0.56 mg/kg, i.p.) produced dose-dependent impairments in both latency to respond and choice accuracy in visual and auditory versions of the task. In conjunction with other results, these data suggest that (1) dopamine receptor blockade and central dopamine depletion can impair discrimination performance under certain conditions (2) dopamine depletion from the ventral and dorsal striatum, respectively, have dissociable effects on behaviour controlled by conditioned reinforcers and discriminative stimuli and (3) the disruption of discrimination performance by dorsal striatal dopamine depletion is probably attributable to several factors.


Subject(s)
Appetitive Behavior/drug effects , Caudate Nucleus/drug effects , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Dopamine Antagonists , Flupenthixol/pharmacology , Hydroxydopamines/pharmacology , Nucleus Accumbens/drug effects , Putamen/drug effects , Receptors, Dopamine/drug effects , Septal Nuclei/drug effects , Thioxanthenes/pharmacology , Animals , Auditory Perception/drug effects , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Male , Motivation , Motor Activity/drug effects , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Orientation/drug effects , Oxidopamine , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Reaction Time/drug effects , Visual Perception/drug effects
9.
Behav Brain Res ; 32(2): 129-49, 1989 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2923657

ABSTRACT

Rats received infusions of ibotenic acid into the substantia innominata, in the region of the nucleus basalis of Meynert (nbM), before and after training on simple (simultaneous) and conditional visual discriminations. The ibotenate infusions reduced cortical choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) levels by about 20%, destroyed many ChAT-immunoreactive neurons in the nbM, but also caused the loss of many neurons in the substantia innominata and adjacent areas. These lesions did not impair the acquisition and performance of a simple visual discrimination, but did impair reversal of the discrimination and the performance of a conditional visual discrimination. However, the degree of impairment was unrelated to the degree of cortical ChAT loss. Ibotenic acid lesions to the dorsal globus pallidus also impaired reversal of discrimination but left acquisition and performance unaffected. Striatal dopamine depletion produced by 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) infusions into the mid-ventral caudate nucleus impaired performance of the simultaneous visual discrimination. Cortical noradrenaline depletion produced by 6-OHDA lesions of the dorsal noradrenergic bundle either alone or in combination with ibotenic acid lesions of the substantia innominata had no effect on acquisition of the discrimination. It is concluded that ibotenic acid lesions of the substantia innominata or to the dorsal globus pallidus affect learning and performance of conditional visual discrimination performance and impair reversal learning without affecting the capacity to discriminate visual events. These results are compared to those following cortical noradrenaline depletion or striatal dopamine loss.


Subject(s)
Basal Ganglia/physiology , Discrimination Learning/physiology , Globus Pallidus/physiology , Memory/physiology , Mental Recall/physiology , Reversal Learning/physiology , Substantia Innominata/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Animals , Attention/physiology , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Choline O-Acetyltransferase/physiology , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Norepinephrine/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
10.
Fundam Appl Toxicol ; 5(6 Pt 2): S213-24, 1985 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4092889

ABSTRACT

Male Wistar-derived rats were used to assess the behaviorally augmented component of tolerance to paraoxon depression of a feeding response. Separate groups of animals were treated daily by 0.125 mg/kg of the compound given sc either 1 hr before the start or 45 min after the end of a 90-min feeding session. However, the dose was reduced to 0.0625 mg/kg from Day 9 to Day 12 of the treatment series if animals showed too severe a reduction in food consumption. After development of tolerance by the presession treatment group, the animals treated after feeding were shifted to treatment before feeding. This shift produced a marked depression in food consumption. This confirms similar data previously obtained by a different test (two-way avoidance), and indicates that behaviorally augmented tolerance to paraoxon related to practice factors may be a fairly general phenomenon. Other experiments were to assess the effects of paraoxon in the conditioned taste aversion (CTA) paradigm. These showed the development of an aversion only at high dosage levels (two pairings between the flavor cue and 0.25 mg/kg sc, or four pairings with a 0.17-mg/kg dose). However, the failure of lower doses to produce CTA may have depended on the relatively slow onset of the intoxication, producing an extended interval between the end of cue exposure and the development of malaise or illness. Two pretreatments given 6 and 3 days before the first conditioning session in an experiment using the 2 X 0.25-mg/kg schedule did not affect the development of CTA as measured by a conventional double-bottle test. However, a typical interference effect produced by prior exposure was shown by a substantial acceleration of subsequent CTA extinction in pretreated animals.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Organophosphorus Compounds/toxicity , Animals , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Body Weight/drug effects , Drug Tolerance , Male , Paraoxon/toxicity , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Reinforcement, Psychology , Taste/drug effects , Time Factors
11.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 86(1-2): 81-3, 1985.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3927369

ABSTRACT

Using in rats a Conditioned Taste Aversion (CTA) procedure, chlorpromazine was shown to possess significant US properties at the highest dose tested (8 mg/kg IP repeated four times). In contrast, haloperidol failed to exert a similar effect at a dosage (1.6 mg/kg IP X 4) at least twice as high, in terms of pharmacological activity, as the effective chlorpromazine dosage. These data suggest that the induction of neuroleptic extrapyramidal side effects and the antidopaminergic properties shared by the two drugs may not be responsible for the aversive effect of chlorpromazine. However, it cannot be excluded than haloperidol produces an aversion which is antagonized by some action of the drug not shared by chlorpromazine.


Subject(s)
Chlorpromazine/pharmacology , Haloperidol/pharmacology , Animals , Avoidance Learning , Basal Ganglia Diseases/chemically induced , Chlorpromazine/adverse effects , Conditioning, Classical , Haloperidol/adverse effects , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Receptors, Dopamine/drug effects , Taste
12.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 86(1-2): 96-101, 1985.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3927372

ABSTRACT

Rats were used in two experiments to investigate the influence of social variables on the acquisition of Conditioned Taste Aversion (CTA) to either lithium chloride (10 ml/kg IP of a 0.3-M solution given twice) or chlorpromazine (8 mg/kg IP given four times) and on subsequent extinction. CTA acquisition was not affected by original housing assignment (isolation or paired housing for 15-23 days prior to conditioning), by the shifted social assignment during conditioning, or by the drugged state of the paired animals' partners on drug-scheduled days. However, for both drugs, permanently isolated animals extinguished CTA more slowly than rats housed permanently in pairs. Shifts from isolation to pairing or vice versa failed to alter CTA extinction in the case of lithium, but affected it significantly in chlorpromazine-treated rats. Shifts from isolation to paired housing with an undrugged partner produced faster extinction for lithium than the corresponding group with a drugged partner. For chlorpromazine, the effect of the same shift was exactly the opposite. Overall, the results show that changes in CTA extinction can be a function of social variables.


Subject(s)
Chlorpromazine/pharmacology , Conditioning, Classical , Lithium/pharmacology , Social Isolation , Animals , Avoidance Learning , Extinction, Psychological , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Taste
13.
Neuropharmacology ; 22(9): 1029-37, 1983 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6138726

ABSTRACT

The nicotine discriminative stimulus (cue) has been used to characterize further the underlying receptor mechanisms. Rats were trained to discriminate the effects of nicotine in a standard, two-bar operant conditioning procedure with food reinforcement. Mecamylamine blocked both the discriminative effect of nicotine and the reducing effect on the response-rate. The block of the discriminative effect could not be overcome by increasing the dose of nicotine, whereas the block of the reducing effect on the response-rate could be reversed. Mecamylamine was effective when administered by either the subcutaneous or the intraventricular route, but hexamethonium was inactive by both routes. Mecamylamine, but not hexamethonium, blocked the discriminative effect of the nicotinic cholinergic agonist, cytisine. Methergoline did not block the discriminative effects of nicotine, even in doses considerably larger than those which blocked the discriminative effects of the 5-HT agonist, quipazine. Mecamylamine did not block the effects of quipazine. The results are consistent with the view that the nicotinic cue is mediated primarily through cholinergic receptors, and that 5-HT mechanisms are not involved. The block of the quipazine cue supports the view that the discriminative effects of this drug are mediated through 5-HT receptors.


Subject(s)
Cues , Nicotine/pharmacology , Parasympatholytics/pharmacology , Serotonin Antagonists/pharmacology , Alkaloids/pharmacology , Animals , Azocines , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Hexamethonium , Hexamethonium Compounds/pharmacology , Injections, Intraventricular , Male , Mecamylamine/pharmacology , Metergoline/pharmacology , Quinolizines , Rats
14.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 80(2): 131-7, 1983.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6410441

ABSTRACT

Rats treated with scopolamine (0.5 mg/kg SC daily) during the acquisition of a discrimination task with symmetrical negative reinforcement (light-go, noise/light-no go) showed a learning impairment, with both active and passive avoidance deficits. In the initial stage of such training, however, fewer passive avoidance errors and more active avoidance errors were made by treated animals if active avoidance pretraining had occurred in the no-drug state. A similar experiment using the same stimulus arrangement with asymmetrical reinforcement (no punishment of intertrial, and no go signal, responses) showed a scopolamine effect consisting mainly of increased responding to extinction signals and during intertrial intervals, with little or no active avoidance deficit. Furthermore, interactions due to changes in treatment conditions in successive stages of training were minimized in the latter task, suggesting that the effects of the shift-no shift factor on distribution of errors in the early stages of active-passive avoidance learning were unlikely to have been due to a genuine drug dissociation. Overall, these results and others obtained previously in the same and related tasks tend to rule out some unidimensional explanations of antimuscarinic effects, e.g., response disinhibition (an exclusively motor deficit) or impairment of stimulus sensitivity (an exclusively sensory deficit). The data rather confirm the notion of a sensorimotor drug bias leading to a shift in response prepotencies depending jointly on stimuli, responses, and response consequences. Prior learning history and behavioural compensation for adverse treatment consequences at the reinforcement level may interact with the sensorimotor bias so as to produce "set perseveration" (perseveration of response tendencies).


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Parasympatholytics/pharmacology , Scopolamine/pharmacology , Animals , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
15.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 81(1): 54-60, 1983.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6415731

ABSTRACT

Rats were trained to discriminate nicotine (0.4 mg/kg SC) from saline in a standard two-bar operant conditioning procedure with food reinforcement. The response to nicotine was dose-related and at the ED50 of 0.14 mg/kg, plasma nicotine concentrations were similar to those reported previously for cigarette smokers who inhale. The nicotine analogues anabasine and cytisine increased nicotine-appropriate responding in a dose-related manner. Animals predominantly responded on the saline-associated lever when administered drugs from a range of pharmacological classes, even at doses that were sufficiently large to reduce the overall numbers of responses. The results confirm that the nicotine discriminative stimulus is highly specific. Previous work has shown anabasine and cytisine to be active at nicotinic-cholinergic binding sites in rat brain. The finding that there is some correlation between the behavioural effects of these compounds and their actions at the nicotine binding site may indicate that the nicotine cue is mediated through a cholinergic receptor.


Subject(s)
Discrimination, Psychological/drug effects , Nicotine/pharmacology , Receptors, Cholinergic/drug effects , Animals , Cues , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Interactions , Generalization, Psychological/drug effects , Male , Nicotine/blood , Rats , Time Factors
16.
Neurobehav Toxicol Teratol ; 4(3): 335-45, 1982.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7099354

ABSTRACT

Repeated injection of paraoxon to pretrained rats 2 hr before avoidance sessions, at a dose causing considerable intoxication symptoms and reduction of brain acetylcholinesterase (0.125 mg/kg SC daily), induced marked performance depression followed by progressive development of tolerance. Additional groups treated either after each session (i.e., 23.5 hr before each subsequent session), or treated and not tested, showed a substantial depression when shifted to treatment 2 hr before sessions after achievement of tolerance by the animals tested from the beginning of the experiment at the time of maximal paraoxon effect. This indicates that chronic paraoxon tolerance cannot be ascribed entirely to metabolic and/or physiological changes occurring as a consequence of repeated treatment per se, but must be explained at least in part by postulating a behaviorally augmented (or "learned") component. In an additional experiment chronic paraoxon animals (0.1 mg/kg SC daily) were indistinguishable from control rats with respect to acquisition of light/go, noise-light/no go discrimination, i.e., of an active-passive avoidance task known to be highly sensitive to the disrupting (response-disinhibiting) effect of antimuscarinics. Therefore, the enhanced sensitivity to antimuscarinics in organophosphate tolerant rats, which is usually ascribed to cholinergic receptor changes, does not appear to be associated with a spontaneous "antimuscarinic-like" syndrome.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Cholinesterase Inhibitors , Paraoxon/pharmacology , Animals , Brain/drug effects , Brain/enzymology , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Tolerance , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
17.
Neurobehav Toxicol Teratol ; 3(3): 331-8, 1981.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7290288

ABSTRACT

The time course of avoidance depression induced by DFP and Paraoxon in rats was measured in four experiments using sublethal doses which induced approximately equivalent changes at the time for maximal behavioral depression (3 hr after 1.1 mg/kg DPF or 0.25 mg/kg Paraoxon SC). The trends obtained with pretrained animals intoxicated for the first time, and not tested during the period between treatment and testing at any given interval (3, 8, 13, 18, and 24 hr after injection), served as baselines to assess (1) proactive consequences of one or more avoidance sessions on subsequent measurements, and (2) sensitivity changes upon repetition of treatment with the same or the other agent after a 5-week resting period. The changes in the time course of avoidance depression due to these factors were generally unimpressive. Some of the interactions observe, however, provided direct or indirect evidence (1) for an enhanced residual depression at long post-treatment intervals upon repetition of organophosphate intoxication; (2) for a proactive impairing effect sometimes appearing after behavioral testing at the time of maximal depression (3 hr), when total or near-total avoidance failure causes extensive exposure to shock; and (3) for a proactive facilitating effect sometimes appearing after testing at a time of moderate avoidance impairment (8 hr), which may be ascribed to behaviorally augmented tolerance ("learned" tolerance).


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Isoflurophate/pharmacology , Paraoxon/pharmacology , Animals , Depression, Chemical , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Reinforcement Schedule , Time Factors
18.
Biochem Exp Biol ; 13(3): 305-9, 1977.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16296013

ABSTRACT

In conclusion, an estimate of the intracranial volumetric effects produced in anesthetized dogs by histamine, acetylcholine and CO2 shows that, on a basis of equiactivity on CBF, the effects of histamine on the intracranial content are twice greater than those produced by acetylcholine and CO2. This difference may be explained by a greater activity of histamine on the intracranial capacitance vessels and/or by an increase in the fluid escape from blood to the brain produced by histamine. Data obtained after the production of an acute, cold induced brain lesion support the second possibility.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier/physiopathology , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Cerebrovascular Circulation/physiology , Acetylcholine/pharmacology , Animals , Cerebrospinal Fluid Pressure/drug effects , Cerebrovascular Circulation/drug effects , Cold Temperature , Dogs , Histamine/pharmacology , Hypercapnia/physiopathology , Vascular Capacitance/physiology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...