21 research outputs found
MITOCHONDRIAL MYOPATHY WITH LACTIC-ACIDOSIS AND DEFICIENT ACTIVITY OF MUSCLE SUCCINATE CYTOCHROME-C-OXIDOREDUCTASE
MITOCHONDRIAL MYOPATHY WITH LACTIC-ACIDOSIS AND DEFICIENT ACTIVITY OF MUSCLE SUCCINATE CYTOCHROME-C-OXIDOREDUCTASE
Immunocytochemical demonstration of Actinomyces species and Arachnia propionica in periapical infections
Potentiation of Vaccines Through Effective Adjuvant Formulations and Manipulation of the Immune Response
Countermeasures and vaccination against terrorism using smallpox: pre-event and post-event smallpox vaccination and its contraindications
Lateral hypothalamic circuits for feeding and reward
In experiments conducted over 60 years ago, the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) was identified as a critical neuroanatomical substrate for motivated behavior. Electrical stimulation of the LHA induces voracious feeding even in non-restricted animals. In the absence of food, animals will work tirelessly, often lever-pressing 1000’s of times per hour, for electrical stimulation at the same site that provokes feeding, drinking, and other species-typical motivated behaviors. Here we review the classic findings from electrical stimulation studies and integrate them with more recent work that has utilized contemporary circuit-based approaches to study the LHA. We identify specific anatomically and molecularly defined LHA elements that integrate diverse information arising from cortical, extended amygdala, and basal forebrain networks to ultimately generate a highly specified and invigorated behavioral state conveyed via LHA projections to downstream reward and feeding specific circuits
