Today's Hours: 8:00am - 8:00pm

Search

Did You Mean:

Search Results

  • Book
    edited by Emma L. Lane, Stephen B. Dunnett.
    Contents:
    V.1 : Why cannot a rodent be more like a man? A clinical perspective / Anne E. Rosser
    Zebrafish as a vertebrate model organism for studying movement disorders / Maria Sundvik and Pertti Panula
    Methodological strategies to evaluate functional effectors related to Parkinson's disease through application of Caenorhabditis elegans Models/ Kim A. Caldwell and Guy A. Caldwell
    Effects of alpha-synuclein expression on behavioral activity in Drosophila : a simple model of Parkinson's disease / Robert G. Pendleton [and others]
    Neurological evaluation of movement disorders in mice / Simon P. Brooks
    Rodent skilled reaching for modeling pathological conditions of the human motor system / Jenni M. Karl and Ian Q. Whishaw
    High-throughput mouse phenotyping / Sabine M. Holter and Lisa Glasl
    MRI of neurological damage in rats and mice / Mathias Hoehn
    Quantification of brain function and neurotransmission system in vivo by positron emission tomography : a review of technical aspects and practical considerations in preclinical research / Nadja Van Camp, Yann Bramoulle, and Philippe Hantraye
    Optical approaches to studying the basal ganglia / Joshua L. Plotkin [and others]
    Electrophysiological analysis of movement disorders in mice / Shilpa P. Rao [and others]
    Genetic models of Parkinson's disease / Ralf Kuhn, Daniela Vogt-Weisenhorn, and Wolfgang Wurst
    6-OHDA lesion models of Parkinson's disease in the rat / Eduardo M. Torres and Stephen B. Dunnett
    6-OHDA toxin model in mouse / Gaynor A. Smith and Andreas Heuer
    Rotation in the 6-OHDA-lesioned rat / Stephen B. Dunnett and Eduardo M. Torres
    Of rats and patients : some thoughts about why rats turn in circles and Parkinson's disease patients cannot move normally / Gordon W. Arbuthnott
    Comparing behavioral assessment of sensorimotor function in rat and mouse models of Parkinson's disease and stroke / Sheila M. Fleming and Timothy Schallert
    Rodent models of l-DOPA-induced dyskinesia / Hanna S. Lindgren and Emma L. Lane
    Using the MPTP mouse model to understand neuroplasticity : a new therapeutic target for Parkinson's disease / Giselle M. Petzinger [and others]
    MPTP-treated primate, with specific reference to the use of the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) / Michael J. Jackson and Peter Jenner
    Behavioral assessment in the african green monkey after MPTP administration / D. Eugene Redmond Jr. V. 2: Part I Generic methods of assessment
    Why cannot a rodent be more like a man? a clinical perspective / Anne E. Rosser
    Zebrafish as a vertebrate model organism for studying movement disorders / Maria Sundvik and Pertti Panula
    Methodological strategies to evaluate functional effectors related to parkinson's disease through application of caenorhabditis elegans models / Kim A. Caldwell and Guy A. Caldwell
    Effects of alpha-synuclein expression on behavioral activity in drosophila : a simple model of parkinson's disease / Robert G. Pendleton [and others]
    Neurological evaluation of movement disorders in mice / Simon P. Brooks
    Rodent skilled reaching for modeling pathological conditions of the human motor system / Jenni M. Karl and Ian Q. Whishaw
    High-throughput mouse phenotyping / Sabine M. Holter and Lisa Glasl
    MRI of neurological damage in rats and mice / Mathias Hoehn
    Quantification of brain function and neurotransmission system in vivo by positron emission tomography : a review of technical aspects and practical considerations in preclinical research / Nadja Van Coup, Yann Bramoulle, and Philippe Hantraye
    Optical approaches to studying the basal ganglia / Joshua L. Plotkin [and others]
    Electrophysiological analysis of movement disorders in mice / Shilpa P. Rao [and others]
    Part II Dopamine systems
    Genetic models of parkinson's disease / Ralf Kuhn, Daniela Vogt-Weisenborn, and Wolfgang Wurst
    6-OHDA lesion models of parkinson's disease in the rat / Eduardo M. Torres and Stephen B. Dunnett
    6-OHDA toxin model in mouse / Gaynor A. Smith and Andreas Heuer
    Rotation in the 6-OHDA-lesioned rat / Stephen B. Dunnett and Eduardo M. Torres
    Of rats and patients : some thoughts about why rats turn in circles and parkinson's disease patients cannot move normally / Gordon W. Arbuthnott
    Comparing behavioral assessment of sensorimotor function in rat and mouse models of parkinson's disease and stroke / Sheila M. Fleming and Timothy Schallert
    Rodent models of 1-DOPA-induced dyskinesia / Hanna S. Lindgren and Emma L. Lane
    Using the MPTP mouse model to understand neuroplasticity : a new therapeutic target for parkinson's disease? / Giselle M. Petzinger [and others]
    MPTP-treated primate, with specific reference to the use of the common marmoset (callitbrix jacchus) / Michael J. Jackson and Peter Jenner
    Behavioral assessment in the african green monkey after MPTP administration / D. Eugene Redmond, Jr.
    Digital Access
    Provider
    Version
    Springer
    Springer
  • Book
    edited by Andrew Baum and Jerome E. Singer.
    Contents:
    v. 1 Clinical psychology and behavioral medicine
    2. Issues in child health and adolescent health
    v. 3. Cardiovascular disorders and behavior
    v. 4. Social psychological aspects of health
    v. 5. Stress.
    Print 1982-
  • Article
    Schlisio W, Nicolai B.
    Comp Biochem Physiol B. 1978;59(4):373-9.
    1. Growing rainbow trout were fed at 8 a.m. daily with a composition conforming with their requirements. 2. The free amino acids in the plasma exhibit no uniform behaviour after feeding. The concentrations of the indispensable amino acids rise. The dispensable amino acids behave indifferently. The aspartate and glutamate concentrations are also high 3 and 12 hr after feeding with pure amino acids, their variability also rising to 80-100% of their mean values. 3. The GOT reaches its maximum activity 6 hr after feeding; the GPT does not change. The amount of soluble protein in the liver fluctuates after feeding. 4. When comparing fish and mammals, the behaviour of the dispensable amino acids in the former may be ascribable to their relatively high amino acid requirement. However, the behaviour of the GOT and the soluble proteins in the liver appears to follow a rhythmic activity pattern.
    Digital Access Access Options