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  • 2020-2023
  • 1975-1979  (133)
  • 1965-1969  (55)
  • 1930-1934
  • 1920-1924
  • Cat
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 382 (1979), S. 51-55 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Cerebellectomy ; Vestibuloocular reflex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of cerebellectomy on the semi-circular canal evoked responses recorded from individual vertical and oblique eye muscles were studied in cats anesthetized with Ketamine. The phase lag relative angular acceleration of the electromyographic response was consistantly smaller over the frequency range tested (0.02–1.0 Hz) in cerebellectomized than in intact animals. This finding indicates that the time constant of the central, neural integrator was shifted towards smaller values by the lesion. This was also suggested when the vertical eye movements generated by rotation about the pitch axis were recorded in the fully alert animal. In addition, the EOG data show that the phase of the VOR in the low frequency range was not altered following cerebellectomy suggesting that the macular influences were still present. When the EMG responses of the superior oblique (SO) and superior rectus (SR) muscles were studied in their presumed main mode, i.e. roll-canal and pitch-canal, respectively, no difference was noted in hemicerebellectomized animals when compared to intact control animals. However, when SO and SR were studied in pitch-canal and roll-canal rotation, respectively, dramatic changes in the response pattern were noted in lesioned animals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 34 (1979), S. 241-261 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Locomotion ; Central generator ; Cat ; Deafferentation ; Spinal cord
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A central network of neurones in the spinal cord has been shown to produce a rhythmic motor output similar to locomotion after suppression of all afferent inflow. The experiments were performed mainly in acute spinal cats (th. 12), which had received DOPA i.v. and the monoamine oxidase inhibitor Nialamide. In some preparations all dorsal roots supplying the spinal cord were transected, in others phasic afferent activity was suppressed by curarization. The activity was recorded as neurograms from nerve filaments or as electromyograms. It is concluded that: 1. alternating activity between flexors and extensors of foot, ankle, knee, and hip of one limb can still occur 2. the duration of the flexor discharges vary less with the cycle duration than the extensor discharges 3. different flexor muscles may retain individual patterns 4. the activity at different joints can be dissociated 5. there is at least one network for each limb 6. the coordination between the two hindlimbs can be alternating as in walking or be more closely spaced as in galloping 7. alternating activity in the ankle remains even when only segments L6, L7 and S1 are intact.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 155 (1979), S. 323-331 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Telencephalon ; Choroid plexus ; Lateral ventricle ; Blood vessels ; Micro Corrosion cast ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Corrosion casts of the complete vascular network of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle in the cat brain were studied in SEM using the injection-replication method. The villi of this plexus are located only on its supero-anterior and infero-posterior parts, being most densely packed in the former region, close to the interventricular foramen. The capillaries of the villi display small nodular thickenings, which suggest the presence of small, sinusoidal dilatations. The main vessel supplying the plexus with blood is the anterior choroidal artery. The plexus is also characterized by a particularly rich venous network, which is drained by a prominent (main) choroid vein. The vascular organization of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle in cat is compared to that of the corresponding plexuses in other mammals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 37 (1979), S. 177-181 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Autoradiography ; Abducens nucleus ; Primary vestibular fibers
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Primary vestibular projections to the ipsilateral abducens nucleus were found in cats by injecting anterograde tracer substances (radioactive proline and fucose) into Scarpa's ganglion. Labelling was observed in the rostral and middle portion of the abducens nucleus.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 37 (1979), S. 405-416 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Purkinje Cells ; Splanchnic mechanoreceptors ; Cat ; Cervelet ; Cellules Purkinje ; Mécanorécepteurs splanchniques ; Chat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Les activités simple et complexe de cellules de Purkinje du cervelet du Chat (zone vermienne des lobules V et VI) ont été enregistrées au moyen de microélectrodes extracellulaires. Ces réponses étaient obtenues par stimulation de différents types de mécanorécepteurs du tractus gastro-intestinal: récepteurs musculaires connectés à des fibres C, récepteurs péritonéaux de mouvement connectés à des fibres Aγδ ou B, corpuscules de Pacini connectés à des fibres Aβ. Les caractéristiques des fibres splanchniques projetant sur cette aire cérébelleuse ont été définies. Des convergences splanchno-somatiques, splanchno-viscérales et splanchno-corticales ont été mises en évidence.
    Notes: Summary Climbing and mossy fibre activity in Purkinje cells of cat cerebellum (vermis part of lobules V and VI) were recorded by means of extracellular microelectrodes. Responses were obtained by stimulation of different types of mechanoreceptors in the gastro-intestinal tract: muscular receptors connected with C fibres, peritoneal movement receptors connected with Aγδ or B fibres, Pacinian corpuscules connected with Aβ fibres. The characteristics of the splanchnic fibre projections on this cerebellar area were defined. Splanchno-somatic, splanchno-visceral, and splanchno-cortical convergences were demonstrated.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 34 (1979), S. 197-200 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Claustrum ; Visual cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Visual cortex, including areas 17, 18, and sometimes 19, was injected with tritiated leucine. Terminal labelling could be detected by autoradiography in the dorsocaudal part of the ipsilateral claustrum in all cases.
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Psychopharmacology 63 (1979), S. 151-153 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Discriminative stimulus properties ; Psychomotor stimulants ; Cat ; d-Amphetamine ; Clozapine ; Cocaine ; Morphine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Cats were trained to choose between two levers of an operant chamber using interoceptive cues provided by d-amphetamine or saline as the discriminative stimuli. Following training, stimulus generalization was observed to additional doses of d-amphetamine and cocaine, but not to morphine. Clozapine blocked the generalization of the drug discrimination response to d-amphetamine, but had no effect on generalization to cocaine. These data indicate that discriminative stimulus properties of psychomotor stimulants, previously described in rats, are similar in cats.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 48 (1979), S. 55-58 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Lafora-like bodies ; Morphogenesis ; Glycogen metabolism ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Lafora-like bodies in an 8-year-old cat were studied light and electron microscopically and histochemically. In addition to Lafora-like bodies composed of branching filaments, glycogen granules and electron-dense materials, abnormal accumulations of glycogen granules attracted attention. The most remarkable features were the developmental processes of the branching filaments originating directly from glycogen granules. Lafora-like bodies in the present study showed ultrastructural, histochemical, and enzymatic similarities to those described in the previous reports in Lafora's disease, glycogenosis and other cases. From these results, a certain disturbance of the glycogen metabolism is considered to be probably related to the productive mechanism of Lafora-like bodies.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 34 (1979), S. 273-286 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Stimulus velocity ; Single cell responses ; LGN ; Area 17 ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Neuronal responses to moving visual stimuli were recorded in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and area 17 of cats. Response duration (DE), number of spikes (NT), and mean frequency (FM) were estimated from the response histograms and analysed for their dependence on stimulus velocity. In the LGN, for about 2/3 of cells these response parameters changed monotonically with velocity up to about 100 °/s. In 1/3 of the cells, the response frequency was tuned to velocity. The speed at which individual cells reached a peak or plateau firing rate was correlated with their receptive field size. In area 17, most neurones were tuned to velocity. Nine out of 59 cells were insensitive to stimulus speed in that they responded equally well at stimulus velocities up to about 10 °/s. The results suggest that at higher levels in the nervous system information about velocity is represented in discrete groups of neurones. It is pointed out that different response parameters may be relevant for different perceptual phenomena associated with movement. The significance of integrational properties and lateral inhibition of nerve cells for the development of complex response properties is discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Thermoreceptors ; Gastro-intestinal tract ; Vagal nerve ; C Fibres ; Cat ; Thermorecepteurs ; Tractus gastro ; Intestinal ; Nerf vague ; Fibres amyéliniques ; Chat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Chez des chats anesthésiés, des décharges sensitives vagales ont été enregistrées dans le ganglion plexiforme à l'aide d'électrodes extracellulaires en verre. Nous avons trouvé au niveau de l'antre et du duodénum, des récepteurs toniques, activés par des solutions chaudes (38–51 ° C avec un optimum à 46–49 ° C) ou froides (36–10 ° C avec un optimum à 12–10 ° C). Ces récepteurs ne répondent ni aux stimulus mécaniques (compression et distension des viscères), ni aux stimulus chimiques (perfusion avec des solutions glucosées ou acides). Ces récepteurs n'appartiennent donc pas au groupe des récepteurs polymodaux, mais ils doivent être considérés comme de véritables thermorécepteurs spécifiquement sensibles au chaud ou au froid. Les thermorécepteurs de la région gastro-duodénale sont connectés à des fibres vagales amyéliniques (vitesse de conduction: 0,8–1,4 m/s). Par ailleurs, le rôle éventuel des thermorécepteurs vagaux de la région gastro-duodénale dans la régulation de la motilité digestive a été recherché. En dérivant simultanément l'EMG en plusieurs points du tractus gastro-duodénal, il a été possible de démontrer que les stimulations froides et chaudes du duodénum, qui mettent en jeu les thermorécepteurs, provoquent une inhibition de l'activité électrique de l'antre. Les modifications persistent apèrs bisplanchnectomie, mais disparaissent complètement après bivagotomie. A partir de ces faits, nous en avons conclu que les thermorécepteurs vagaux sont impliqués dans la régulation nerveuse de la motilité gastro-duodénale.
    Notes: Summary In anaesthetized cats, sensory vagal units were recorded in the nodose ganglion by means of extracellular glass microelectrodes. In the antrum and the duodenum we have found receptors tonically activated by warm (38–51 ° C with an optimum at 46–49 ° C) or cold (36–10 ° C with an optimum at 12–10 ° C) solutions. These receptors did not respond to mechanical stimuli (compression and distension of the viscera) and to chemical ones (perfusion with glucose and acid solutions). Thus they did not belong to polymodal type, but they must be considered as true thermoreceptors, specifically sensitive to warm or cold stimulations. The gastro-duodenal thermoreceptors were connected to non-medullated vagal fibres (conduction velocity: 0.8–1.4 m/s). On the other hand, the role of the gastro-duodenal vagal thermoreceptors in the regulation of the digestive motility was studied. By using several electromyographic recordings, it was possible to show that the cold and warm stimulations of the duodenum which elicited thermoreceptor responses, induced an inhibition of the electrical activity of the antrum. The changes persisted after bisplanchnectomy, but disappeared completely after bivagotomy. From these facts it was concluded that the vagal thermoreceptors were involved in the nervous regulations of the gastro-duodenal motility.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cooling ; Ventrolateral thalamic nucleus ; Pyramidal system ; Reaction time ; Ballistic movement ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Five cats were trained to perform a forelimb ballistic flexion on a reaction time paradigm including an upper limit of about 400 ms for reinforcement (food pellets). They were implanted with a cyrogenic probe thermically insulated, except at the tip, by a vacuum jacket (outer diameter, 1.1 mm). Four cats had the probe inserted into the ventrolateral thalamic nucleus (VL), contralateral to the moving limb. During cooling they showed increased reaction times, which remained constant throughout daily sessions performed during many weeks, independent of the foreperiod but varying from 25 to 100 ms according to the subject. The temperatures used to upset the reaction times varied from +10 ° C to −8 ° C, depending on the localisation of the probe and on the insulation of the silver tip used to prevent nervous tissue reaction, but for each subject the reaction times always increased when the temperature was lowered. The fifth cat, with a probe inserted between VL and the Centre Median, showed a decrease of reaction times on cooling to 0 ° C and an increase of the reaction times for a cooling at −10 ° C. For one of the four cats with a probe properly inserted into the VL, strain-gauges were stuck on the lever to measure the latency of the decrease of the pressure exerted by the subject when the subject initiated the forelimb flexion in response to the CS. Reaction times and latencies of pressure changes were closely correlated with the movement onset, and they were equally delayed during cooling. This result demonstrates that it is not by slowing down movement velocity that reaction times are upset during VL cooling but by delaying the movement onset.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Retractor bulbi motoneurones ; Accessory abducens nucleus ; 6th nerve ; Oculomotricity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Motoneurones innervating the retractor bulbi muscle in the cat have been identified by retrograde labelling with horseradish peroxidase, by intracellular recording and by intracellular staining with horseradish peroxidase. Their somata are found in an accessory abducens nucleus, analogous to that described in some other species, which consists of a narrow column of cells situated in the lateral tegmental reticular field, above the superior olive and medial to the facial nerve. This column of cells extends over approximately 1.5 mm from P 5.5 to P 7. The retractor bulbi motoneurones number from 80 to 120 and have large, elongated somata which give rise to five or six major dendrites. Their axons cross the reticular formation in a dorso-medial direction to pass through the principal abducens nucleus before turning to leave the brain stem in the 6th nerve. Antidromic latencies ranged from 0.4 to 0.7 ms. Some retractor bulbi motoneurones could also be activated antidromically by stimulation of the lateral rectus muscle nerve.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 13
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 25-36 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Retinal ganglion cells ; Cat ; Contrast reversal stimulus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A contrast reversal (alternating phase) stimulus was used to study the responses of 150 retinal ganglion cells from 15 adult cats. Because the majority of the cells did not show perfect linear spatial summation, a ratio of the firing rates at two time periods was used to express the degree of nonlinearity. Y-cells showed a high degree of nonlinearity, and their mean null ratio was significantly lower than that of X-cells. With the stimulus at the null position, X-cells had an unmodulated discharge rate which was significantly higher than maintained activity, while the firing rate of Y-cells was lower than maintained activity. With the stimulus placed at an eccentric position in the receptive field, X-cells responded in a sustained manner, while Y-cells respond transiently. Because of these observations, we conclude that X-cells correspond to the sustained cells, while Y-cells correspond to the transient cells.
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  • 14
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 161-175 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebral cortex ; Superior colliculus ; Cat ; Horseradish peroxidase method
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The retrograde labeling of cortical neurons with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used to investigate the morphological features of neurons in various cortical areas projecting to the superior colliculus in the cat. Corticotectal cells were found to be labeled in layer V of the entire cerebral cortex. The number of labeled cells and their locations varied according to the sites of injections of HRP in the colliculus. Most of the Corticotectal cells identified in the present study were small (9–20 μm in diameter, 66%) and medium (20–40 urn, 30%) pyramidal neurons and only 4% of them were large (more than 40 μm). The labeled cells, 261 in total number, had somal diameters of 20.8±8.0 μm (mean and SD). The range of sizes of the labeled neurons was different in different cortical areas. For example, the labeled neurons in the Clare-Bishop area had a greater proportion of large diameter cells than in other areas. The present findings are largely in agreement with the previous data of anterograde degeneration methods with respect to the topographical correlation of the Corticotectal projections. However, in some cortical areas, e.g., the sensorimotor and the first visual (area 17) cortex of the lateral surface of the hemisphere, relatively small numbers of Corticotectal neurons appear to have been labeled by retrogradely transported HRP. The sparsity of the labeled neurons in certain cortical areas may reflect the existence of Corticotectal neurons with axon collaterals supplying brain structures other than the superior colliculus.
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  • 15
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 269-285 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebral cortex ; Pontine nuclei ; Cat ; Horseradish peroxidase method
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injections in various portions of the cat pontine nuclei resulted in retrograde labeling of neurons in layer V of the ipsilateral cerebral cortex. Corticopontine neurons, pyramidal in type, have been found to be labeled in the entire cortex, confirming the previous findings of anterograde degeneration studies. Most (91%) of the labeled cells were 14–26 μm in diameter (mean 19.4±4.5 μm SD). Small (10–20 μm) and medium (20–40 μm) cells represent 51.5% and 47.7%, respectively, of the total number of the labeled neurons. The populations of the neurons of various sizes were almost identical in different cortical areas, and were different from the populations of corticoreticular and corticospinal cells. Corticopontine cells were well labeled in experimental cases of 3-days' survival time, confirming the topographical organization established previously by degeneration studies for this projection system. However, in cases of shorter survival time (20–27 h), the number of labeled neurons was very small. The relative paucity of labeled Corticopontine neurons in the sigmoid and lateral gyri is discussed with reference to other cortical descending neurons (e.g., the corticotectal, corticoreticular and corticospinal) which have hitherto been identified morphologically as well as physiologically.
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  • 16
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 395-406 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Spinal cord ; Phrenic motoneurons ; Neuron geometry ; Horseradish peroxidase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cat phrenic motoneurons, labeled by intradiaphragmatic injection of horseradish peroxidase, formed a tight cluster in the most ventral portion of the ventral horn in lamina IX of the lower cervical cord. Cell counts were symmetrically distributed for 17 to 21 mm along the longitudinal axis of the cord with a unimodal peak at the junction of segments C5 and C6. The phrenic nucleus was bilaterally organized on either side of the cord with anatomical symmetry and in no case was there evidence for the crossing of phrenic axons in the cord. Assessment of cellular geometry and intercellular relationships demonstrated that phrenic cell diameters approximated a normal distribution with a single peak at 26 μm while longitudinal cell lengths averaged 76 μm. Cells of different size were mixed randomly at all levels of the nucleus. The minimum distance between cells was about 10 μm and the maximum cell packing density approached 2 cells per 106 μm3. The results confirm the location of the cat phrenic nucleus, extend the knowledge of phrenic motoneuronal geometry, and provide an anatomical basis for the understanding of recruitment and synchronization phenomena within the phrenic nucleus.
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  • 17
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 465-477 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Monkey ; Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Visual nondominant suppression
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We have studied the suppression of firing in single LGN cells of cat and monkey in response to visual stimulation of the nondominant eye. In the cat LGN most of the cells of each of the main laminae show this nondominat suppression. X cells having their dominant input from the ipsilateral eye were suppressed to a significantly greater degree than any other cell type in the cat LGN. In the monkey LGN nondominant suppression was absent in all 19 X-like cells studied, whereas 6 of 21 Y-like cells showed nondominant suppression. Thus nondominant suppression is present in the magnocellular laminae of the monkey LGN, where the Y-like cells are found, but appears to be absent from the parvocellular laminae, where the X-like cells are found.
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  • 18
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 479-494 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Thermosensitivity ; Lesions ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The behavioural thermosensitivity of cat paws was examined before and/or after restricted uni- and/or bilateral lesions had been made in the spinal cord between the first and fifth cervical segments. Unilateral lesions of the lateral funiculus, which involved at least its whole width at the level of the central canal, reproducibly were found to interfere with the contralateral sensitivity for temperature increases and/or decreases. No corresponding thermosensory deficiencies were found after unilateral lesions involving the ventral spinal quadrant or the dorsal funiculus. Various bilateral and combined lesions were made, but no cat ever developed thermoanaesthesia. The bilateral lesions included bilateral transections of: the middle parts of the lateral funiculi, the dorsal halves of the lateral funiculi, the dorsal funiculi, and the ventral spinal half. Most of our knowledge about peripheral behavioural thermosensitivity after spinal cord injury is based on observations of human patients, especially after anterolateral chordotomies. The present finding of contralateral thermosensory deficiencies after lesions of the middle part of the lateral funiculus fits with some of the clinical reports. The present failure to cause thermoanaesthesia, on the other hand, is inconsistent with the theory of a single ascending spinal pathway for behavioural thermo-sensitivity, which has emanated mainly from the clinical observations.
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  • 19
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 35 (1979), S. 495-510 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pretectal nuclei ; Superior colliculus ; Visual response pattern ; Retinal input types ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single unit recordings from 220 units were obtained from the nuclei praetectalis anterior (NPA) and posterior (NPP) of 30 immobilized, anesthetized cats. Quantitative analysis of pretectal (PT) visual activity was mainly based on recordings from the NPP. For comparison, 160 collicular (CS) neurons were studied. A strong sensitivity for moving objects was evident in both samples. The following main types of PT activity were categorized: (A) slow movement, direction-selective units (21%); (B) slow movement, nondirection-selective units (19%); (C) units nonselective for stimulus velocity and direction (24%); (D) jerk movement selective, nondirection-selective units (36%). Latency measurements following single shocks to optic chiasm (OX) and tract (OT) showed mainly slow conducting fiber input to the PT and CS which can be divided into two different groups by conduction properties and synaptic delay: direct W-input and delayed W-input. Fast Y-fiber input of both types, direct and indirect, was recorded at both sites, PT and CS.
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  • 20
    Electronic Resource
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 36 (1979), S. 191-194 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hypercomplex cells ; Area 18 ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single unit recording has revealed the same orientation sensitive cell classes in cat area 18 as are to be found in area 17. These include particularly the various types of hypercomplex cell belonging to the S, C, and B cell families.
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  • 21
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 36 (1979), S. 285-300 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: VL nucleus ; Single units ; Reaction time ; Movement initiation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Unrestrained cats performed ballistic forelimb flexion movements triggered by an auditory stimulus (CS) on a simple reaction time (RT) paradigm. During the variable foreperiod the subject was required to hold down a lever and to release it on presentation of the CS. The RTs ranged from 200 to 300 ms. The activity of single neurons of the ventrolateral nucleus of the thalamus (VL) was recorded bilaterally. More than 40% of the 166 units recorded in the VL contralateral to the performing limb presented, after the CS, changes of activity with a latency less than 100 ms and were classified into three types: (1) Twenty-five units had a short latency transient increase of activity 10 to 30 ms after the CS, followed by a longer increase or decrease in activity. Short latency increase as well as subsequent increase of the firing rate were not correlated to the RTs. (2) Twenty-nine units showed a 40–60 ms latency increase of activity which lasted long enough to continue during the forelimb movement. These units displayed a correlation between the RTs and the mean firing rate measured in the 40–100 ms period after the CS. The more the cells were activated, the shorter the RTs. (3) Fifteen units presented a reciprocal pattern of discharge with respect to the type (2) units. The firing rate decreased with latencies ranging from 20 to 90 ms after the CS. Only 14,5% of the 96 units recorded in the VL ipsilateral to the performing limb presented changes of activity starting in the 100 ms period following the CS. Background firing levels as well as phasic activity were rather low compared to those observed contralaterally. Sixteen units showed burst activity while the cat was performing but burst pattern was not time-related to the task. In an unconditioned animal, a very low level of activity and an absence of modulations were observed in both VLs.
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  • 22
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 37 (1979), S. 41-47 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye alignment ; Cat ; Visual experience ; Maturation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the developing kitten, the alignment of the pupils changes from strongly divergent to almost parallel. The visual axes, however, seem to stay almost parallel throughout this period. The influence of early visual experience on this development is examined in the present study. The results suggest that the development of eye alignment is not controlled by visual experience, but depends on maturational processes, and that normal visual input serves only to halt these processes at the appropriate time.
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  • 23
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    Experimental brain research 37 (1979), S. 609-613 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Orientation subunits ; Visual cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The orientation domain in the cortical visual areas of anesthetized cats has been investigated by employing the 14C-Deoxyglucose technique (Sokoloff et al., 1977). Orientation subunits (OS) are seen in the first (V1), the second (V2) and the third visual area (V3) as well as in the visual areas of the suprasylvian sulcus. In the latter regions OS are less elaborated than in V1, V2, and V3. The OS are continuous through all cortical layers; in V1 however, only weak label is detected in layer 4C. In V1, V2, and V3 the width of the OS is about 0.4 mm and the average distance between two OS centers is 0.9 mm. The spatial pattern of the OS seems to be more regular in the visual field periphery than in regions representing the vertical meridian.
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1435-1463
    Keywords: Cat ; electrical stimulation ; serotonin ; splanchnic nerves ; substance P
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The blood levels of serotonin (5-HT) and substance P (SP) in the portal vein were studied after splanchnic nerve stimulation in the cat. The portal levels of both substances were studied before, during and after splanchnic nerve stimulation. There was a twofold increase in 5-HT during stimulation whilst the SP concentration remained unchanged. These results suggest that the nervous control of the amine release into the portal stream and the mechanism that regulates the release of the polypeptide is not the same.
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  • 25
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    European archives of oto-rhino-laryngology and head & neck 222 (1979), S. 113-118 
    ISSN: 1434-4726
    Keywords: Brain-stem electric response (BSER) ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The early auditory evoked responses have been studied in bilaterally hearing cats, and in animals with hereditary unilateral anacusis. Cross-over stimulation of the hearing ear occurs at an interaural attenuation of 50-50 dB, and all six waves of the responsare present at supra-threshold stimulus levels.
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  • 26
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    Cell & tissue research 196 (1979), S. 175-179 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Thalamo-cortical projection ; Anteroventral nucleus ; HRP retrograde transport ; Golgi impregnation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Neurons displaying a thalamo-cortical projection were marked by means of the retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and the labeled elements were compared with neurons impregnated by the Golgi technique. Injections of HRP into the posterior area of the limbic cortex resulted in its uptake by various anterior thalamic nuclei, especially the anteroventral nucleus. HRP-positive cells are characterized by their position, dendritic orientation, and the shape and size of their somata. On the basis of the combined HRP- and Golgi-analysis three different types of thalamo-cortical relay neurons can be distinguished.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Thalamus ; Horseradish peroxidase ; Golgi-impregnation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Afferent connections to the ventrobasal complex (VB) of the thalamus were studied by means of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and by the Golgi-method. After HRP-injection into the VB, peroxidase-positive cells were observed contralaterally in the dorsal column nuclei (DCN), in the trigeminal nuclei and in the lateral cervical nucleus (LCN), and ipsilaterally in the somatosensory I (SI) and II (SII) cortical areas. Labeled cells of different shape and size were compared with neurons impregnated by the Golgi-technique. On the basis of HRP-labeling it is concluded that cells projecting to the VB are different in size and shape even within one region and that they correspond to the relay or efferent neurons observed in the Golgimaterial.
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  • 28
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    Cell & tissue research 196 (1979), S. 117-122 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Vasopressin neurons ; Oxytocin neurons ; Immunocytochemistry ; Magnocellular neuroendocrine system ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Our immunocytochemical investigation of the magnocellular neuroendocrine cells in the cat hypothalamus reveals a mixture of vasopressin (VP)- and oxytocin (OT)-containing neurons in the supraoptic (NSO), the paraventricular (NPV) and in five accessory nuclei (NAC). We describe the lateral hypothalamic nucleus (NLH), a new accessory nucleus, lying at the junction of the internal capsule and pallidum, and possibly involved in drinking behavior. Previously characterized incompletely in mammals, the four other accessory nuclei consist of the circularis (NC), anterior fornical (NAF), posterior fornical (NPF) and retrochiasmatic (NRC). The two peptidergic cell types, VP and OT, are equally mixed in the NPV and the NAC, but in the NSO VP neurons predominate. The perikarya of these VP and OT neurons do not show distinct morphological differences at the level of light microscopy. The organization of magnocellular neurosecretory neurons in the cat hypothalamus closely resembles that described in other mammals with the exception of the unique presence of the lateral hypothalamic accessory nucleus.
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  • 29
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Ergolenes ; Rat brain ; Dopamine ; Noradrenaline ; Serotonin ; PGO waves ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of the ergolene derivatives bromocriptine, dihydroergotoxine, methysergide, d-LSD, CF 25-397, and 29-712 on the metabolism of the biogenic amines in the brain of the rat were investigated. All six ergolene derivatives were found to increase the concentration of 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenylethylene glycol sulphate in the brain stem, i.e., to increase the turnover of noradrenaline (NA). Since in brain homogenates the agents inhibited the binding of 3H-dihydroergocryptine to α-adrenoceptors, but only weakly inhibited the binding of 3H-alprenolol to β-adrenoceptors, it is suggested that the increased turnover of NA may be a consequence of a blockade of α-adrenoceptors by ergolenes. All of the ergolenes increased the concentration of serotonin (5-HT) in the cortex, but only bromocriptine and 29-712 increased the concentration of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), the other compounds decreasing the concentration of this metabolite, i.e., inhibiting 5-HT turnover. Reserpine-induced PGO waves in the cat were inhibited by all six compounds, bromocriptine and 29-712 being the least active. Both of these findings suggest that the ergolenes possess serotonergic activity. The increase in the concentration of 5-HIAA after bromocriptine and 29-712 may be secondary to some action on other systems. The actions of the ergolenes on the metabolism of dopamine (DA) in the striatum are more complex. Bromocriptine, 29-712, and, to a much lesser extent, dihydroergotoxine reduced the concentration of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), i.e., they inhibited DA turnover. These findings are compatible with the proposed dopaminergic activity of the drugs. CF 25-397 caused a slight increase in the DOPAC concentration at high doses, and d-LSD and methysergide caused pronounced increases. At doses below 1 mg/kg i.p., d-LSD decreased the DOPAC concentration. This biphasic effect of d-LSD may be due to interaction with different types of DA receptors or may reflect some secondary action of the compound. The profiles of activity of the various ergolenes are discussed. Bromocriptine and 29-712, wich have similar profiles of activity, can be clearly differentiated from the other ergolenes. CF 25-397 seems to be a potent and, at low doses, specific serotonergic drug.
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  • 30
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    Psychopharmacology 58 (1978), S. 27-33 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Clobazam ; Diazepam ; Spinal polysynaptic reflexes ; Visual evoked potentials ; Computer EEG analysis ; Cat ; Rabbit
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of the new 1,5-benzodiazepine clobazam on visual evoked potentials (VEP) and spontaneous EEG in the conscious rabbit and on spinal polysynaptic reflexes in the decerebrated cat was studied in comparison to the 1,4-benzodiazepine diazepam. Clobazam was half as potent as diazepam in depressing the amplitude of visual evoked potentials in the nonanaesthetized rabbit, whereas the depressing effect on spinal polysynaptic reflexes in the decerebrated cat was only 1/7–1/30 of the diazepam effect. The action of clobazam and diazepam on VEP also showed differences in time course, i.e., the peak effect of clobazam lasted from 1 to 6 h after application, whereas the effect of diazepam appeared after 10min and declined already after 1 h. Both compounds had similar effects on computer-analyzed spontaneous EEG in the rabbit (power spectrum analysis), with an increase of power in the beta-band (13–39 Hz) and a decrease in the alpha (8–13 Hz) and theta (4–8 Hz) bands.
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  • 31
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    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 302 (1978), S. 239-254 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Myocardial α-adrenoceptors ; Rat ; Guinea pig ; Cat ; Hypothyroidism ; Single adrenoceptor type
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The presence and distribution of myocardial α-adrenoceptors in different parts of the heart of various mammalian species was investigated. For this reason experiments were performed in isolated cardiac preparations of rats, guinea pigs and cats. In order to obtain more information about the nature of the cardiac α-adrenoceptors additional experiments were undertaken at different temperatures. These studies were aimed to show whether or not a conversion of β-to α-adrenoceptors or vice versa takes place. Moreover, we analyzed the influence of hypothyroidism on the sensitivity of α- and β-adrenoceptors of preparations from rats fed with propylthiouracil. Finally, we tried to find out whether stimulation of these α-adrenoceptors leads to the formation of the cyclic nucleotides cAMP and cGMP. The following results were obtained: 1. In right ventricular strips of rats, guinea pigs and cats phenylephrine stimulated α-adrenoceptors. After blockade of β-adrenoceptors the respective pD2-values of phenylephrine were 5.32, 5.99 and 5.33. The doseresponse curves obtained in the presence of α-adrenolytic drugs were shifted to the right without depression of the maximum. In the rat, in addition, the pA2-values for the α-adrenolytic drugs yohimbine (5.79) and phentolamine (7.85) were determined. They were at least 0.5 log units higher than those found in the rat for other α-adrenoceptors (Van Rossum, 1965) thus supporting the view that the population of cardiac α-adrenoceptors is different from that of other organs. In left ventricular strips of guinea pigs the pD2-value for the α-mimetic effect of phenylephrine was of the same order of magnitude as that obtained in the right ventricle. 2. In the papillary muscle of the right ventricle of guinea pigs and cats phenylephrine stimulated α-adrenoceptors. 3. In the left atrium of the rat, phenylephrine stimulated myocardial α-adrenoceptors (pD2: 5.58). Also in this preparation the pA2-values for yohimbine (6.36) and phentolamine (8.21) were different from those found for other α-adrenoceptors in the rat (Van Rossum, 1965). Likewise in strips from the left atrium of the cat myocardial α-adrenoceptors are present. 4. In spontaneously beating right atria of the rat a clear-cut positive chronotropic effect mediated by stimulation of α-adrenoceptors could not be demonstrated although in 6 out of 15 preparations a small positive chronotropic effect became evident. No positive chronotropic effect at all was obtained by stimulation of α-adrenoceptors in the cat right atrium. 5. In ventricular strips as well as in left atria from hypothyroid rats the pD2-value for the α-effect of phenylephrine was increased, in the atrium more than in the ventricle, while the pA2-values for yohimbine and phentolamine were not significantly different from the controls. Under these conditions a distinct positive chronotropic effect mediated by stimulation of α-receptors was found in the spontaneously beating rat atrium. 6. After stimulation of α-adrenoceptors in atria and ventricular strips of normal and propylthiouraciltreated rats, as well as in strips of guinea-pig ventricles or cat atria no elevation of cAMP and cGMP was observed. 7. The concept of a single adrenoceptor convertible from α- to β-type or vice versa was not supported by our experiments. These were carried out at different temperatures on left atria and on ventricular strips of rat hearts using the irreversible α-adrenoceptor blocking agent phenoxybenzamine. 8. The present experiments provide evidence for the existence of α-adrenoceptors in the myocardium of various mammalian species. Their stimulation produces positive inotropic effects without increases in heart rate.
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  • 32
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    Anatomy and embryology 153 (1978), S. 243-267 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Embryology ; Cat ; Prenatal hematopoiesis ; Blood characteristics ; Hematopoietic organs
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The blood, yolk sac, liver, spleen, and bone marrow from 65 timed embryos of 22 cats were examined using light microscopic means in six different age categories. Nucleated primitive erythroblasts derived from the yolk sac are mature by the 19th day and represent 98% of the circulating blood cells, some of them found circulating even at birth. Definitive yolk sac erythropoiesis comprises a span of up to 30 days. On the 36th day, hematopoietic contribution drops to 15%. Neutrophils and the first thrombocytes are present on the 17th day, eosinophils and lymphocytes by the 25th day. Hepatic hematopoiesis most likely begins with definitive erythropoiesis on abouth the 20th day; granulopoiesis occurs in the liver on the 25th day. Blood forming tissue in the liver amounts to 28% which drops to 4% at birth. Splenic hematopoiesis begins on about the 36th day but contributes little to the blood. Bone marrow activity begins at mid-term and supplies about 50% of the blood cells on the 45th day. Hematocrit values increase from 22% on the 36th day to 47% at birth, thus exceeding the normal value of adult cats. The red blood cell number increases from 0.8 million/mm3 on the 25th day to 3.8 million on the 45th day and 6.3 million at birth. The total leukocyte count (880 on the 45th day and 6.480 at birth) must be calculated from the differential count of nucleated cells. Primitive erythroblasts represent the most common nucleated cells on the 25th day; on the 36th and 45th day, definitive erythroblasts predominate, but are outnumbered by leukocytes at birth. On the 36th and 45th day, lymphocytes are the predominating cell type in the white blood picture. The contribution of the hematopoietic organs to the feline prenatal blood formation is shown graphically.
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  • 33
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    Anatomy and embryology 153 (1978), S. 331-350 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Hippocampus ; Cell types ; Fibers ; Golgi method ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The Golgi architecture of the Fascia dentata and hippocampus is described in the cat. The main cell types are like those found in other species. The initial collaterals of granule cell axons were demonstrated and are commented on. The interneurons proved to be of several types and subtypes not observed in lower species. The intrinsic fibers and few of the afferents — both in the dentate fascia and in the hippocampus — are discussed.
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  • 34
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    Anatomy and embryology 154 (1978), S. 39-54 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Implantation ; Trophoblast ; Endometrium ; Zona pellucida ; Proteinases ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The light microscopical morphology and proteinase activities are studied during the first phases of implantation in the cat, i.e. at 12, 13 and 14 days post coitum (d.p.c.). Timed matings are used to obtain exact data on the time course of implantation events. Size and shape of the blastocysts and the topographical relationships between trophoblast, zona pellucida and endometrium are studied on cryostat sections. These observations indicate that the zona pellucida is being removed at 12 d p.c. by dissolution which starts at the abembryonic pole and lateral of the embryonic disc. Since the zona has, in spite of the considerable expansion of the blastocyst, a thickness of 8–10 μm at this stage, it must have undergone a process of swelling or material must have been added invisibly. Invasion of the trophoblast into the endometrium begins between 13 and 14 d p. c. and is fully under way at 14 d p. c. Widening of the glandular lumina in the neighborhood of the blastocysts at 12–13 d p.c. indicates an early preimplantation interaction between the blastocyst and the endometrium. Amino Acid Arylamidase (Aminopeptidase) activity is found, in histochemical tests, to be high in the trophoblast but low in the endometrium in all three investigated stages. Proteinase Activity is studied with a highly sensitive gelatin substrate film test. Moderate to medium activity is found in the trophoblast at 12–13 d p.c. Very high proteinase activity is present in the invasion zone at 14 d p.c. Experiments with a large number of specific proteinase inhibitors in vitro and preliminary investigation of pH dependence show that it is mainly due to a cathepsin-B-like endopeptidase. This enzyme can be traced to both the trophoblast and the uterine epithelium. The disintegrating zona pellucida shows, at 12 d p.c., only little gelatinolytic proteinase activity. A trypsin-like endopeptidase as described for the rabbit blastocyst could not be identified with certainty in the cat but there is some indication that it might be present at 12 d p.c. Considerable trypsin-like proteinase activity is found in scattered endometrial stroma cells at all stages. The possible physiological role of the described proteinases in implantation is discussed.
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  • 35
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    Anatomy and embryology 153 (1978), S. 227-242 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Reticular formation ; Cerebellum ; Cat ; Horseradish Peroxidase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Following stereotactically performed lesions in nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis (N.r.t.) degenerating fibers are traced to the contralateral N.r.t., to the pontine nuclei, through brachium pontis to restricted areas of the cerebellar nuclei and to most parts of the cerebellar cortex where they terminate in the granular layer. Most degenerating fragments are found in the contralateral half of the cerebellum with the greatest density in the vermal lobules VI and VIIA and in the flocculus. Following injections of HRP in the various cerebellar lobules labeled cells are mainly present within limited groups in the N.r.t.. Injections in vermal lobules VI-VIII B give rise to labeled cells within circumscribed areas in the dorsal and ventral parts throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the N.r.t.. In cases with injections in lobule IX or the ventral paraflocculus labeled cells are found ventrally in the rostral half of the N.r.t., while following injections in the vermal lobules I-V labeled cells are mainly found in the ventral and caudal part of the N.r.t.. Following injections in the intermediate and lateral parts of the anterior lobe, Crus I and II, the paramedian lobule and the dorsal paraflocculus labeled cells occur within groups in medial and lateral parts throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the N.r.t.. Following injections in the flocculus labeled cells are found in a very distinct group in the dorsal and rostral part of the N.r.t., While an injection in the nodulus (lobule X) gave rise to a smaller group of labeled neurons in the dorsolateral corner in the caudal part of the N.r.t.. Labeled cells within processus tegmentosus lateralis (p.t.l.) are only found following injections in lobules VI-VIIIA, Crus I and II and the dorsal paraflocculus. From what is known about afferents to the N.r.t., it is concluded that no cerebellar lobule gets information from one only of these sources via the N.r.t.. Visual information can probably be mediated from the superior colliculus via the N.r.t. to the flocculus and to a minor extent to the vermal lobules VI-VIII B, and from the pretectum via the N.r.t. to both vermal and lateral parts of the cerebellum.
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  • 36
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    Acta neuropathologica 42 (1978), S. 19-24 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Acrylamide neuropathy ; Cat ; Axon degeneration ; Eleetron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Electronmicroscope studies have been performed on the greater splanchnic nerve and the nerve to the medial head of gastrocnemius muscle of control and acrylamide poisoned cats. Degeneration of unmyelinated as well as of myelinated fibres was observed in both nerves. In cats severely poisoned with acrylamide, some very large unmyelinated axons undergoing early degeneration were seen in the splanchnic nerve. In the nerve to medial head of gastrocnemius, there was a decrease in the proportion of large diameter unmyelinated axons.
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  • 37
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    Acta neuropathologica 41 (1978), S. 81-84 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Cat ; Polyneuropathy ; Demyelination ; Onion bulb formation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary An 18 month old cat had a 6 month history of abnormal high stepping gait, ataxia, muscle twitching and loss of sensory perception. The clinical course was interrupted by several episodes of temporary remission. The essential pathological features were those of a polyradiculoneuritis with segmental demyelination, focal mononuclear cell infiltration and hypertrophic onion-bulb formations. The condition is compared with chronic relapsing polyradiculoneuritis in the dog and in man.
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  • 38
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    Theoretical and applied genetics 52 (1978), S. 257-262 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Cat ; Egypt ; Genetic profile ; Genetic distance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Gene frequency surveys conducted in Alexandria and Cairo reveal genetic profiles which are extensions of those that characterize the cat populations of European cities. For nine selected comparisons with Alexandria, regression analysis indicates that a linear function best describes the relationship between Nei's and Cavalli-Sforza's genetic distance indices and geographic distance.
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  • 39
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    Pflügers Archiv 374 (1978), S. 187-191 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vascular tone ; Carbon dioxide ; Chemoreceptors ; Isolated perfused hindlimbs ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Complete vascular isolation of the hindlimbs was performed in vagotomized cats under Sodium Pentobarbital anesthesia. The hindlimbs were perfused at constant flow with blood kept at a constant and physiological $$P_{0_2 }$$ , $$P_{{\text{C}}0_2 }$$ , and pH values by means of a specially designed pump-oxygenator system. The animals were hyperventilated with different CO2 mixtures (0%, 5%, 7% and 10% in O2) thereby changing blood gases and pH levels in the upper body but not in the hindlimb vascular bed. At body $$P_{{\text{aC}}0_2 }$$ (mm Hg) of 13.7 ±1.0 (means±SE), 30.6±1.05, 40,4±0,9 and 58.4 ±2.9 the hindlimb perfusion pressure (mm Hg) was, respectively 124±7.6, 138±7.4, 156±11.9 and 187 ±15.1. These changes in perfusion pressure were still present after complete peripheral chemoreceptor denervation but were abolished after section of the spinal cord at the T5 level. Since hindlimb perfusion pressure fell when body $$P_{{\text{aC}}0_2 }$$ was lowered below physiological levels it is concluded that part of the neurogenic vascular tone of the hindlimbs is maintained by a CO2 mediated stimulation of supraspinal structures.
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  • 40
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    Pflügers Archiv 375 (1978), S. 119-123 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Vagus nerve ; Climbing fibers ; Field potentials ; Vermis ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The cervical vagus nerve (VN) was electrically stimulated in Nembutal-anaesthetized cats. The responses recorded from the cerebellar surface were found in lob. V and VI in a bilateral sagittal strip perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the folia. At a longer latency, potentials were also found in the paramedian lobule. Field potential analysis confirmed the existence of a sagittal strip in the deep parts of the lobules. The distribution of these potentials and their field potential profiles indicate that they are transmitted through the climbing fiber (CF) system. Experiments with local anaesthetics and deafferentation support our view that the potentials described in the vermis by Dell and Olson (1951) could be originated extracerebellarly. A strong parallelism was found between the amplitude of the cerebellar responses and the amplitude of the group B1 component of the vagal afferent potentials, having a conduction velocity between 4 and 20 m/s. The pathway by which the vagal afferents reach the inferior olive and the functional significance of these afferents are discussed.
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  • 41
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Superior colliculus ; Dorsal column system ; Trigeminal complex ; Cat ; HRP technique
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Projections of the somesthetic ascending pathways to the superior colliculus (SC) of the cat have been demonstrated by means of the horseradish peroxidase (HRP) tracing technique. Following HRP injection in one SC, marked neurons were found in the contralateral dorsal horn and in the contralateral dorsal column nuclei, mainly the cuneate nucleus. Moreover, in the contralateral trigeminal complex, the sub-nucleus caudalis of the spinal nucleus of the Vth nerve, and the subnucleus oralis plus the main sensory trigeminal nucleus were labeled. Thus, the anterolateral system and the lemniscal system subserving face and forelimb sensation send afferent fibers to the contralateral SC.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Caudate ; Cat ; 9 Types of synapses ; Degenerated ; Cortico-striate boutons
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the cat caudate nucleus the same nine types of synapses are found as in putamen and fundus striati. The three parts of the striatum in the strict sense do not differ in the morphological differentiation of synapse types but only in their quantitative distribution. One-third of all synapses in the caudate nucleus are axo-spinous type IV synapses with a curved and divided asymmetric contact. This strongly suggests that the caudate nucleus interneuronal apparatus is dominated by centre-median input, in contrast to the putamen which is controlled by the cortico-striatal input to its internuncial cells and by its strong intrastriatal feedback mechanism. Extensive destruction of the convexity of the cortex and the medial cortex in one hemisphere results in dark degeneration of a large proportion of two of the nine types of caudate synapses: a) the axo-dendritic type VII synapses exciting the large aspiny caudate neurons and b) the axo-spinous type III synapses making contact with the small spiny neurons of the interneuronal cell apparatus.
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  • 43
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    Experimental brain research 31 (1978), S. 95-106 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Ventral lateral geniculate ; Intralaminar nuclei ; Cat ; Horseradish peroxidase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Retrograde tracing experiments using horseradish peroxidase (HRP) have been utilized for demonstrating the origin of efferent projections of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNv) in the cat. HRP-positive cells identifiable as origins of thalamic projections were found in LGNv after injections of HRP into the lateral central intralaminar nucleus. The labeled cells appeared concentrated in the medial part of the internal division of LGNv, consisting of medium-sized multipolar cells. Contralaterally, fewer labeled cells were present in the corresponding part of LGNv. In the case of injections of HRP into the midbrain (pretectum and superior colliculus), labeled cells in LGNv were distributed almost exclusively in its external division, composed of mainly small cells. Little overlap of the distribution of HRP-positive cells was seen in LGNv between the thalamic and midbrain injection cases.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Auditory cortex ; Cat ; Precedence effect ; Sound localization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary It has previously been shown that unilateral ablation of the whole auditory cortex in the cat disrupts the precedence effect, and also interferes with the ability of the normal animal to discriminate in the Y-maze between a single sound on one side and a double sound consisting of a signal on both left and right sides. The present work has confirmed these effects and has shown that both can be obtained with lesions confined to AI and AII The ‘one-versus-two’ deficit has invariably been seen in all the animals studied, but a proportion of animals do not show the precedence effect deficit. It has been confirmed that the apparent success of some animals can be due to the training effect of the one-versus-two paradigm, as was proposed in the earlier paper; however it has also been shown that this cannot be the explanation in all cases. It has been demonstrated that cats are able to localize sounds behind them with some success; turning around in the start box to reverse right and left space is therefore a possible strategy for overcoming a unilateral deficit. However, even with the head ‘fixed’ in the forward-facing position, one animal was still able to run well above chance. The size of the lesion does not appear to be a correlate of the performance level.
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  • 45
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    Experimental brain research 31 (1978), S. 417-431 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: AV-AM nuclei ; Boutons ; Glomeruli ; Triads ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Electron microscopical studies of the thalamic AV-AM nuclei substantiated the presence of two main types of neurons, i.e. principal (or relay) cells and Golgi type II interneurons. Characteristic synaptic islands are found in abundance in the AV-AM. Four different types of synaptic terminals have been identified in these islands: RL-boutons = large axonal terminals with round synaptic vesicles; RS-boutons = small axonal terminals with round synaptic vesicles; F1-boutons = small axonal profiles containing flattened synaptic vesicles, and F2-profiles interpreted as presynaptic dendrite appendages, bearing pleomorphic vesicles, both belonging to the Golgi type II interneurons. — The synaptic relations were studied in normal preparations and after lesions in the mamillary body, limbic cortex and hippocampus. The specific afferents (RL-boutons) — originating from the medial mamillary nucleus — are presynaptic to both relay cell dendrites and “presynaptic” dendrite profiles of Golgi type II interneurons, which in turn are presynaptic to the same relay dendrites (synaptic triads). RS-boutons originate mainly from limbic cortex and hippocampus.
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  • 46
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    Experimental brain research 32 (1978), S. 55-68 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Functional stretch reflex ; Spinal cord ; Cat ; Tracking
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A sudden and rapid angular displacement of the limb evokes, in human and monkey subjects, a segmented pattern of electromyographic activity in muscles which are stretched. While the first segment is acknowledged to represent a tendon jerk, it has been proposed that the second segment, occurring with a shorter latency than a reaction time, is mediated by a transcortical loop. The present experiments were conducted in cats to determine the properties of muscle responses to torque perturbations analogous to those used in the monkey, and to determine if the integrity of supraspinal pathways is required for the individual response segments to occur. Torque perturbations which flexed the forearm evoked a segmented response in the electromyogram of the cat triceps muscle. This response typically consisted of three early segments with latencies of 10, 30 and 60 msec which were similar to the M1, M2, and M3 segments described in the monkey. The M3 and occasionally M2 components were depressed when the cat followed rather than resisted the perturbation. A torque pulse of 10 msec duration was sufficient to elicit a near maximal M1 response while torque pulses in excess of 20 msec were required to evoke the M2 response. To determine if any of these components required mediation by the cerebral cortex, experiments were conducted in decerebrate and spinal cats. Similar torque perturbations produced segmented electromyographic responses in the triceps muscles which were indistinguishable in their timing from those observed in intact cats. The torque required to produce the segmented responses was comparable as well. All three segments were dependent upon the activation of receptors in the homonymous muscle and did not require cutaneous input. These observations show that receptor properties and/or spinal mechanisms involved in the stretch reflex are sufficient to produce a segmented response similar to that observed in intact animals.
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  • 47
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    Experimental brain research 32 (1978), S. 117-134 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Ascending auditory pathways ; Superior olivary complex ; Inferior colliculus ; Axoplasmatic flow ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ascending and intrinsic projections of the superior olivary complex (SO) in the cat were investigated by injection of 3H-leucine and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in SO and the inferior colliculus (IC), respectively. A topically arranged projection was demonstrated from the nucleus of the trapezoid body (NTB) to the ipsilateral lateral superior olivary nucleus (LSO) with a lesser connection in the opposite direction. The medial superior olivary nucleus (MSO) has a strictly ipsilateral projection, whilst LSO projects symmetrically through the lateral lemniscus (LL) of both sides, to end with topically arranged terminals in the ventrolateral part of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (CNIC). Terminal labelling found in the ventral and dorsal nuclei of LL (VNLL and DNLL) probably represents collaterals from bypassing fibres originating in MSO and LSO, respectively. These results were demonstrated by both techniques, whilst in addition the HRP method revealed an ipsilateral and a contralateral projection to IC from VNLL and DNLL, respectively.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Ventral lateral geniculate body ; Reticularis thalami ; Vestibular stimulation ; Saccadic eye movements ; Optokinetic responses ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single unit recordings were carried out in the reticularis thalamic nucleus (RT) and the ventral lateral geniculate body (LGv) of chronically prepared alert cats under sinusoidal vestibular stimulation in the horizontal plane. Optokinetic stimulation was also used. Of the 57 recorded neurons, 12 present vestibular modulation in the dark, analogous to Duensing's and Schaefer's (1958) type I response in the vestibular nuclei. Responses of 26 cells are similar to response of type II vestibular neurons and 14 units have a type III response; the 5 remaining cells were activated by vestibular stimulation in the vertical sagittal plane. The majority of these cells does not present detectable direct visual responses, but 50% can be driven by Optokinetic stimulation. 74 % of types I, II and III neurons show saccadic responses to vestibular nystagmic saccades in the dark. About 60% present similar saccadic modulations during Optokinetic nystagmus and 55% keep this response for spontaneous saccades in the dark or in front of a striped background. The saccadic responses are constant for a given neuron in all cases of stimulation with latencies ranging from 30 msec prior to the beginning of the saccade to 120 msec after its onset. The histological localization of these units falls on one hand into the caudal part of the RT nucleus (type III neurons) above the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus and on the other hand within the internal subdivision of the LGv and its rostral limit (all other types). The significance of this new, saccadic and vestibular focus in the feline thalamus is discussed in relation with the two previously known vestibular thalamic relays in terms of interrelations between the vestibular and the visual systems.
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Mediodorsal thalamic nucleus ; Prefrontal cortex ; Horseradish peroxidase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Different areas of the frontal cortex of the cat were injected with small amounts of horseradish peroxidase. The regions of labeled cells in the mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus (MD) were related to the injected areas. Distinct relations between subdivisions of MD and of the prefrontal cortex were established: a rather large central sector of MD projects to the gyrus proreus and to the anterior parts of the gyri sigmoideus, rectus, and frontalis. A narrow lateral band of anterior MD neurons projects predominantly to an area on both sides of the sulcus praesylvius, whereas a postero-lateral band sends fibers to a region on the ventral anterior sylvian gyrus. The area between the presylvian sulcus and the sylvian gyrus is apparently free of MD afferents, but not of other thalamic afferents. A fourth sector of MD, situated dorsomedially, projects to the middle parts of the gyri rectus and frontalis. And a fifth sector, located ventrally to the dorsomedial MD sector, projects to the ventral part of the gyrus rectus. The established subfields of MD and of the prefrontal cortex are discussed with respect to previous anatomical research in the cat.
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  • 50
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    Experimental brain research 32 (1978), S. 345-364 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual system ; Cortico-thalamic connections ; Thalamocortical input ; Functional organization ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. In the cat visual cortex (VC), electrophoretic glutamate application at a depth corresponding to layer VI may have excitatory or inhibitory effects on relay cells of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Corticofugal excitation was seen, if the receptive field centers (RFCs) of the VC neurons recorded at the application site were within 2.3 ° of the RFCs of the LGN neurons under test. Inhibitory effects were seen if the RFCs of both cells were further apart up to 3.1 °. Glutamate application at more superficial cortical sites had no effect on LGN-neuron activity. 2. Cross-correlation analysis between spontaneous activities of simultaneously recorded VC and LGN neurons revealed excitatory cortico-geniculate connections in 18 pairs with RFCs separated by less than 1.7 °. In 15 pairs the peak latency of the excitation was 2–5 msec (3.4 msec in the average), 3 pairs showed long cortico-geniculate latencies (13–18 msec). The existence of a fast and slow cortico-geniculate system is suggested. 3. Inhibitory cortico-geniculate interaction was demonstrated with cross-correlation analysis in 8 pairs of which 4 had RFCs separated by more than 1.7 °. The onset latency of the inhibition was 2–7 msec except for 2 pairs with about 20 msec latency. 4. Most of the LGN neurons which were affected by cortical glutamate application or which showed an excitatory or inhibitory connection with a VC neuron were sustained cells, while the majority of VC neurons which were recorded in the effective glutamate application sites or which showed a significant interaction with LGN neurons in the cross-correlogram were binocularly driven and complex, with mostly large RFCs (mean diameter 3.5 °). They responded briskly to moving small spots as well as to moving slits. 5. It is concluded that the corticofugal excitatory effect is transmitted through monosynaptic links from VC neurons located in layer VI (complex cell) to LGN relay neurons (mostly sustained-cell) and this system is organized in a precise topographical manner. 6. In an Appendix neuron pairs which showed a positive correlation in the geniculo-cortical direction were described. The findings may support the view that complex as well as simple cells are driven monosynaptically from geniculo-cortical afferents of the sustained or transient type.
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  • 51
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    Experimental brain research 32 (1978), S. 377-388 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Posterior canal nerve ; EPSP ; IPSP ; Extraocular motoneurons ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the anesthetized cat, the posterior canal nerve (PCN) was stimulated by electric pulses and synaptic responses were recorded intracellularly in the three antagonistic pairs of extraocular motoneurons. Pure reciprocal effects were obtained in the motoneurons innervating the antagonistic pair of ipsilateral oblique muscles and the antagonistic pair of contralateral vertical rectus muscles. These responses consisted of low threshold disynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in either the contralateral superior oblique (c-SO) (trochlear) or contralateral inferior rectus (c-IR) motoneurons and of disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in either the ipsilateral inferior oblique (i-IO) or ipsilateral superior rectus (i-SR) motoneurons. In addition, disynaptic IPSPs were also found in (i-SO) motoneurons. Mixtures of low threshold (dior trisynaptic) EPSPs and IPSPs were found in all other extraocular motoneurons except for the contralateral lateral rectus (c-LR) motoneurons. These results may afford a basis for the characteristic eye movements induced by vertical canal nerve stimulation.
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  • 52
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Otolith afferents ; Semicircular canal afferents ; Response dynamics ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The activity of cat semicircular canal and otolith afferents was studied during yaw and roll rotations, respectively, to examine their dynamic behavior. 2. A sinusoidal analysis of the canal afferent activities showed that their dynamic characteristics are similar to those of second order vestibular neurons, except for a two to three-fold lower absolute gain. This agrees with earlier studies using angular acceleration steps. 3. Both divisions of the eighth nerve were sampled so as to examine afferents from both the utriculus and sacculus. Within the range of inputs used (± 25 degrees lateral tilt), the presumed saccular afferents (inferior division) showed either a γ- or β-response. However, the gain of their response was generally much less than for the afferents of the superior division (mostly utricular). This behavior is to be expected on the basis of receptor orientations and the components of gravity acting upon the macular receptors. 4. In response to ramp changes in angular position, some otolith units showed a phasic-tonic response pattern, i.e., an overshoot followed by an adaptation to a new steady state level of activity. The majority of units showed predominantly tonic responses proportional to displacement. 5. During sinusoidal rotations the predominantly tonic units showed small phase leads of 0 to 15 degrees at 0.025 Hz which remained constant or decreased to 0 to −15 degrees at 1.0 Hz. The gains were flat or increased by up to 2 fold. The phasic-tonic units showed greater phase leads, 10 to 50 degrees, and gains which increased from 2 to 8 fold. 6. This behavior of otolith afferents suggests that they can provide information about both the magnitude and the rate of change of linear acceleration stimuli.
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  • 53
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    Experimental brain research 32 (1978), S. 509-528 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Trochlear motoneurons ; Canal and otolith inputs ; Natural stimulation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The electrical activity of single trochlear motoneurons (TMns) and axons of second order vestibular neurons presumably terminating on these motoneurons were studied during natural stimulation of semicircular canals and otolith organs in cats anesthetized with Ketamine. 2. Null point analysis showed that TMns received an excitatory canal input from the contralateral posterior canal, and labyrinthine lesion experiments suggested that the functionally synergistic, ipsilateral anterior canal provides an inhibitory input. A small number of motoneurons showed orthogonal canal convergence. 3. In addition to the canal projections most TMns received an otolithic input. Firing rate was proportional to lateral head tilt and was of the β type. Most units also responded to pitch with an increase and decrease in firing rate on nose-up and nose-down positioning, respectively. Lesion experiments indicated that the otolith responses are the results of reciprocal innervation of TMns by contralateral (excitatory) and ipsilateral (inhibitory) otolith projections. 4. During sinusoidal rotation in yaw (canal only stimulation) the mean phase lag re acceleration of the response of TMns increased from 60 ° at 0.025 Hz to 126 ° at 1.0 Hz. In roll (canal plus otolith stimulation) the phase lag of TMn responses measured 180 ° and 130 ° at 0.025 and 1.0 Hz, respectively. Phase-lags measured in Vi and Vc axons were less by ca. 15 °. 5. The otolith contribution to TMn responses in roll was calculated by vectorial subtraction of the yaw from the roll responses: A phase lag of 10 (0.025 Hz) to 90 ° (0.5 Hz) re. displacement was noted and gain was constant over the same range. Similar lag dynamics were revealed in TMns when studied during ramp displacement of the head. 6. The possible functional role of central canal-otolith convergence and the differences between the responses of primary vestibular afferents and secondary vestibular neurons and TMns will be discussed.
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  • 54
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    Experimental brain research 33 (1978), S. 51-63 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Visual cortex ; Visual development ; Visual deprivation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary It is known that kittens reared in ways that restrict movement while visual stimulation is received exhibit deficits in visually guided behavior. Presumably, the behavioral dysfunction is due to a lack of sensorimotor coordination during visual exposure. The current investigation was undertaken to study this effect both physiologically and behaviorally. Two groups of kittens were normally reared until they were nearly 4 weeks old. They were then placed in a darkroom and exposed daily for 1–2 hours while one eye was occluded. On alternate days, alternate eyes were covered. One group was restrained in a body cast while a given eye was exposed, but the kittens were free to move about while the other eye received visual experience. A second control group was alternately occluded, but freely mobile during all exposures. An additional cat was also unrestrained during daily rearing periods and neither eye was ever occluded. Behavioral tests showed clear deficits when the “passive” eye of the restrained-unrestrained group was used. Deficiencies were found in visually guided paw placing, pursuit eye movements, and jumping behavior to a platform. Responses of single cells were studied in area 17 of the visual cortex. Ocular dominance distributions showed marked reductions in binocularity for alternate occluder cats. The eye that had received exposure while animals were active in the restrained-unrestrained group also tended to predominate but the difference was not statistically significant.
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  • 55
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    Experimental brain research 33 (1978), S. 191-202 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Tracking ; Isometric force ; Pulse-step control
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the previous study it was shown that cats were capable of making rapid and accurate adjustments in the force they applied to a lever in accord with information provided by a compensatory display. In the present study, isometric responses were examined in greater detail to determine 1. if a general control policy (or model) governing responses of different magnitudes could be inferred from the relations among output parameters and 2. if the earliest output measures were scaled to the preceding sensory events. The force adjustments elicited by the sudden motion of the display showed a linear relation between the peak force and the peak of its first derivative, dF/dt. Similarly, the peak d2F/dt2 was a linear function of dF/dt. By contrast, the times required to achieve the peak force and the peak dF/dt were largely independent of their magnitudes. These adjustments were produced by a burst of EMG activity in agonist muscles which coincided with the rising phase of dF/dt. The observations suggest that such motor outputs are determined by a pulse-step control policy. The amplitude of the pulse would control the rate of rise of dF/dt (and therefore also the peak force since the rising phase of dF/dt was of constant duration), and the step would control the level of the terminal steady state force. Both the peak force and the preceding peak dF/dt were highly correlated with the amplitude of the perturbation. Changes in display gain, which altered the required relation between input and output magnitudes, resulted in a gradual readjustment of the output parameters. It was concluded that the motor outputs were scaled from their inception to requirements dictated by the initial sensory information. The selection by the cat of the appropriate scaling function was contingent upon its previous experience with the device.
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  • 56
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    Experimental brain research 33 (1978), S. 173-189 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Tracking ; Reaction time ; Vibrissae ; Vision
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A versatile tracking task has been developed to assess the competence of feline subjects in using sensory information to initiate and guide limb movement. In the present study we investigated the response latency and the factors which affect it in order to define temporal constraints on the underlying processing of information. The paradigm makes use of an electromechanical display of the difference between the output of transducers in a manipulandum (controlled by the cat) and a target level (controlled by the experimenter). Because of inertia and friction, a step change in target level required 230 msec to fully shift the display. The animals were trained to match the position of the manipulandum (or the force they applied to it isometrically) to the target level for a food reward. Target perturbations elicited rapid position or force adjustments of appropriate direction and magnitude at short latency. Under isometric conditions, the latency of the response was an inverse function of the extent of display motion and of the peak rate of force change attained during the adjustment. Asymptotic values of the response time, measured from the perturbation to the first change in force applied to the lever, were typically between 50 and 70 msec. Since the motor responses were invariably initiated while the display was still moving, the animals must have used information contained in the derivatives of its motion. In the absence of visual cues, deflection of the vibrissae by the sudden motion of the display provided two of the four animals with sufficient information to initiate and guide their movements without changes in response latency. When vision was allowed, section of the vibrissae produced a persistent increase in response times of 15–20 msec. This difference in latency is compatible with the delays due to retinal transmission. The short time interval elapsing between stimulus and response strongly suggests that the topography and the metrics of the underlying transformations are adjusted by gating and/or biasing processes which precede the stimulus. It is concluded that sensory information can generate purposeful movements through pathways which include only a small number of central relays in series, independently of its modality.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Current source density analysis ; Field potentials ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The current source density (CSD) method in its one-dimensional approximation is used to analyze the field potentials in visual areas 18 and 17 of the cat, which were elicited by stimulating electrodes in the optic chiasm (OX), the optic radiation (OR) or in the respective cortical area itself. The CSD analysis reveals the basic pattern of excitatory postsynaptic activity. 1. In both visual areas the basic specific excitatory activity flows along three different intracortical pathways, all starting in layer IV: The first pathway relays activity from layer IV to supragranular pyramidal cells via strong, local connections to layer III and from there through long-distance connections to layer II. The second pathway conveys activity from layer IV to layer V, where it mainly contacts apical dendrites of layer VI pyramidal cells. This infragranular polysynaptic activity is not clearly resolvable into separate components, suggesting that it is conveyed by various groups of axons, among them long-distance horizontal connections. The third pathway has one synaptic relay within layer IV and then conveys activity to layer III. In addition, monosynaptic activity is revealed in layers VI and I. 2. In A 18 one coherent, fast-conducting group of afferents induces this basic activity pattern. In A 17 no such fast conducting input is resolvable; the supragranular activity is induced by a small group of afferents with intermediate conduction velocity, which terminate in the upper part of layer IV. The infragranular activity is induced by afferents with slower and widely scattered conduction velocities, which terminate in the lower part of layer IV. The layer VI input is very prominent in A 17 and also has a wide latency scatter. 3. The supragranular activity is more prominent in A 18 than in A 17 and the respective layers appear thicker, in accordance with anatomy. In A 17 the infragranular activity prevails and layers IV and VI appear very broad, again in accordance with anatomy. 4. Comparison of the CSDs with the original evoked potentials shows that the surface evoked potentials over A 18 reflect the three dipolar sink/source distributions of the coherent monosynaptic activity in layer IV and of the two prominent polysynaptic activities in layers III and II. The widely scattered activity in the lower part of layer IV in A 17 and all infragranular activities in both areas generate smaller, partly closed-field potentials; those are not discernible from the strong far-field potentials which originate from the supragranular activity and — especially in A 17 —from farther distant events.
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  • 58
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Corpus callosum ; Visual representation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The distribution of the interhemispheric projection from area 17 and 18 was studied using the anterograde degeneration technique. Besides the classical visual areas (17, 18, 19), area 21 and several visual areas in the middle suprasylvian sulcus also received visual callosal input. In the four terminal areas of the middle suprasylvian sulcus the projection was found to be focused on representations of the vertical meridian including the area centralis, as in the classical visual areas. An increase of the width of visual field represented in the zone of callosal terminations can be seen from area 17 through area 18 to area 19 and possibly this trend continues in the suprasylvian visual areas.
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  • 59
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    Keywords: Stereotaxic method ; Cat ; Intracerebral coordinate system ; Ventriculography ; Substantia nigra
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A method based on an intracerebral coordinate system and contrast ventriculography was developed for Stereotaxic surgery in the cat. The intercommissural (CA-CP) line was used as the principal reference because its length showed little variability in animals within a wide weight range. The Stereotaxic coordinates of the substantia nigra (SN) in relation to the CA-CP line and the midline were evaluated in serial sections. Stereotaxic operations with the use of ventricular radiography were performed in different parts of the SN in 18 cats. Histological verification showed that the selected target regions within the SN were very accurately reached in all animals operated with this method. The precision of the Stereotaxic method based on the intracerebral coordinate system compared to the Horsley-Clarke method is discussed.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Nigrothalamic projections ; Autoradiography ; Electron microscopy ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Light microscopic autoradiography and electron microscopy were used to trace the nigrothalamic projections and to study the sites of termination of this pathway in the cat. Injections of tritiated amino acids or electrolytic lesions were placed in the substantia nigra pars reticularis (SNr). An accumulation of radioactivity was found in the ventral medial nucleus and in the ventromedial part of the ventral anterior nucleus. At the ultrastructural level degenerating medium size synaptic boutons and medium size myelinated fibers were observed in these nuclei. The boutons contained clear pleomorphic vesicles and formed symmetrical type synaptic contacts with regular type dendrites and vesicle-containing dendrites. The present findings indicate that the ventral medial nucleus is the principal site of termination of nigrothalamic projections in the cat.
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  • 61
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vasoconstrictor neurones ; Skin ; Muscle ; Systemic hypoxia ; Systemic hypercapnia ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Reactions of cutaneous and muscle vasoconstrictor neurones to the hindlimb on systemic hypoxia and systemic hypercapnia were investigated in chloralose anaesthetized cats. Mainly four types of preparations were used: brain intact and decrebrate (pontomedullary) animals with and without cartotid sinus (CSN) and vagal nerves (VN). 2. In brain intact animals with intact CNS and VN most cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurones were depressed and most muscle vasoconstrictor neurones were excited during systemic hypoxia and hypercapnia. The responses to hypercapnia were smaller than those to hypoxia. 3. In brain intact deafferented animals and in decerebrate animals with and without intact CSN and VN systemic hypoxia and hypercapnia induced excitation in both cutaneous and muscle vasoconstrictor neurones. The responses to hypoxia were significantly smaller in deafferented preparations when compared to those in preparations with intact CSN and VN. Furthermore in muscle vasoconstrictor neurones the size of the responses was not significantly different in decerebrate preparations from that in brain intact preparations. 4. These results indicate a distinct neuronal organization of the chemoreceptor reflexes in the vasoconstrictor systems in the brain stem. Suprapontine brain structures are most important for producing the inhibition of the cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurones during hypoxia and hypercapnia.
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  • 62
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    Pflügers Archiv 369 (1977), S. 27-32 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Electrodermal reflexes ; Natural stimulation of skin ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Electrodermal reflexes recorded from the central pads on the hind- and forepaws were elicited by natural stimulation of skin in ketamine anaesthetised cats. 2. Stimuli which excite the Pacinian corpuscles in the paws (air jet stimuli applied to the paw, vibrational stimuli produced by tapping on the experimental frame) and the cutaneous nociceptors (mechanical and thermal noxious stimuli) elicit electrodermal reflexes. Stimuli exciting hair follicle receptors on the trunk or legs or slowly adapting receptors in the feet are without effect. 3. Electrodermal reflexes elicited by non-noxious mechanical stimulation of skin in the hindpaws have a clear-cut spatial organization. Air jet stimuli can only produce them from the distal hindpaws but not from any other skin area indicating that this reflex may be organized at the spinal level. Electrodermal reflexes on noxious stimulation too have some spatial organization.
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  • 63
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 259-278 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Lateral geniculate nucleus ; X- and Y-cells ; Visual deprivation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Retrograde axonal transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used to identify two populations of cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the cat. HRP was injected into area 17 and 18 separately in the same animal, and the neuronal somata giving rise to thalamo-cortical axons, identified by the presence of granular HRP reaction product within them, were measured. The mean size of LGN neurones labelled by injections in area 17 (“17-relay” cells) was less than of neurones filled from area 18 (“18-relay” cells). Similar separate injections into area 17 and 18 of monocularly deprived kittens also showed that in non-deprived LGN laminae 17-relay cells were, on average, smaller than 18-relay cells. In deprived laminae, 17-relay cells were some 20% smaller than in nondeprived laminae, but deprived 18-relay cells were 50–60% smaller than normal, being on average, actually smaller than deprived 17-relay cells. We conclude that the population of large LGN neurones projecting to area 18 is more severely affected by monocular deprivation than the smaller neurones projecting to area 17, and discuss the relationship of the morphological results to physiologically defined X and Y cells in the LGN.
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  • 64
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    Experimental brain research 27 (1977), S. 335-345 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Spatial frequency ; Visual neurones ; Mean luminance ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Experiments have been performed on unanaesthetized and paralysed cats. The tuning curves for spatial frequency of retinal, lateral geniculate and simple and complex cells of the cortex have been determined in response to sinusoidal gratings of various spatial frequencies at different levels of mean luminance. For all neurones, decreasing the mean luminance leads to a progressive loss of spatial resolution and contrast sensitivity. Retinal ganglion cells of type X show, for scotopic levels of luminance, a flattening of their spatial frequency tuning curves in the low spatial frequency range. For geniculate and cortical neurones, on the contrary, the spatial frequency characteristics at the various levels of luminance remain practically invariant in their bandwidth. On the average, complex cells still respond to mean luminances ten times lower than simple cells. The tuning curves for orientation of cortical cells maintain, to a first approximation, the same shape at the various levels of mean luminance. The results are discussed, comparing the electrophysiological with psychophysical data.
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  • 65
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 133-139 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Intralaminar nuclei ; Visual cortex ; Horseradish peroxidase ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Thalamic projections to the visual cortex were investigated using the Horseradish peroxidase tracing technique. Besides confirmation of a distinct origin of thalamic projections to striate and extra-striate visual cortex, afferents of the intralaminar nuclei (ILN) to visual cortex were demonstrated. These projections of ILN were shown to be specific in that they terminate in areas 18, 19 and Clare Bishop but not area 17. The coupling of these intralaminar projections on to the extra-striate visual system is considered with respect to orientation of gaze.
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  • 66
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pontine nuclei cells ; Unitary EPSPs ; Synaptic organization ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Intracellular potentials of pontine nuclei (PN) cells were recorded in cats anesthetized with pentobarbitone sodium. 2. Stimulation of the cerebellar nuclear regions or the brachium pontis induced an antidromic action potential composed of IS-SD spikes, after-depolarization and after-hyperpolarization. 3. Cerebellar stimulation produced EPSPs only in a few PN cells. 4. Activation of the corticopontine or pyramidal tract produced in all PN cells an EPSP built up from the unitary components with variable amplitudes and time courses. Paired or repetitive activation revealed a property of the frequency potentiation of the EPSP. 5. Unitary EPSPs also occurred spontaneously. A great majority of these spontaneous EPSPs were cerebral in origin, and had amplitudes and time courses comparable with those evoked by stimulation of the corticopontine or pyramidal tract. 6. The half-width versus time to peak relationship of these unitary EPSPs suggested a dendritic location of the synapses with variable distances from the soma. It is assumed that large, proximal synapses serve for efficient relay of signals while small, distal synapses for their integration.
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  • 67
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 249-257 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hemilabyrinthectomy ; Compensation ; Postural deficits ; Vision ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A photographic technique was used to study the evolution of lateral head-tilt following hemilabyrinthectomy in adult cats. Animals were maintained post-operatively in normally lit conditions (LM cats), in total darkness (DM cats), or in stroboscopic light. In LM cats, the head tilt peaked at 45 degrees (with the lesionned side down) on the second post-operative day, and decreased to about 0 degree within about 10 days. This evolution was followed by rebounds of head-tilt to larger angles before a stable compensated head position could be maintained (approximately at the end of the third post-operative month). In DM cats, the head remained tilted by a large angle throughout the duration of the dark period. Re-exposure to light was followed by a rapid decrease of head-tilt. In stroboscopic light, the evolution of head-tilt was found to be closely similar to that in the normally lit condition. Finally, when put back in the dark at a late post-operative stage, already compensated animals were found to loose their symmetrical head position, and to re-acquire a strong head tilt. This effect resumed on re-exposure to light. It is inferred that static visual input is a necessary condition for compensation of the postural deficits of hemi-labyrinthectomy in the cat. Maintenance of a stable head posture also depends upon continuous availability of visual input.
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  • 68
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 345-361 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Putamen ; Cat ; Center median parvocellular neurons ; Ultrastructure ; Degenerated boutons (type VII and IV)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The cat putamen contains the identical nine types of synapses and the same proportion of axo-dendritic (or axo-somatic) synapses as described for the fundus striati. However, type III (cortico-striatal) (31∶16%) and type V (axon-collateral) (13∶1%) occur much more frequently and type I (nigro-striatal) much less frequently (14∶34%) in the putamen than in the fundus striati. Of the axo-spinous synapses only type IV, with densely arranged small round vesicles and interrupted, asymmetric contact, shows a dark degeneration after center median lesions, mainly in the parvocellular part. Of the six axo-dendritic (or axo-somatic) synapses, only type VII, with densely packed small round vesicles and asymmetric contact, is degenerated after the same lesion in the center median nucleus. However, after such lesions type VII synapses are much more frequently degenerated in the putamen than those of type IV.
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  • 69
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    Experimental brain research 27 (1977), S. 101-111 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye muscle afferents ; Stretch receptors ; Cerebellar cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Extraocular proprioceptive input to cerebellar vermis, lobule VI, was investigated in cats under N2O analgesia by recording neuronal responses to eye muscle stretch. Both optic tracts were transected and the periorbital skin and conjunctiva were locally anaesthetized. Eye rotation within the physiological range was achieved by applying a pull of predetermined length and tension to each of the eight musculi recti at their insertion to the globe. Within lobule VI, only small patches of cortex receive stretch receptor afferents. The information made available by these afferents corresponds to a change of eye position. Minimal responses were dependent upon angular deflections of a few degrees. Maximal response amplitudes were obtained within the physiological range of angular deflections and angular velocities for the units tested. Most cells responded to stretch of more than one muscle. Three types of convergence were found: (1) neurons responding according to a certain direction of a conjugated movement of both eyes, (2) neurons responding to movements in either direction of one plane, (3) more complicated response patterns.
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  • 70
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    Experimental brain research 29 (1977), S. 429-432 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual movement perception ; Cat ; Contrast sensitivity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Behavioral experiments show that the visual system of cat contains mechanisms which are selective for direction of stimulus movement. The cat's contrast detection threshold for a drifting grating is unaffected by the addition of a grating moving in the opposite direction; this same pattern of results is found for human observers. The convergence of cat and human psychophysical data suggests that man's brain may hold direction-specific neurons, similar to those known to exist in the cat brain.
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  • 71
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 421-425 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual system ; Cat ; Proprioceptive receptors ; Extraocular muscles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Electrical stimulation of the intraorbital part of the motor branches of extraocular muscles, where proprioceptive fibers run, evokes responses in 25% of the units of the striate cortex of the cat. The latency ranges between 25 and 40 msec. Mechanical stretch of extraocular muscles evokes multiunit responses in the striate cortex. The response is abolished by injection of xylocaine into the stretched muscle. The suppression of the response is reversible.
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  • 72
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    Experimental brain research 30 (1977), S. 25-41 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Visual cortex ; Deprivation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effects of monocular deprivation from contour vision were investigated in the striate cortex of cats. In addition to the receptive field (RF) properties of single cells responses to electrical stimulation of the deprived and the experienced optic nerve were analyzed: Evoked potentials as well as intra- and extracellularly recorded single unit responses were evaluated. The main goals were: 1. to determine to what extent the responses to electrical stimulation reflected the shift in ocular dominance apparent from the RF analysis, 2. to determine the relative effects of deprivation on excitatory and inhibitory responses and 3. to locate the site of impaired transmission in the pathway from the deprived eye. The results show that the responses to electrical stimulation reflect precisely the shift in ocular dominance apparent from the RF analysis. The evoked potentials elicited from the deprived nerve further indicate that deprivation had also affected the afferent system at the LGN level or (and) at the terminal field of the thalamo-cortical fibers. In contrast to the reduction of short latency excitatory responses to stimulation of the deprived nerve, oligosynaptic inhibition with latencies of 4–6 msec was equally well elicited by stimulation of either eye. The same was true for delayed excitatory responses which frequently occur with latencies between 40 and 80 msec after nerve stimulation. It is concluded from these results 1. that transmission between thalamic afferents and inhibitory interneurones in the cortex is less affected by deprivation than transmission in those pathways which relay cortical excitation, 2. that there is another deprivation resistant indirect pathway from the retina to the visual cortex which is probably relayed through mesencephalic structures and 3. that deprivation effects are not confined to transmission failure at the thalamo-cortical synapses but include alterations already at the presynaptic level.
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    Experimental brain research 27 (1977), S. 35-50 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Cat ; Dark adaptation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The receptive fields of LGN cells were investigated with stationary light and dark spot and annulus stimuli. Stimulus size and background intensity were varied while stimulus/background contrast was kept constant. The speed of dark adaptation varied considerably from cell to cell. Dark adaptation made responses more sustained in all neurones and eliminated the oscillatory on-responses evoked under some conditions in the light-adapted cells. Dark adaptation led also to a disappearance of early phasic inhibition in on-responses, and increased response rise time and latency. The power of surround responses to inhibit centre responses decreased slightly at low levels of light adaptation in LGN cells but much less than in retinal ganglion cells. Some other traces of changing retinal surround effects also appeared in the LGN on dark adaptation. For example, the functional size of receptive fields increased at low levels of illuminance as has been observed in retinal ganglion cells and the receptive fields as estimated from response peaks were larger than those estimated from sustained components.
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  • 74
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    Archives of dermatological research 260 (1977), S. 29-38 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Cat ; Epidermis ; Histochemistry ; Enzymes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Mit Hilfe von enzymhistochemischen Methoden wurden die Verteilung und die Aktivitäten verschiedener oxydativer und hydrolytischer Enzyme in der Epidermis der Hauskatze untersucht. Deutliche Aktivitäten oxydativer Enzyme konnten mit Ausnahme des Stratum corneum in allen epidermalen Zellagen beobachtet werden. Unter den nachgewiesenen hydrolytischen Enzymen zeigte besonders die unspezifische Esterase stark positive Reaktionen im Stratum granulosum und in den basalen Anteilen des Stratum corneum. Cholinesterase-Aktivitäten waren in der Epidermis der Katze nicht festzustellen. Die vorliegenden Ergebnisse von der Epidermis der dicht behaarten Hauskatze werden im Zusammenhang mit den Ergebnissen entsprechender Untersuchungen an der Epidermis spärlich behaarter Säugetierarten (z.B. Hausschwein und Mensch) diskutiert. Insgesamt weist das Enzymmuster der Katzenepidermis nur bedingt Parallelen zu demjenigen der Epidermis des Menschen auf, wobei speziell in der Verteilung und den Aktivitäten von Esterasen Abweichungen auftreten.
    Notes: Summary With the help of enzyme histochemical methods, the distribution and activities of several oxidative and hydrolytic enzymes in the epidermis of the densely-haired domestic cat have been studied. Distinct oxidative enzyme activity could be demonstrated in all epidermallayers except the stratum corneum. Among the hydrolytic enzymes investigated, strong reactions for non-specific esterases were visible especially in the str. granulosum and the basal lamellae of the str. corneum. Positive reactions for cholinesterases could not be observed in the cat epidermis. The results are discussed in relation to corresponding investigations on the epidermis of sparsely-haired mammals, e. g. the domestic pig and man. Generally the enzyme pattern of the cat epidermis only shows limited parallels to man, especially where esterase distribution is concerned.
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    Acta neuropathologica 39 (1977), S. 231-235 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Actinomyces viscosus ; Epidural space ; Spinal cord ; Cat ; Electron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In a 3 year old female domestic cat a suppurative, granulomatous lesion of the tail and sacral area penetrated into the epidural space, causing paraplegia. A. viscosus was isolated from the inflammatory tissues. A comparative light and electron-microscopic study of the bacterial elements and the architecture of the granules (Drusen) show that the latter are in-vivo microcolonies of the agent.
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  • 76
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Amphetamine ; Para-hydroxy-amphetamine ; Distribution ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract The distribution and metabolic fate of amphetamine were studied in cats. In the brain, high levels of drug were detected in the grey matter structures at short intervals after administration, while at longer intervals distribution between white and grey matter areas was more uniform. In peripheral tissues the greatest concentration of the drug was seen in the highly vascularized organs. Para-hydroxyamphetamine was found in minimal amounts in the liver and kidneys and only at trace quantities in the brain.
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  • 77
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vestibular nuclei ; Cat ; Somatosensory integration ; Neck movement
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The vestibular nuclei of cats were explored extracellularly with micropipettes to locate units with a resting discharge rate which responded to rotation in the horizontal plane. These units were examined for somatosensory input from neck and limbs. Fewer than half responded to somatosensory stimulation. The neck region was the body area most effective in influencing unitary activity. The response pattern most often noted was an increase and decrease in discharge frequency when the body was moved towards and away from the recording electrode respectively. Change in discharge rate was observed to be primarily dependant upon neck velocity and not upon absolute neck position. Half of the somato-sensory units received input from either the forelimbs or the hindlimbs, while the remaining half responded to both.
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    Experimental brain research 27 (1977), S. 61-70 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Amygdala ; Commissural fibers of the fimbria ; Electrophysiology ; Lesions ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single shock stimulations have been applied stereotaxically and bilaterally in the region of the caudo-thalamic groove of the cat. These stimulations elicit diphasic potentials in the amygdala. Using combined methods of stimulation and lesion, it has been demonstrated that these electrical responses are due to the excitation of fibers projecting rostrally in the lateral border of the contralateral fimbria and caudally in the homologous part of the homolateral fimbria. A commissural path has been identified in the rostral part of the fimbria-fornix. Analysis of the experimental data has shown that the projection system consists of a discrete bundle of fibers which probably reaches the amygdala directly, in the dorsal part of the basal nucleus. The length of the explored portion of this pathway has been measured. The calculated conduction velocity of this amygdalopetal commissural component of the fimbria is 4.5 m/sec.
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    Experimental brain research 27 (1977), S. 131-141 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Colliculus superior ; Single neurons ; Eye movements ; Head movements ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 452 single neurons from the superior colliculus were recorded in awake and non-paralysed cats. 75 neurons were obtained from cats with unrestrained horizontal head movements. 228 neurons remained unaffected by saccadic eye movements. Eye movement related discharge followed the onset of saccades in 156 neurons either only in the presence of a visual pattern (92 neurons) or in darkness, too (64 neurons). The latter reaction type probably depends on eye muscle afferents. In 48 neurons eye movement related activity preceded the onset of eye movements. 12 neurons fired in synchrony with eye movements of any direction (type I). 30 neurons were excited during contralaterally directed eye versions within or into the contralateral head related hemifield. They were inhibited when the eyes moved within or into the ipsilateral head related hemifield (type II). 6 neurons with constant maintained activity during fixation were inhibited by ipsilaterally directed saccades, but remained unaffected by contralateral eye movements. Head movement related discharge followed the onset of head movements in 20 neurons only in presence of a visual pattern and also in darkness in 6 neurons. Ipsilateral head movements or postures strongly suppressed maintained activity and visual responsiveness of some neurons. 15 neurons discharged in synchrony with and prior to contralateral head movements. Ipsilateral head movements inhibited these neurons. Activation or inhibition were usually related to movement and to posture, exceptionally to movement or to posture. Electrical stimulation of recording sites of these neurons through the recording microelectrode elicits contralateral head movements.
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  • 80
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Descending auditory pathways ; Superior olivary complex ; Cochlear nuclear complex ; Axoplasmic flow ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The descending pathways from the superior olivary complex (SO) to the cochlear nuclear complex (CN) were investigated in 58 cats using labelled aminoacid and horseradish peroxidase transport techniques. Descending connections were found coursing bilaterally through the trapezoid body (TB) and ipsilaterally in the intermediate and dorsal acoustic striae. The dorsolateral periolivary nucleus (DLPO) sends fibres through both the intermediate and dorsal striae, which are joined by others from the lateral preolivary nucleus (LPO). Both the latter nucleus and the medial preolivary nucleus (MPO) give rise to a bilateral descending projection which traverses TB. The distribution of these descending pathways within CN is described (although the technique did not permit precise synaptic identification). The possible implications of these pathways for response patterns at the level of CN are discussed.
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 153-166 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Spinal cord ; Dorsal horn ; Dendritic fields ; Golgi stain
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Observations of neurons in dorsal horn laminae IV–VI of the lumbosacral segments of Golgi-stained spinal cords in kittens and adult cats revealed laminar differences in dendritic architecture. Many neurons in lamina IV had dense, bushy dendritic fields. Lamina V contained, in addition to bushy cells similar in appearance to those of lamina IV, increasing numbers of neurons with radiating dendritic fields. Lamina VI was composed almost exclusively of neurons with radiating dendritic fields. These qualitative differences among laminae were accompanied by systematic variations in mean dendritic spread, which increased more than two-fold in adult cats between laminae IV and VI. A second gradient of dendritic spread was found within individual laminae: dendritic spread, particularly medial to lateral spread, increased for successively more lateral cells within a lamina. These differences in the spread of dendrites for neurons in different regions of the dorsal horn may be related to variations in the areas of peripheral receptive fields of dorsal horn neurons.
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 325-333 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Spatial contrast sensitivity ; Cat ; Grating pattern ; Flicker ; X- and Y-cells
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Using behavioral techniques, contrast sensitivity for flickering and stationary gratings was measured in ordinary cats. Gratings of low spatial frequency were more easily detected by the cat when temporal modulation was present, but at high spatial frequencies temporal modulation reduced grating visibility. These psychophysical results are consistent with neurophysiological evidence for the existence of two classes of visual cells in the cat, which are distinguishable in terms of their spatio-temporal response properties.
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    Experimental brain research 29 (1977), S. 107-122 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Area 17 ; Lateral suprasylvian area ; Remote visual stimuli ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single units were recorded extracellularly from area 17 and lateral suprasylvian area (LSSA) in curarized cats. Visual stimuli, usually a 10 ° black spot, were introduced abruptly in the visual field remote from the discharge area of a neuron's receptive field and moved at a speed of about 30 °/sec. The effect of these remote stimuli (S2) on the response to a restricted visual stimulus (S1) crossing the discharge area was studied. It was found that most units in area 17 were not affected by the presentation of remote stimuli, the remainder being either slightly facilitated or slightly inhibited. In contrast the LSSA neurons were usually inhibited by the presentation of S2: this effect was strong, was present in all classes of LSSA neurons and was independent of the relative directions of movement of S1 and S2. On the basis of these data and those previously obtained from the superior colliculus it is concluded that the way the extrageniculate centres respond to a stimulus abruptly introduced in the visual field is substantially different from that of the striate cortex. Only in the extrageniculate centres a new stimulus, besides exciting the neurons which correspond to the position of the stimulus in the field, concomitantly decreases the responses of neurons located in positions of the visual field remote from that stimulus. Possible behavioral implications of the findings are discussed.
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    Experimental brain research 30 (1977), S. 89-105 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Extrageniculate visual system ; Pretectum ; Efferent connections ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Direct projections from the pretectum in the cat were investigated by means of the Nauta-Gygax and the Fink-Heimer method in an attempt to identify the morphological substrates subserving possible neural mechanisms involved in visual behaviour and reflexes. Degeneration in the diencephalon was found ipsilaterally in the nucleus limitans, lateral pulvinar nucleus, lateral posterior nucleus, lateral dorsal nucleus, dorsal and ventral lateral geniculate nuclei, centre medianparafascicular complex, central medial nucleus, paracentral nucleus, central lateral nucleus, ventroanterior and ventrolateral nuclear complex, zona incerta, H field of Forel and the reticular nucleus. The pretectal fibers projecting to the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus appeared to be topically organized. In the midbrain, the pretectal fibers were observed to terminate ipsilaterally within the superior colliculus, nucleus of Darkschewitsch, dorsolateral portion of the red nucleus, lateral terminal nucleus of the accessory optic tract and the reticular formation, and bilaterally within the central gray, interstitial nucleus of Cajal and the rostral portion of the nucleus of Edinger-Westphal. Degeneration in the superior colliculus was marked in laminae II, III and IV. The fibers arising from more anterior part of the pretectum appeared to be distributed more medially in laminae II and III. The pretectopontine fibers terminated ipsilaterally in the paramedial and the dorsolateral pontine nuclei as well as the reticular formation. In the inferior olivary complex, degeneration was found in caudal levels of the dorsal cap and β-nucleus, and additionally in the rostral portion of the dorsal accessory olive.
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    Experimental brain research 30 (1977), S. 155-160 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Postural reflexes ; Visual and vestibular reflex modulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The excitability of hindlimb extensor and flexor motoneurons is tonically modulated by animal tilt and a large visual stimulus rotating about the animal's line of sight. This direction-specific modulation is opposite for extensor and flexor motoneurons and opposite for optokinetic and vestibular stimuli, thus combining to a functionally significant pattern of postural reflexes.
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    Experimental brain research 30 (1977), S. 275-296 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Striate cortex ; Simple and complex cells ; Visual texture ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The responsiveness of 254 simple and complex striate cortical cells to various forms of static and dynamic textured visual stimuli was studied in cats, lightly anaesthetised with N2O/O2 mixtures supplemented with pentobarbitone. Simple cells were unresponsive to all forms of visual noise presented alone, although about 70% showed a change in responsiveness to conventional bar stimuli when these were presented on moving, rather than stationary, static-noise backgrounds. Bar responses were depressed by background texture motion in a majority of cells (54%), but were actually enhanced in a few instances (16%). In contrast, all complex cells were to some extent responsive to bars of static visual noise moving over stationary backgrounds of similar texture, or to motion of a whole field of static noise. The optimal velocity for noise was generally lower than for bar stimuli. Since moving noise backgrounds were excitatory for complex cells, they tended to reduce specific responses to bar stimulation; in addition, directional bias could be modified by direction and velocity of background motion. Complex cells fell into two overlapping groups as regards their relative sensitivity to light or dark bars and visual noise. Extreme examples were insensitive to conventional bar or edge stimuli while responding briskly to moving noise. In many complex cells, the preferred directions for motion of noise and of an optimally oriented black/white bar were dissimilar. The ocular dominance and the degree of binocular facilitation of some complex cells differed for bar stimuli and visual texture. Preliminary evidence suggests that the deep-layer complex cells (those tolerant of misalignment of line elements; Hammond and MacKay, 1976) were most sensitive to visual noise. Superficial-layer complex cells (those preferring alignment) were less responsive to noise. Only ‘complex-type’ hypercomplex cells showed any response to visual noise. We conclude that, since simple cells are unresponsive to noise, they cannot provide the sole input to complex cells. The differences in the response of some complex cells to rectilinear and textured stimuli throw a new light on their rôle in cortical information-processing. In particular, it tells against the hypothesis that they act as a second stage in the abstraction of edge-orientation.
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    Experimental brain research 30 (1977), S. 353-368 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual deprivation ; Cat ; Behavior ; Perimetry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Visual fields of 15 monocularly deprived (MD) cats and 2 monocularly tested normal adult cats, were measured using stationary stimuli at fixed distances in the horizontal plane. Compared to the visual fields of monocularly tested normal cats, those of the deprived eyes of MD cats were found to be restricted to the ipsilateral hemifield up to the midline. This finding appeared to be permanent since it was measured both in cats tested early (4 cases) and late (11 cases) after deprivation. In addition, it seemed to be independent whether the nondeprived eye was closed by reverse suturing (13 cases), or was left open after deprivation and closed only temporarily during testing (2 cases). Visual fields were also found to be restricted to the ipsilateral hemifield, if MD cats were tested at several levels above the horizontal plane or in a hemisphere (23 cm radius) in which the superior and inferior segment of the visual space could be tested (6 cases). The results are controversial to those of Sherman (1973) who described the visual fields of MD cats to be restricted to the monocular (60–90 ° ipsilateral) segment. The differences observed in our results compared to those of Sherman could not be explained by experimental factors, since testing MD cats by the method employed by Sherman (8 cases) also resulted in visual fields covering the monocular as well as the binocular part of the ipsilateral side. Consequently, Sherman's hypothesis (1974b), that for MD cats the geniculocortical pathways dominate in the visual behavior and that retinotectal pathways are somehow suppressed, could not be confirmed by our results. In our experiments the visual behavior demonstrated by MD cats seemed to be developed mainly through retinotectal pathways. In MD cats in which after the deprivation period the non-deprived eye remained open, the monocular part seemed to be of more importance than the binocular segment; permanent closure of the normal eye seemed to lead to a further shift towards the binocular segment. Therefore, in non-reverse sutured MD cats some suppression of retinotectal pathways by imbalanced corticotectal pathways may be present, but not as elaborate as described by Sherman. This slight suppression is overcome by reverse suturing. The mechanism of release from suppression of retinotectal pathways is unknown, its possible localisation is discussed.
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  • 88
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Cat ; Dark adaptation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The responses of neurones in laminae A and A1 of the cat lateral geniculate nucleus to moving stimuli were investigated at different background luminances. Moving bright slits, dark bars and edges were employed; the contrast of stimuli against the background was held constant. Background intensities varied from 10−3 to 102 td. Responses as stimuli passed across the centres of LGN receptive fields became stronger with increasing levels of light adaptation up to 10−1–101 td and then remained constant. Responses as stimuli passed through surround regions altered qualitatively with adaptation level, generally increasing in strength and complexity with background luminance. As a bright slit for on-centre cells or dark bar for off-centre cells left the surround, in almost all units a strong secondary peak could be elicited by an appropriate selection of the adaptation conditions. Many features of the responses to moving stimuli could not be predicted from the responses to stationary stimuli under different adaptation conditions described in the previous paper.
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  • 89
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Visual cortex ; Intrinsic connections ; Degeneration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The extent of the spread of axonal degeneration was investigated in the visual cortex of the cat after making small lesions restricted to the grey matter. Two series of experiments were undertaken. In the first, normal adult cats were used, and in the second, the cortex of the postlateral gyrus was isolated from its extrinsic afferents by surgical undercutting 3 months before making the lesions. The results were similar in the two series in most respects. 1. Horizontal fibres extended in considerable numbers for some 500 μm from the lesion, mainly in layers I, III/IV and V, a few reaching 2–3 mm. These fibres were better seen in the intact than in the isolated cortex. Their spread was usually asymmetrical, being greater posteromedially than anterolaterally. 2. Oblique axons ran downwards from the middle layers into layers V and VI, or upwards into layers I and II. 3. Axons arising from layers II to VI descended vertically into the white matter. Degeneration patterns after lesions in areas 17 and 18 were compared.
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  • 90
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pons ; Cerebellum ; Pontocerebellar projection ; HRP method ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary By use of the retrograde axonal transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) the projection to the anterior lobe from the pontine nuclei was mapped in detail. In 18 cats 0.1–0.5 gml of a,50% suspension of Sigma VI or Serva HRP was injected in the anterior lobe under visual guidance or stereotactically. The main findings are as follows: 1. The projection to the vermis of the anterior lobe is bilateral with a contralateral preponderance (about 3/4). 2. The vermis of the anterior lobe receives afferents from a restricted, laterally located region in the caudal part of the pons. Dorsal parts of this region project anteriorly (lobules I–III), ventral parts posteriorly (lobulus V). 3. The projection to the intermediate-lateral part is almost exclusively contralateral and is considerably heavier than the projection to the vermis. 4. The intermediate-lateral part receives afferents from two pontine regions. One is located laterally and coincides caudally with the region projecting to the vermis. The other is located medially and projects only sparsely to the vermis. 5. Within the projection from the lateral pontine region to the intermediate part there is a somatotopical pattern corresponding to that within the projection to the vermis. Within the medial pontine region the somatotopical pattern is less clear, but there is a tendency for cells projecting to lobules III–IV to be located more ventrolaterally than those sending their fibres to lobulus V. 6. The pontine regions projecting to the anterior lobe seem to coincide closely with those receiving fibres from the primary sensorimotor cortex, particularly the lateral part of the anterior sigmoid gyrus and medial part of the posterior sigmoid gyrus, as determined previously (P. Brodal, 1968a).
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  • 91
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 21-35 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cat ; Visual cortex ; Binocular convergence ; Ocularity stripes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The average latency of cortical neuronal responses to electrical optic nerve (ON) stimulation was 3.0±0.7 s.d. msec. No significant difference between latencies to ipsi- and contralateral ON stimulation was found. Binocularly excitable cells showed almost equal response latencies to stimulation of both nerves. The average latency of subcortically recorded geniculo-cortical fibers was 0.3 msec less, but showed the same variance as that of cortical cells, suggesting that in all cases direct monosynaptic excitation of cortical cells by fibers of either ocularity is possible. Classes of ocular dominance based on electrical stimulation were positively, but not 100% correlated with classes of ocular dominance to visual stimulation. An anatomical study revealed that in cat terminals of geniculo-cortical projection are segregated to a lesser degree into ocularity stripes than in monkey. Direct monosynaptic excitation of cells by fibers of either ocularity which was found physiologically would also on these grounds appear possible for all cells.
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  • 92
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    Experimental brain research 28 (1977), S. 235-248 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Hemilabyrinthectomy ; Role of vision ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. A new description of vestibulo-ocular responses to angular velocity steps has been used to quantify vestibular compensation in right hemilabyrinthectomized cats. The amplitudes (VM and CM) and the times of occurrence (tM and to) from stimulus onset of the peaks of slow phase eye velocity and slow cumulative eye position were computed for velocity steps directed towards the lesioned side (clockwise, CW) and towards the intact side (counterclockwise, CCW). In addition, the values of these parameters were corrected from the effects of spontaneous nystagmus, when present. 2. In animals recovering in normal laboratory conditions, spontaneous nystagmus disappeared within 10 days after operation. In CCW responses, vm decreased by about 45% during the first 3 days and then remained stationary during the next 2 weeks. In CW responses VM showed a rapid increase during the first 3 days, and then remained stationary. After 2 weeks, VM increased in both CW and CCW responses. CM changes substantially reproduced those of VM. 3. In animals put in the dark immediately after operation, spontaneous nystagmus persisted until re-exposure to light (up to 31 days) and then disappeared rapidly. VM in both CW and CCW responses remained at a low value during the dark period and became more or less doubled after one week of exposure to light. CM also increased rapidly in CW and CCW responses, after re-exposure to light. 4. In the discussion these results are compared with those concerning activity of single vestibular neurons during compensation. It is concluded that vision is a primary factor conditioning disinhibition of vestibular nuclei spontaneous activity after the critical phase of compensation.
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  • 93
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    European archives of oto-rhino-laryngology and head & neck 217 (1977), S. 199-217 
    ISSN: 1434-4726
    Keywords: Hereditary deafness ; Cat ; Electron microscopy ; Stria vascularis ; Reissner's membrane ; Microcirculation ; Cellular metabolism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The auditory pathway potentials have been recorded from a series of 35 cats, and the stria vascularis and Reissner's membrane examined with the electron microsope. The ages varied from the first postnatal day to at least 6 years. 30 of the animals had white coats, and 45 of the ears lacked potentials. The basal processes of the marginal cells fail to develop in pathological ears, and appear displaced towards the endolymphatic surface by a layer of grossly swollen, chromophobe cells. These features are already present at the 3-day stage, and persist until the third week. Thereafter, increasing electron density of all cell types is found, with progressive reduction in strial thickness. Swelling of the capillary endothelial cells and descent of Reissner's membrane are found in the first coil at 2 weeks. Obliteration of capillaries, and development of vacuolar cytoplasmic outgrowths from the vestibular membrane mesothelial cells occur at later stages. These findings are discussed and compared with the pathological changes produced by a variety of endogenous and exogenous factors in both man and animals.
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  • 94
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    Cell & tissue research 183 (1977), S. 71-89 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Yolk sac ; Cat ; Erythropoiesis ; Blood-vessels ; Ultrastructure of erythroblasts
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The phase of primitive erythropoiesis in the feline yolk sac lasts from the 14th to the 20th day after mating. The globular nucleated primitive erythroblasts are formed extravascularly to some extent, but they can be clearly distinguished from the endoderm. They do not undergo a denucleation and are still present in the circulating blood on the 45th day. Aging primitive erythroblasts are characterized by a loss of polysomes, by the appearance of long intracytoplasmic electron-lucent channels, and by a nuclear pyknosis which can turn into a karyolysis. Definitive erythropoiesis begins around the 17th day but, even by the 19th day, it is not particularly prominent. It ends around the 45th day. It is almost exclusively intravascular. The distinction of immature primitive erythroblasts from erythroblasts of the definitive series is difficult, because it is based upon only slight differences in the heterochromatinization, in the nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio, and in the organelle content of the cells. In the definitive series, the nuclear divisions follows the law of the rhythmical halving of the nuclear volume. The cells exhibit more clearly identifiable maturation stages here, and the ‘checkerboard nucleus’ is more distinct. The vascular endothelium is largely attenuated and moderately fenestrated; it lacks a distinct basement membrane. Organelle-rich adventitial cells are found in close apposition.
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  • 95
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Sympathetic innervation ; Carotid body ; Carotid sinus ; Rabbit ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two postganglionic branches of the superior cervical ganglion enter the area of the carotid bifurcation in the rabbit and the cat. The common and external carotid arteries receive a rich adrenergic nerve supply, which can be demonstrated by fluorophores of biogenic amines appearing after formaldehyde treatment. The internal carotid artery is only sparsely innervated; however, it shows a dense sympathetic supply at the site of pressor receptors. Following removal of the superior cervical ganglion, a total loss of fluorescent adrenergic nerves occurs and degeneration of nerve endings possessing dense core vesicles is conspicuous. These nerve terminals are situated mainly subendothelially in the carotid body sinusoids; they only rarely terminate on type I cells.
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  • 96
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vasoconstrictor neurones ; Vasodilator neurones ; Skin ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single postganglionic neurones to hairy skin and hairless skin of the hindleg were investigated on spinal cord heating and spinal cord cooling in chloralose anesthetized cats. 1. Spontaneously active postganglionic neurones which were classified as vasoconstrictor neurones were depressed by spinal cord heating and excited by spinal cord cooling. The overall response to spinal cord cooling was smaller than that to spinal cord heating. 2. Posiganglionic neurones to the hairless skin, which had most likely sudomotor function, responded initially to spinal cord heating with a few impulses or not at all. As judged by the skin potentials recorded from the hairless skin the sweat glands were also only weakly activated at the beginning of the heat stimuli. 3. Six silent postganglionic neurones, 3 each to the hairy skin and to the hairless skin, were excited during spinal cord heating. The response of these neurones consisted of a dynamic and a static component and started at the beginning of the heating stimuli with latencies of less than 10 s. The neurones could not be excited by any other stimuli and were classified as cutaneous vasodilator neurones. 4. Quantitative analysis of 4 spontaneously active postganglionic (vasoconstrictor) neurones and 3 silent postganglionic (vasodilator) neurones revealed that the threshold of the responses of these neurones to spinal cord heating was 40–42°C (on the dorsal spinal cord) and that the response increase was maximal at the highest temperatures tested (43–44°C).
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  • 97
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    Pflügers Archiv 361 (1976), S. 221-229 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vasoconstrictors ; Pilomotors ; Tail's skin ; Single unit analysis ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Postganglionic neurones to the tail's skin of the cat were investigated with regard to their spontaneous activity, response characteristics to somatic stimuli and asphyxia, the conduction velocity of their axons, and the conduction velocity of the preganglionic axons converging on them. The cats were anaesthetized with chloralose, immobilized, and arteficially ventilated. With this regimen the postganglionic neurones were divided into two types: 1. Type 1 neurones are spontaneously active and exhibit reflexes upon somatic stimulation. During asphyxia they are mostly first depressed and then excited for about 2–3 min. Their axons conduct with 0.57±0.13 m/s (mean ± SD). The preganglionic axons converging on them conduct with 5.4±1.6 m/s. 2. Type 2 neurones are not spontaneously active and exhibit with few exceptions no reflexes on somatic stimuli. During asphyxia they are activated after 3–4 min, concomitantly with piloerection, when the activity in type 1 neurones is already decreasing. Their axons conduct with 0.84±0.14 m/s, the preganglionic axons converging on them conduct with 9.9±2.9 m/s. 3. From these characteristics it is concluded that type 1 neurones have vasomotor function and most type 2 neurones pilomotor function.
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  • 98
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Vasoconstrictors ; Vasodilators ; Muscle ; Hypothalamic stimulation ; Atropinesensitive vasodilation ; Single unit analysis ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Discharge patterns in postganglionic neurones to muscle and to hairy skin of the hindlimb of chloralose anaesthetized cats were investigated during electrical hypothalamic stimulation which induced either vasoconstriction or atropine sensitive vasodilation in the skeletal muscle. 2. Spontaneously active postganglionic neurones to muscle were activated both during hypothalamically induced vasoconstriction and active vasodilation. Stimulation of the hypothalamic vasodilator area induced mostly a sequence of activation-depression-activation in these neurones. Stimulation of cutaneous Group IV afferents elicited reflexes in these neurones; repetitive high frequency stimulation of large diameter afferents in the vago-depressor nerve produced depression of spontaneous activity followed by a postinhibitory excitation. The characteristics of these neurones fit those that would be expected of vasoconstrictors. 3. Normally inactive postganglionic neurones to skeletal muscle could only be activated during hypothalamically induced atropine sensitive vasodilation. These neurones exhibit no reflexes on somatic stimulation. The axons of these neurones conduct faster than those of the spontaneously active postganglionic neurones. It is likely that they are cholinergic vasodilator neurones. 4. Most of the cutaneous postganglionic neurones to hairy skin were activated during stimulation of both the hypothalamic vasoconstrictor and the vasodilator areas. These neurones have the characteristics of cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurones. Part of the cutaneous not spontaneously active postganglionic neurones could neither be activated from the hypothalamus nor by somatic stimuli.
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  • 99
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    Experimental brain research 25 (1976), S. 231-246 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Intralaminar system of thalamus ; Visual orientation ; Contrast perception ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Electrical stimulation with repetitive pulses (6/sec) was applied to the internal medullary lamina and produced tonic contraversive turning movements of eyes and head which were associated with recruiting responses in the visual cortex. Optical gratings of a spatial frequency of 0.5 c/deg which alternated with diffuse illumination of equal intensity were then presented to the animal during conjugated adversive eye movements induced by intralaminar stimulation with continuous sine-wave alternating currents of 5000 c.p.s. The head of the animal was fixed except for rotation in the horizontal plane. Prior to intralaminar stimulation it was turned in the direction opposite to the induced eye movements so that the animal always viewed the central area of the screen. The potential recorded in the visual cortex in response to the gratings consisted of an initial positive-negative potential of the order of 20 μV followed by later deflections of irregular shape. The size of this initial potential was measured during induced gazing and in the absence of intralaminar stimulation. A significantly greater potential in response to the gratings was found during gazing. Diminishing the visual acuity of the animal resulted in a marked decrease of the initial potential and in this condition very little increase was obtained during gazing. No enhancement of the potential was seen when stimulation was applied to other thalamic structures that yielded no visual orientation. It is concluded that perception of contrast is improved during visual orientation and that the effect is due to a concomitant activation of unspecific intralaminar afferents to the visual cortex.
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  • 100
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    Experimental brain research 25 (1976), S. 291-306 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Lateral geniculate ; Eye movements ; Frontal eye field ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Effects of electrical stimulation of the frontal eye field (FEF) upon activities of the lateral geniculate body (LG) were studied in encéphale isolé cats. In some experiments the effects were examined by recording field responses of the dorsal nucleus of LG (LGd) and the visual cortex (VC) to electrical stimulation of the optic chiasm (OX). Conditioning repetitive stimulation of FEF exerted no significant effects on the r1 wave of LGd responses but had a facilitatory effect on the r2 wave. FEF-induced facilitation of VC responses was prominent in the late postsynaptic components. These effects had latencies of 50–100 msec and durations of 200–500 msec. Transection of the midbrain showed that most of the FEF-effect was not mediated via the brainstem reticular formation. Extracellular unitary recordings were made from 125 neurons, of which 91 were LGd neurons, 23 neurons of the caudal part of the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRc) and 11 neurons of the ventral nucleus of LG (LGv). In 30 of 87 LGd relay neurons FEF stimuli increased response probabilities to OX stimuli and their spontaneous discharges. These FEF-facilitated LGd neurons were distinguished from the non-affected ones in that the former had longer OX-latencies than the latter. The FEF-facilitated neurons probably correspond to “X” neurons of LGd. In 17 TRc neurons the effects were inhibitory. Their time courses were similar to those of the facilitation in the LGd relay neurons. Seven LGv neurons received facilitatory effects from FEF. Among them 5 neurons showed short-latency (6.7–17 msec) responses to FEF single shocks. The FEF sites inducing conjugate lateral eye movements exerted stronger facilitatory effects than those inducing upward or centering eye movements did. It is suggested that the effects may subserve to cancel the inhibitory convergence onto X-cells just after saccadic eye movements so as to improve visual information transmission through LGd during the eye fixation.
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