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Slide 1 - TeacherWeb
Slide 1 - TeacherWeb

... • Neurotransmitters enable the signal from one neuron to be relayed to other neurons across the synapse, a small gap that separates neurons. • A myelin sheath covers the axons of some neurons to increase the speed of transmission of the neural signal. ...
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... useful for the selection of cell types harbouring plasmids carrying puromycin resistance genes. The specific bonding of puromycin to full-length protein at the C-terminus at a low concentration is potentially useful to the analysis of various ...
Neuromodulation  and  cortical  function: BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN
Neuromodulation and cortical function: BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN

... differences in the amount of suppression were noted depending upon the side of the slice being studied [246]. Later experiments in transverse slices revealed that cholinergic agonists have little effect in the outer molecular layer (receiving afferents from the lateral entorhinal cortex), but more s ...
The sacral autonomic outflow is sympathetic
The sacral autonomic outflow is sympathetic

... Cranial parasympathetic preganglionic neurons (or visceromotor (VM) neurons) are born in the pMNv domain progenitor domain of the hindbrain5 that expresses the homeogene Phox2b and produces, in addition to VM neurons, branchiomotor (BM) ones6. The postmitotic precursors migrate dorsally 7 to form nu ...
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... mode network components; and in subcortical nuclei, including the amygdala, thalamus, and basal ganglia. Such cortical and subcortical hotspots of functional connectivity were more clearly evident at lower frequencies (0.02–0.1 Hz) than at higher frequencies (0.1–0.2 Hz) of endogenous oscillation. C ...
Lect-3-Sensory cortex-Dr.Zahoor2010-10
Lect-3-Sensory cortex-Dr.Zahoor2010-10

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histology of the central nervous system

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A Physiologically Plausible Model of Action Selection

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... Parkinson’s disease was named after James Parkinson, a London physician who first described its “involuntary tremulous motion” in 1817 It was hoped that Parkinson’s might be alleviated by replacing the chemical. It was thought that the tremors of Parkinson’s disease resulted from the death of nerve ...
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Clinical neurochemistry



Clinical neurochemistry is the field of neurological biochemistry which relates biochemical phenomena to clinical symptomatic manifestations in humans. While neurochemistry is mostly associated with the effects of neurotransmitters and similarly-functioning chemicals on neurons themselves, clinical neurochemistry relates these phenomena to system-wide symptoms. Clinical neurochemistry is related to neurogenesis, neuromodulation, neuroplasticity, neuroendocrinology, and neuroimmunology in the context of associating neurological findings at both lower and higher level organismal functions.
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