Ocular Reflex Adaptation as an Experimental Model of Cerebellar Learning –– In Memory of Masao Ito ––

Author(s):  
Soichi Nagao
1997 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Andersson ◽  
Mats Ulfendahl ◽  
Richard Tham

A new method has been developed to study the influence of drugs and toxicants on longterm recovery of dynamics in the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex of the rat after hemilabyrinthectomy (HL). HL was performed by injecting sodium arsanilate into the middle ear. The lesion was confirmed by histology. Eye movements elicited by sinusoidal vestibular stimulation, in both light and darkness, were recorded by a search-coil technique and then analyzed by a computer program created with virtual instrument soft-ware, which calculated the gain of the slow-phase velocity (SPV) and the saccades para-meters (frequency, amplitude, and peak velocity) to the lesioned side and to the intact side separately. During the 2-10 week period after HL, repeated analysis of the spontaneous long-term recovery of such parameters revealed a slight but significant reduction of the post-HL asymmetry between SPV gain to the lesioned side and to the intact side. During the follow-up period, a post-HL increase of the phase lead remained unchanged. The reduced number of saccades/min was not completely restored. To test the usefulness of the experimental model for neurochemical investigation of such adaptation, we administered baclofen and toluene to rats 8–12 wk after hemilabyrinthectomy. Baclofen, a specificGABABagonist, immediately restored the symmetry of SPV gain. By contrast, toluene, which has some effects on the central vestibular system that are related toGABABtransmission, aggravated the asymmetry in both the SPV gain and the number of saccades. We suggest that the experimental model would be useful for studying neurochemical mechanisms in vestibular adaptation processes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (21) ◽  
pp. 7203-7215 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Clopath ◽  
A. Badura ◽  
C. I. De Zeeuw ◽  
N. Brunel

Author(s):  
Waykin Nopanitaya ◽  
Raeford E. Brown ◽  
Joe W. Grisham ◽  
Johnny L. Carson

Mammalian endothelial cells lining hepatic sinusoids have been found to be widely fenestrated. Previous SEM studies (1,2) have noted two general size catagories of fenestrations; large fenestrae were distributed randomly while the small type occurred in groups. These investigations also reported that large fenestrae were more numerous and larger in the endothelial cells at the afferent ends of sinusoids or around the portal areas, whereas small fenestrae were more numerous around the centrilobular portion of the hepatic lobule. It has been further suggested that under some physiologic conditions small fenestrae could fuse and subsequently become the large type, but this is, as yet, unproven.We have used a reproducible experimental model of hypoxia to study the ultrastructural alterations in sinusoidal endothelial fenestrations in order to investigate the origin of occurrence of large fenestrae.


2003 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-34
Author(s):  
B SHIVALKAR ◽  
B MEURIS ◽  
R VANBENEDEN ◽  
J KETESLEGERS ◽  
F BECKERS ◽  
...  

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