Search

Your search keyword '"Reticular Formation drug effects"' showing total 1,085 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "Reticular Formation drug effects" Remove constraint Descriptor: "Reticular Formation drug effects"
1,085 results on '"Reticular Formation drug effects"'

Search Results

1. μ-Opioid Receptor Activation at the Dorsal Reticular Nucleus Shifts Diffuse Noxious Inhibitory Controls to Hyperalgesia in Chronic Joint Pain in Male Rats.

2. Effects of α-Synuclein Monomers Administration in the Gigantocellular Reticular Nucleus on Neurotransmission in Mouse Model.

3. Direct and indirect nigrofugal projections to the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis mediate in the motor execution of the acoustic startle reflex.

4. Chronic adolescent morphine exposure alters the responses of lateral paragigantocellular neurons to acute morphine administration in adulthood.

5. [Myoclonus as a movement disorder].

6. Intrinsic connections within the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus are critical to the elaboration of post-ictal antinociception.

7. Behavioral anxiolysis without reduction of hippocampal theta frequency after histamine application in the lateral septum of rats.

8. Repeated Baclofen treatment ameliorates motor dysfunction, suppresses reflex activity and decreases the expression of signaling proteins in reticular nuclei and lumbar motoneurons after spinal trauma in rats.

9. GABAA receptors are located in cholinergic terminals in the nucleus pontis oralis of the rat: implications for REM sleep control.

10. Role of glutamate receptors in the dorsal reticular nucleus in formalin-induced secondary allodynia.

11. GABA(A) receptors implicated in REM sleep control express a benzodiazepine binding site.

12. Noradrenaline increases pain facilitation from the brain during inflammatory pain.

13. Coherence and frequency in the reticular activating system (RAS).

14. Extrasynaptic GABAA receptors in rat pontine reticular formation increase wakefulness.

15. Adenosine A(1) receptors in mouse pontine reticular formation depress breathing, increase anesthesia recovery time, and decrease acetylcholine release.

16. Glutamate injection into the cuneiform nucleus in rat, produces correlated single unit activities in the Kolliker-Fuse nucleus and cardiovascular responses.

17. Propofol and etomidate depress cortical, thalamic, and reticular formation neurons during anesthetic-induced unconsciousness.

18. Enhanced catabolism to acetaldehyde in rostral ventrolateral medullary neurons accounts for the pressor effect of ethanol in spontaneously hypertensive rats.

19. [Effect of the Na+, K(+)-ATPase modulation in neurons of the medulla oblongata on hemodynamic effects in spontaneously hypertensive rats].

20. Glycine inhibits startle-mediating neurons in the caudal pontine reticular formation but is not involved in synaptic depression underlying short-term habituation of startle.

21. Buprenorphine disrupts sleep and decreases adenosine concentrations in sleep-regulating brain regions of Sprague Dawley rat.

22. μ-Opioid modulation in the rostral solitary nucleus and reticular formation alters taste reactivity: evidence for a suppressive effect on consummatory behavior.

23. Theta synchronization between the hippocampus and the nucleus incertus in urethane-anesthetized rats.

24. Blockade of opioid receptors in the medullary reticularis nucleus dorsalis, but not the rostral ventromedial medulla, prevents analgesia produced by diffuse noxious inhibitory control in rats with muscle inflammation.

25. Changes in neurons of medulla oblongata nuclei under conditions of chronic NO-synthase inhibition.

26. Effect of glutamate stimulation of the cuneiform nucleus on cardiovascular regulation in anesthetized rats: role of the pontine Kolliker-Fuse nucleus.

27. Alterations of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in the brain of rats chronically exposed to lead acetate.

28. Neural correlates of an injury-free model of central sensitization induced by opioid withdrawal in humans.

29. Nitrergic ventro-medial medullary neurons activated during cholinergically induced active (rapid eye movement) sleep in the cat.

30. A trigeminoreticular pathway: implications in pain.

31. A comparison of tabun-inhibited rat brain acetylcholinesterase reactivation by three oximes (HI-6, obidoxime, and K048) in vivo detected by biochemical and histochemical techniques.

32. Eye movements and abducens motoneuron behavior after cholinergic activation of the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis.

33. Hypocretin and GABA interact in the pontine reticular formation to increase wakefulness.

34. Reversal of neuropathic pain by HSV-1-mediated decrease of noradrenaline in a pain facilitatory area of the brain.

35. GABA(A) receptors in the pontine reticular formation of C57BL/6J mouse modulate neurochemical, electrographic, and behavioral phenotypes of wakefulness.

36. Group III metabotropic glutamate receptors inhibit startle-mediating giant neurons in the caudal pontine reticular nucleus but do not mediate synaptic depression/short-term habituation of startle.

37. Cholinergic modulation differs between basal and apical dendritic excitation of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells.

38. Cerebellar Golgi cells in the rat receive convergent peripheral inputs via a lateral reticular nucleus relay.

39. Benzodiazepine receptor agonists cause drug-specific and state-specific alterations in EEG power and acetylcholine release in rat pontine reticular formation.

40. Thermal nociception is decreased by hypocretin-1 and an adenosine A1 receptor agonist microinjected into the pontine reticular formation of Sprague Dawley rat.

41. Carbachol injection into the pontine reticular formation depresses laryngeal muscle activities and airway reflexes in decerebrate cats.

42. [Effect of oxysophoridine on electric activities and its power spectrum of reticular formation in rats].

43. Suppression of third ventricular NPY-elicited feeding following medullary reticular formation infusions of muscimol.

44. Importance of angiotensinergic mechanisms for the pressor response to l-glutamate into the rostral ventrolateral medulla.

45. Stabilization of visual responses through cholinergic activation.

46. Cyclooxygenase-1 and -2 in spinally projecting neurons are involved in CRF-induced sympathetic activation.

47. Opioid-induced decreases in rat brain adenosine levels are reversed by inhibiting adenosine deaminase.

48. Influence of glutamatergic projections to the rostral pontine reticular formation on micturition in rats.

49. Status epilepticus affects the gigantocellular network of the pontine reticular formation.

50. Angiotensin II type-2 (AT2) receptor antagonism alters cardiovascular responses to static exercise and simultaneously changes glutamate/GABA levels within the ventrolateral medulla.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources