58 research outputs found

    Absence-like seizures in adult rats following pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus early in life

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    Administration of pilocarpine causes epilepsy in rats if status epilepticus (SE) is induced at an early age. To determine in detail the electrophysiological patterns of the epileptogenic activity in these animals, 46 Wistar rats, 7-17 days old, were subjected to SE induced by pilocarpine and electro-oscillograms from the cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus and hypothalamus, as well as head, rostrum and vibrissa, eye, ear and forelimb movements, were recorded 120 days later. Six control animals of the same age range did not show any signs of epilepsy. In all the rats subjected to SE, iterative spike-wave complexes (8.1 ± 0.5 Hz in frequency, 18.9 ± 9.1 s in duration) were recorded from the frontal cortex during absence fits. However, similar spike-wave discharges were always found also in the hippocampus and, less frequently, in the amygdala and in thalamic nuclei. Repetitive or single spikes were also detected in these same central structures. Clonic movements and single jerks were recorded from all the rats, either concomitantly with or independently of the spike-wave complexes and spikes. We conclude that rats made epileptic with pilocarpine develop absence seizures also occurring during paradoxical sleep, showing the characteristic spike-wave bursts in neocortical areas and also in the hippocampus. This is in contrast to the well-accepted statement that one of the main characteristics of absence-like fits in the rat is that spike-wave discharges are never recorded from the hippocampal fields.Universidade de São Paulo Faculdade de Medicina Laboratório de Neurocirurgia FuncionalUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Escola Paulista de Medicina Laboratório de Neurologia ExperimentalUNIFESP, EPM, Laboratório de Neurologia ExperimentalSciEL

    The brain decade in debate: VII. Neurobiology of sleep and dreams

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    This article is a transcription of an electronic symposium held on February 5, 2001 by the Brazilian Society of Neuroscience and Behavior (SBNeC) during which eight specialists involved in clinical and experimental research on sleep and dreaming exposed their personal experience and theoretical points of view concerning these highly polemic subjects. Unlike most other bodily functions, sleep and dreaming cannot, so far, be defined in terms of definitive functions that play an ascribable role in maintaining the organism as a whole. Such difficulties appear quite clearly all along the discussions. In this symposium, concepts on sleep function range from a protective behavior to an essential function for maturation of the nervous system. Kleitman's hypothesis [Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (1974), 159: 293-294] was discussed, according to which the basal state is not the wakeful state but sleep, from which we awake to eat, to protect ourselves, to procreate, etc. Dreams, on the other hand, were widely discussed, being considered either as an important step in consolidation of learning or simply the conscious identification of functional patterns derived from the configuration of released or revoked memorized information.Universidade de São Paulo Faculdade de Medicina Instituto de PsiquiatriaUniversity of Laval School of Medicine Department of PhysiologyRutgers State University Center for NeuroscienceUniversidade de São Paulo Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas Departamento de Fisiologia e BiofísicaUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Instituto do SonhoFacultad de Medicina de Montevideo Departamento de Fisiología NeurofisiologíaFlorida Atlantic University Center for Complex SystemsUniversidade de São Paulo Faculdade de Medicina Departamento de NeurologiaUNIFESP, Instituto do SonhoSciEL

    Sleep patterns over 15-day period in rats with spinal cord injury

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    Study design: Experimental, controlled trial.Objectives: the purpose of this study was to evaluate over a 15-day period alterations in sleep pattern of rats after spinal cord injury (SCI).Setting: Federal University of São Paulo, Department of Psychobiology.Methods: in total, 20 male Wistar rats were used. the rats were divided in two groups: SHAM and SCI. the rats were submitted to the following procedures: electrode insertion surgery, 24 h duration baseline sleep recording, SCI (level T9) and subsequent sleep recording for 15 consecutive days.Results: the results showed a reduction in sleep efficiency in the light period for Days 1-3, 5, 10 and 12 after SCI in relation to the SHAM group, with alterations in total waking time and sleep stages. Limb movements were observed 4 days after SCI.Conclusion: the present findings suggest that SCI may be heavily involved in altering sleep pattern in SCI subjects and that the inactivity caused by SCI may be exacerbating this altered sleep pattern.Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Psychobiol, BR-04020060 São Paulo, BrazilUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Ctr Psychobiol & Exercise Res, BR-04020060 São Paulo, BrazilSanta Casa, Dept Pathol, São Paulo, BrazilUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Psychobiol, BR-04020060 São Paulo, BrazilUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Ctr Psychobiol & Exercise Res, BR-04020060 São Paulo, BrazilWeb of Scienc
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