Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

school:SOM

Department/Unit:Neuroscience Institute

Total Results:

13368


Inability of one-step real-time PCR to detect Borrelia burgdorferi DNA in urine [Letter]

Wagner, E M; Schmidt, B L; Bergmann, A R; Derler, A M; Aberer, E
PMCID:344498
PMID: 14766897
ISSN: 0095-1137
CID: 132051

Characterisation of cytoskeletal abnormalities in mice transgenic for wild-type human tau and familial Alzheimer's disease mutants of APP and presenilin-1

Boutajangout, Allal; Authelet, Michele; Blanchard, Veronique; Touchet, N; Tremp, Gunter; Pradier, Laurent; Brion, Jean-Pierre
To study the role of Abeta amyloid deposits in the generation of cytoskeletal lesions, we have generated a transgenic mouse line coexpressing in the same neurons a wild-type human tau isoform (0N3R), a mutant form of APP (751SL) and a mutant form of PS1 (M146L). These mice developed early cerebral extracellular deposits of Abeta, starting at 2.5 months. A somatodendritic neuronal accumulation of transgenic tau protein was observed in tau only and in tau/PS1/APP transgenic mice, including in neurons adjacent to Abeta deposits. The phosphorylation status of this somatodendritic tau was similar in the two transgenic lines. The Abeta deposits were surrounded by a neuritic reaction composed of axonal dystrophic processes, immunoreactive for many phosphotau epitopes and for the human tau transgenic protein. Ultrastructural observation showed in these dystrophic neurites a disorganisation of the microtubule and the neurofilament network but animals that were observed up to 18 months of age did not develop neurofibrillary tangles. These results indicate that overexpression of mutant PS1, mutant APP and of wild-type human tau were not sufficient per se to drive the formation of neurofibrillary tangles in a transgenic model. The Abeta deposits, however, were associated to marked changes in cytoskeletal organisation and in tau phosphorylation in adjacent dystrophic neurites
PMID: 14751770
ISSN: 0969-9961
CID: 75151

[The neuroanatomy of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder]

Castellanos, F X; Acosta, M T
Neuroimaging techniques are increasingly being applied to the study of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). This review focuses on magnetic resonance imaging studies of the brain anatomy of ADHD, which have now been conducted for over a decade. Most studies have focused on frontal striatal regions and have tended to find smaller volumes in children with ADHD relative to controls. Recently published analyses with the largest sample of patients and controls found that ADHD is associated with a statistically significant global reduction in brain volume in both boys and girls of 3 4%, which is confirmed in a meta analysis of this global measure. Specific regional differences have been found in many studies in the basal ganglia with the most prominent differences being found in the cerebellum
PMID: 15011167
ISSN: 0210-0010
CID: 42287

[Tourette syndrome: an analysis of its comorbidity and specific treatment]

Castellanos, F X; Acosta, M T
Introduction and method. Tic disorders can be severe enough to be incapacitating, but in most cases the observation of tics should alert the clinician to the possible presence of other conditions that may be more impairing even if less directly observable. The comorbid diagnoses that are best documented are obsessive compulsive disorder and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Conclusions. Treatment of Tourette syndrome combined with ADHD is often challenging. Alpha 2 agonists, such as guanfacine, or non stimulant options such as atomoxetine, where available, are worth considering, although many individuals with Tourette syndrome and ADHD can be successfully treated with judicious doses of stimulant medications
PMID: 15011166
ISSN: 0210-0010
CID: 42288

Building a projection map for photoreceptor neurons in the Drosophila optic lobes

Morante, Javier; Desplan, Claude
The sensory tasks performed by the eye are diverse and complex. In Drosophila, the eye performs motion detection for navigation as well as detection of the quality of light (color and polarized light). Both types of inputs are processed separately, as different photoreceptors are specialized in these tasks and contact different target cell layers in the optic lobe. However, their respective outputs are likely to be integrated in higher brain centers. Here, we discuss the cell diversity and potential role of the several ganglia that form the fly optic lobe. We also discuss the power of modern genetic tools to provide the potential to trace the visual neural networks.
PMID: 15036216
ISSN: 1084-9521
CID: 1694872

Fibrin depletion reverses relapsing paralysis in central nervous system autoimmune disease [Meeting Abstract]

Nuriel, T; Chao, MV; Akassoglou, K
ISI:000188239500031
ISSN: 1352-4585
CID: 46853

Dark flow artifacts with steady-state free precession cine MR technique: causes and implications for cardiac MR imaging

Li, Wei; Storey, Pippa; Chen, Qun; Li, Belinda S Y; Prasad, Pottumarthi V; Edelman, Robert R
Steady-state free precession cine images from cardiac magnetic resonance imaging studies of 24 patients were reviewed retrospectively to identify dark flow artifacts. The cause and features of the artifacts were studied in flow phantom experiments. Dark flow artifacts were recognized in eight of the 24 cases and were characterized by low or inhomogeneous signal intensity in blood pools with little change in adjacent tissues. The artifacts could be mimicked in flow phantom experiments by deliberately deshimming the gradients and appeared periodically during imaging with off-centered frequencies. These artifacts appeared to be caused by spins moving within an inhomogeneous magnetic field
PMID: 14752195
ISSN: 0033-8419
CID: 43835

Detection of Alzheimer's amyloid lesions in transgenic mice by magnetic resonance imaging [Meeting Abstract]

Sigurdsson, EM; Wadghiri, YZ; Li, YS; Elliott, JI; Tang, CY; Aguilnaldo, G; Duff, K; Pappolla, M; Watanabe, M; Scholtzova, H; Turnbull, DH; Wisniewski, T
ISI:000188844200032
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 42486

Occupational risk for nephrolithiasis and bladder dysfunction in a chauffeur [Case Report]

Chang, M A; Goldfarb, D S
The occupational risks for nephrolithiasis have not been widely studied. The published literature focuses on exposure to heat stress and toxic substances, not on the equally important behavioral risk factor of limited water consumption over many years. Urologic morbidity has been associated with suppressing the need to drink or void under restrictive work environments; however, no such studies link work related behavioral change with the development of kidney stones. This case report is the first to associate a restrictive work environment with limited fluid consumption, resulting in the development of nephrolithiasis
PMID: 14576963
ISSN: 0300-5623
CID: 48188

Spiking neural network for recognizing spatiotemporal sequences of spikes

Jin, Dezhe Z
Sensory neurons in many brain areas spike with precise timing to stimuli with temporal structures, and encode temporally complex stimuli into spatiotemporal spikes. How the downstream neurons read out such neural code is an important unsolved problem. In this paper, we describe a decoding scheme using a spiking recurrent neural network. The network consists of excitatory neurons that form a synfire chain, and two globally inhibitory interneurons of different types that provide delayed feedforward and fast feedback inhibition, respectively. The network signals recognition of a specific spatiotemporal sequence when the last excitatory neuron down the synfire chain spikes, which happens if and only if that sequence was present in the input spike stream. The recognition scheme is invariant to variations in the intervals between input spikes within some range. The computation of the network can be mapped into that of a finite state machine. Our network provides a simple way to decode spatiotemporal spikes with diverse types of neurons.
PMID: 14995489
ISSN: 1539-3755
CID: 3331822