Animal models of movement disorders
著者
書誌事項
Animal models of movement disorders
(Springer protocols)(Neuromethods, 61,
Humana Press, c2011
- v. 1
- v. 2
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
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v. 1 ISBN 9781617792977
内容説明
Movement is the way that animals interact with their environment and is under the organization and complex control of the brain and spinal cord. Multiple central nervous systems, including cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and brainstem, interact to provide precise motor control and integration. Damage or disease within these systems cause profound motor disturbances in man, which can be effectively modeled in animals to develop a better understanding and treatment of the human condition. Animal Models of Movement Disorders introduces a variety of methods and techniques used to model and assess motor function in experimental animals from lower orders, such as drosophila and c. elegans, through vertebrate species including fish, to mammals, such as rodents and non-human primates. The most advanced contemporary models in each system are presented at multiple levels of analysis from molecular and genetic modeling, lesions, anatomy, neurochemistry, to imaging and behavior. Volume I contains general methods of movement disorder assessment as well as an extensive section on dopamine systems.
Comprehensive and meticulous, Animal Models of Movement Disorders serves as a valuable reference for those studying motor disorders by covering methodologies in detail and providing the information necessary to consider both the appropriate models and assessment tools that can most informatively answer the key experimental issues in the field.
目次
Part I: Generic Methods of Assessment
1. Why Can't a Rodent Be More like a Man?: A Clinical Perspective
Anne E. Rosser
2. Zebrafish as a Vertebrate Model Organism for Studying Movement Disorders
Maria Sundvik and Pertti Panula
3. Methodological Strategies to Evaluate Functional Effectors Related to Parkinson's Disease through Application of C. elegans Models
Kim A. Caldwell and Guy A. Caldwell
4. Effects of Alpha-Synuclein Expression on Behavioral Activity in Drosophila, a Simple Model of Parkinson's Disease
Robert G. Pendleton, Xiaoyun C. Yang, Natalie Jerome, Ornela Dervisha, and Ralph Hillman
5. Neurological Evaluation of Movement Disorders in Mice
Simon Brooks
6. Rodent Skilled Reaching for Modeling Pathological Conditions of the Human Motor System
Jenni M. Karl and Ian Q. Whishaw
7. High Throughput Mouse Phenotyping
Sabine M. Hoelter and Lisa Glasl
8. MRI of Neurological Damage in Rats and Mice
Mathias Hoehn
9. 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
10. Optical Approaches to Studying the Basal Ganglia
Joshua L. Plotkin, Jaime N. Guzman, Nicholas Schwarz, Geraldine Kress,
David L. Wokosin, and D. James Surmeier
11. Electrophysiological Analysis of Movement Disorders in Mice
Shilpa P. Rao, Veronique M. Andre, Carlos Cepeda, and Michael S. Levine
Part II: Dopamine Systems
12. Genetic Models of Parkinson`s Disease
Ralf Kuhn, Daniela Vogt-Weisenhorn, and Wolfgang Wurst
13. 6-OHDA Lesion Models of Parkinson's Disease in the Rat
Eduardo M. Torres and Stephen B. Dunnett
14. 6-OHDA Toxin Model in Mouse
Gaynor A. Smith and Andreas Heuer
15. Rotation in the 6-OHDA Lesioned Rat
Stephen B. Dunnett and Eduardo M. Torres
16. Of Rats and Patients: Some Thoughts about Why Rats Turn in Circles and Parkinson's Disease Patients Cannot Move Normally
Gordon W. Arbuthnott
17. Comparing Behavioral Assessment of Sensorimotor Function in Rat and Mouse Models of Parkinson's Disease and Stroke
Sheila M. Fleming and Timothy Schallert
18. Rodent Models of L-DOPA-Induced Dyskinesia
Hanna S. Lindgren and Emma L. Lane
19. Using the MPTP Mouse Model to Understand Neuroplasticity: A New Therapeutic Target for Parkinson's Disease?
Giselle M. Petzinger, Beth E. Fisher, Garnik Akopian, Ruth Wood, John P. Walsh, and Michael W. Jakowec
20. The MPTP Treated Primate, with Specific Reference to the Use of the Common Marmoset (C. jacchus)
Michael J. Jackson and Peter Jenner
21. Behavioral Assessment in the African Green Monkey after MPTP Administration
D. Eugene Redmond, Jr.
- 巻冊次
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v. 2 ISBN 9781617793004
内容説明
Movement is the way that animals interact with their environment and is under the organization and complex control of the brain and spinal cord. Multiple central nervous systems, including cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and brainstem, interact to provide precise motor control and integration. Damage or disease within these systems cause profound motor disturbances in man, which can be effectively modeled in animals to develop a better understanding and treatment of the human condition. Animal Models of Movement Disorders introduces a variety of methods and techniques used to model and assess motor function in experimental animals from lower orders, such as drosophila and c. elegans, through vertebrate species including fish, to mammals, such as rodents and non-human primates. The most advanced contemporary models in each system are presented at multiple levels of analysis from molecular and genetic modeling, lesions, anatomy, neurochemistry, to imaging and behavior. Volume II of this detailed collection contains sections on the basal ganglia, neo- and allo-cortical systems, cerebellar and brain stem systems, as well as spinal cord systems.
Comprehensive and meticulous, Animal Models of Movement Disorders serves as a valuable reference for those studying motor disorders by covering methodologies in detail and providing the information necessary to consider both the appropriate models and assessment tools that can most informatively answer the key experimental issues in the field.
目次
Part I: Basal Ganglia
1. Behavioral Assessment of Genetic Mouse Models of Huntington's Disease
Miriam A. Hickey and Marie-Francoise Chesselet
2. Excitotoxic Lesions of the Rodent Striatum
Mate D Doebroessy, Fabian Buchele, and Guido Nikkhah
3. Combination Lesion Models of MSA
Daniela Kuzdas and Gregor K. Wenning
4. The Role of the Dorsal Striatum in Instrumental Conditioning
Mark Rossi and Henry H. Yin
5. 3-Nitropropionic Acid and Other Metabolic Toxin Lesions of the Striatum
Cesar V. Borlongan and Paul R. Sanberg
6. Functional Assessment of Subcortical Ischemia
Tracy D. Farr and Rebecca C. Trueman
Part II: Neo- and Allo-Cortical Systems
7. Functional Organization of Rat and Mouse Motor Cortex
G. Campbell Teskey and Bryan Kolb
8. Forebrain Circuits Controlling Whisker Movements
Kevin D. Alloway and Jared B. Smith
9. An Approach to Understanding the Neural Circuitry of Saccade Control in the Cerebral Cortex Using Antidromic Identification in the Awake Behaving Macaque Monkey Model
Kevin Johnston and Stefan Everling
10. Photothrombotic Infarction of Caudate Nucleus and Parietal Cortex
Toshihiko Kuroiwa and Richard F. Keep
11. Models of Rodent Cortical Traumatic Brain Injury
Frances Corrigan, Jenna M. Ziebell and Robert Vink
12. The Use of Commissurotomy in Studies of Interhemispheric Communication
Ian Steele-Russell
Part III: Cerebellar and Brain Stem Systems
13. Genetic Models of Cerebellar Dysfunction
Robert Lalonde and Catherine Strazielle
14. Cerebellar Control of Fine Motor Function
Rachel M. Sherrard
15. Cerebellum and Classical Conditioning
Richard F. Thompson
16. Assessments of Visual Function
Ma'ayan Semo, Carlos Gias, Anthony Vugler and Peter John Coffey
17. The Role of the Pedunculopontine Tegmental Nucleus in Motor Disorders
Nadine K. Gut and Philip Winn
Part IV: Spinal Cord Systems
18. Contusion Models of Spinal Cord Injury in Rats
Kelly A. Dunham and Candace L. Floyd
19. Demyelination Models in the Spinal Cord
Paul A. Felts, Damineh Morsali, Mona Sadeghian, Marija Sajic, and Kenneth J. Smith
20. Preparation of Spinal Cord Injured Tissue for Light and Electron Microscopy Including Preparation for Immunostaining
Margaret L. Bates, Raisa Puzis, and Mary Bartlett Bunge
21. Assessing Spinal Cord Injury
Gillian D. Muir and Erin J. Prosser-Loose
22. Precise Finger Movements in Monkeys
Roger Lemon
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