LH syndrome and brain catecholamine levels after lesions of the nigrostriatal bundle |
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Authors: | G A Oltmans J A Harvey |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Lesions of the nigrostriatal bundle (NSB), whose fibers pass through the medial portions of the internal capsule and the immediately adjacent lateral hypothalamus (LH), produced a more severe aphagia, adipsia, and disturbance of water regulation than did lesions of the medial forebrain bundle (MFB). When deprived of food, animals with NSB lesions drank significantly less than controls and animals with MFB lesions. NSB lesions also produced greater decreases in telencephalic content of the catecholamines than MFB lesions, while the reverse was true for serotonin. Water intake during food deprivation was highly correlated with telencephalic catecholamine levels in animals with NSB lesions. Thus, the inability to regulate water intake in the absence of food, one of the characteristic and long lasting effects of the LH syndrome, appears to be due to destruction of the NSB and the consequent decline in telencephalic content of catecholamines. |
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Keywords: | LH syndrome Water regulation Nigrostriatal bundle Medial forebrain bundle Dopamine Norepinephrine Serotonin |
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