Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 1676, 2018 01 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29374211

ABSTRACT

Type III solar radio bursts are the Sun's most intense and frequent nonthermal radio emissions. They involve two critical problems in astrophysics, plasma physics, and space physics: how collective processes produce nonthermal radiation and how magnetic reconnection occurs and changes magnetic energy into kinetic energy. Here magnetic reconnection events are identified definitively in Solar Dynamics Observatory UV-EUV data, with strong upward and downward pairs of jets, current sheets, and cusp-like geometries on top of time-varying magnetic loops, and strong outflows along pairs of open magnetic field lines. Type III bursts imaged by the Murchison Widefield Array and detected by the Learmonth radiospectrograph and STEREO B spacecraft are demonstrated to be in very good temporal and spatial coincidence with specific reconnection events and with bursts of X-rays detected by the RHESSI spacecraft. The reconnection sites are low, near heights of 5-10 Mm. These images and event timings provide the long-desired direct evidence that semi-relativistic electrons energized in magnetic reconnection regions produce type III radio bursts. Not all the observed reconnection events produce X-ray events or coronal or interplanetary type III bursts; thus different special conditions exist for electrons leaving reconnection regions to produce observable radio, EUV, UV, and X-ray bursts.

2.
Clin Neuropathol ; 12(4): 179-83, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8403625

ABSTRACT

A 31-year-old overweight man, suffering from high-blood pressure, was hospitalized for transient fits and hemiparesis. MRI disclosed a large irregular mass affecting the vault, meninges and invading the parietal lobe. At neurosurgery, the lesion was necrotic, hemorrhagic and poorly demarcated from the surrounding brain. Histopathology revealed a benign Langerhans cell histiocytosis. No other systemic nor organic lesions could be discovered. After additional local radiotherapy, the patient recovered completely and regained normal activities 6 months later.


Subject(s)
Brain/pathology , Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell/pathology , Adult , Follow-Up Studies , Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell/surgery , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male
3.
Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol ; 42(5): 640-55, 1977 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-67024

ABSTRACT

The mechanism of precipitation of generalized epileptiform discharges in feline generalized penicillin epilepsy, a model of human generalized corticoreticular ('centrencephalic') epilepsy, was studied in acute and chronic experiments in cats with implanted skull and intracerebral electrodes. Single shock and low frequency repetitive stimulation of subcortical sites from which prior to penicillin administration spindle activity and recruiting responses could be elicited, readily triggered epileptiform discharges in the same animals after penicillin. These structures comprised the intralaminar and midline thalamic nuclei, the neostriatum, and some posterior thalamic association nuclei (Pulvinar and nucleus lateralis posterior). Subcortical and cortical structures which prior to penicillin elicited neither spindle activity nor recruiting responses were significantly less effective in triggering generalized epileptic bursts after penicillin injection. The probability with which such bursts were elicited from these structures was still, however, in many instances above chance level. It is concluded that the generalized epileptiform discharges in feline generalized penicillin epilepsy can be triggered from a large number of brain sites, but most reliably so from subcortical nuclei involved in spindle generation and recruiting responses. The experimental evidence presented still does not allow one to determine whether epileptic alteration of neuronal function in this form of epilepsy primarily resides in cortical or subcortical nerve cells or in both.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Electroencephalography , Penicillin G/administration & dosage , Seizures/chemically induced , Animals , Cats , Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Disease Models, Animal , Gyrus Cinguli/physiopathology , Injections, Intramuscular , Male , Penicillin G/toxicity , Thalamic Nuclei/physiopathology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...