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      The Regulation of Respiration During Sleep and Anesthesia 

      An Endocrine Hypothesis of Brain Aging and Studies on Brain-Endocrine Correlations and Monosynaptic Neurophysiology during Aging

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      Springer US

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          Long-lasting potentiation of synaptic transmission in the dentate area of the anaesthetized rabbit following stimulation of the perforant path

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            Neuroglial cells in the cerebral cortex of rats from young adulthood to old age: an electron microscope study.

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              Impaired synaptic potentiation processes in the hippocampus of aged, memory-deficient rats.

              A series of neurophysiological experiments was performed on the Schaffercommissural system of the hippocampus of aged and young anesthetized Fischer rats. The aged Fisher rats were previously found to exhibit retention performance deficits. No obvious differences were found between aged and young animals in amplitude, latency, stimulation threshold, or wave forms of typical synaptic responses when these were elicited by control (0.3 Hz) stimulation pulses. Further, the temporal curves of facilitation during a paired-pulse series were not different in aged and young animals. However, aged and young synapses showed consistently different responses during repetitive stimulation. Synapses of aged animals were deficient in frequency potentiation processes during 12 Hz stimulation; and the aged animals exhibited a delayed rise of post-tetanic synaptic potentiation following a 5 sec, 100 Hz stimulation train. Moreover, aged synapses 'exhausted' more rapidly during continuous 4 Hz stimulation. Throughout these studies a biphasic pattern of potentiation was observed during repetitive stimulation (brief potentiation, depression, renewed potentiation). Aged animals were deficient primarily in development of the second phase of potentiation. This pattern suggests an age-related impairment of some secondary process of potentiation, leading to an increased tendency to synaptic depression during and after stimulation. The possibility that the impaired hippocampal synaptic plasticity may be related to reported deficient behavioral plasticity in the aged animals is considered.
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                Book Chapter
                1978
                : 179-199
                10.1007/978-1-4684-8893-7_11
                5d891f2a-573b-425a-bb19-f6210d970fb5
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