SummaryBackgroundDespite seventeen decades of continuous clinical use, the neuronal mechanisms through which volatile anesthetics act to produce unconsciousness remain obscure. One emerging possibility is that anesthetics exert their hypnotic effects by hijacking endogenous arousal circuits. A key sleep-promoting component of this circuitry is the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus (VLPO), a hypothalamic region containing both state-independent neurons and neurons that preferentially fire during natural sleep.ResultsUsing c-Fos immunohistochemistry as a biomarker for antecedent neuronal activity, we show that isoflurane and halothane increase the number of active neurons in the VLPO, but only when mice are sedated or unconscious. Destroying VLP...
General anaesthetics cause sedation, amnesia and hypnosis. Although these clinically desired actions...
SummaryVolatile anesthetics (VAs) cause profound neurological effects, including reversible loss of ...
Volatile anesthetics are widely used for surgery, but neuronal mechanisms of anesthesia remain unide...
General anesthetics are among the most important drugs in modern medicine, yet the mechanisms by whi...
Ever since the first documented use of an anesthetic nearly 166 years ago, the mechanisms by which g...
SummaryThe plant hormone cytokinin controls root growth by balancing the division and differentiatio...
The role of the hypothalamic preoptic area (POA) in arousal state regulation has been studied since ...
General anesthetics are commonly used in animal models to study how sensory signals are represented ...
The anesthetic excitement phase occurring during induction of anesthesia with volatile anesthetics i...
The perturbation that is responsible for the anaesthetic-induced unconscious state remains undefine...
Dopamine (DA) promotes wakefulness, and DA transporter inhibitors such as dextroamphetamine and meth...
The molecular mechanisms of general anesthetic action are poorly understood, especially in regard to...
General anesthesia consists of amnesia, analgesia, areflexia and unconsciousness. How anesthetics su...
The daily transition we take in and out of sleep is ancient and occurs in all known mammals. Ancient...
Actualment, Albert Quintana Romero desenvolupa la seva recerca a l'Institut de Neurociències de la U...
General anaesthetics cause sedation, amnesia and hypnosis. Although these clinically desired actions...
SummaryVolatile anesthetics (VAs) cause profound neurological effects, including reversible loss of ...
Volatile anesthetics are widely used for surgery, but neuronal mechanisms of anesthesia remain unide...
General anesthetics are among the most important drugs in modern medicine, yet the mechanisms by whi...
Ever since the first documented use of an anesthetic nearly 166 years ago, the mechanisms by which g...
SummaryThe plant hormone cytokinin controls root growth by balancing the division and differentiatio...
The role of the hypothalamic preoptic area (POA) in arousal state regulation has been studied since ...
General anesthetics are commonly used in animal models to study how sensory signals are represented ...
The anesthetic excitement phase occurring during induction of anesthesia with volatile anesthetics i...
The perturbation that is responsible for the anaesthetic-induced unconscious state remains undefine...
Dopamine (DA) promotes wakefulness, and DA transporter inhibitors such as dextroamphetamine and meth...
The molecular mechanisms of general anesthetic action are poorly understood, especially in regard to...
General anesthesia consists of amnesia, analgesia, areflexia and unconsciousness. How anesthetics su...
The daily transition we take in and out of sleep is ancient and occurs in all known mammals. Ancient...
Actualment, Albert Quintana Romero desenvolupa la seva recerca a l'Institut de Neurociències de la U...
General anaesthetics cause sedation, amnesia and hypnosis. Although these clinically desired actions...
SummaryVolatile anesthetics (VAs) cause profound neurological effects, including reversible loss of ...
Volatile anesthetics are widely used for surgery, but neuronal mechanisms of anesthesia remain unide...