Physiology, Pharmacology and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission

Physiology, Pharmacology and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission
Title Physiology, Pharmacology and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages
Release 1992
Genre
ISBN

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The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission

The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission
Title The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission PDF eBook
Author Organisation internationale de recherche sur le cerveau. Symposium
Publisher
Pages 373
Release 1992
Genre
ISBN

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The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission : Symposium of the International Brain Research Organization, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta., Canada, August 12-14, 1991

The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission : Symposium of the International Brain Research Organization, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta., Canada, August 12-14, 1991
Title The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission : Symposium of the International Brain Research Organization, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta., Canada, August 12-14, 1991 PDF eBook
Author International Brain Research Organization. Symposium (1991 Aug. 12-14 : University of Alberta)
Publisher
Pages 96
Release 1992
Genre
ISBN

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The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission

The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission
Title The Physiology, Pharmacology, and Biophysics of Ganglionic Transmission PDF eBook
Author Peter A. Smith
Publisher
Pages 373
Release 1992
Genre Autonomic ganglia
ISBN

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Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission

Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission
Title Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission PDF eBook
Author D.A. Kharkevich
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Pages 536
Release 2012-12-06
Genre Medical
ISBN 364267397X

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D.A. KHARKEVICH The history of the study of ganglionic substances begins with the paper of LANGLEY and DICKINSON (1889), who established the ability of nicotine to block the neurones in the superior cervical ganglion. This was a considerable discovery as the authors ascertained that impulses were transmitted from pre- to postganglionic neurones in the autonomic ganglia. Simultaneously they indicated the possibility of pharmaco logical influence upon interneuronal transmission in autonomic ganglia. The idea of ganglionic receptors specifically sensitive to nicotine followed logically. Later, LANGLEY (1905, 1906) considered the problem of receptors with respect to neuro-effector synapses. It is remarkable that he was one of the first to put forward the theory of chemical mediation of excitation (" ... the nervous impulse should not pass from nerve to muscle by an electric discharge, but by the secretion of a special substance at the end of the nerve": LANGLEY, 1906, p. 183). In addition, LANGLEY JOHN N. LANGLEY (1852-1926) D.A. KHARKEVICH 2 and his collaborators managed to define the topography of autonomic ganglia more precisely by means of nicotine. It should be mentioned that it was he who introduced the terms "autonomic nervous system" and "parasympathetic nervous system".

Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission

Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission
Title Pharmacology of Ganglionic Transmission PDF eBook
Author D.A. Kharkevich
Publisher Springer
Pages 534
Release 1979-12-01
Genre Medical
ISBN 9783540095927

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D.A. KHARKEVICH The history of the study of ganglionic substances begins with the paper of LANGLEY and DICKINSON (1889), who established the ability of nicotine to block the neurones in the superior cervical ganglion. This was a considerable discovery as the authors ascertained that impulses were transmitted from pre- to postganglionic neurones in the autonomic ganglia. Simultaneously they indicated the possibility of pharmaco logical influence upon interneuronal transmission in autonomic ganglia. The idea of ganglionic receptors specifically sensitive to nicotine followed logically. Later, LANGLEY (1905, 1906) considered the problem of receptors with respect to neuro-effector synapses. It is remarkable that he was one of the first to put forward the theory of chemical mediation of excitation (" ... the nervous impulse should not pass from nerve to muscle by an electric discharge, but by the secretion of a special substance at the end of the nerve": LANGLEY, 1906, p. 183). In addition, LANGLEY JOHN N. LANGLEY (1852-1926) D.A. KHARKEVICH 2 and his collaborators managed to define the topography of autonomic ganglia more precisely by means of nicotine. It should be mentioned that it was he who introduced the terms "autonomic nervous system" and "parasympathetic nervous system".

Autonomic and Enteric Ganglia

Autonomic and Enteric Ganglia
Title Autonomic and Enteric Ganglia PDF eBook
Author A.G. Karczmar
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Pages 514
Release 2013-11-11
Genre Medical
ISBN 1461594367

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In the early 1960s, Dr. Alexander G. Karczmar, Professor of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at the Stritch School of Medicine of the Medical Center at Loyola University of Chicago, was confronted with a certain technical problem concerning his studies of synaptic transmission by means of microelectrode methods. He thought that the problem might be resolved if he could interest a microelectrode expert such as Dr. Kyozo Koketsu in his studies. Dr. Koketsu was a past member of the Faculty of the Kurume University School of Medicine who as a Research Fellow at the Australian National University had helped Sir John Eccles, subse quently a Nobel Prize winner, in developing microelectrode procedures. After further considering the matter, Dr. Karczmar was pleasantly sur prised to discover that by coincidence Dr. Koketsu was his neighbor, serving at that time as a Research Professor at the Neuropsychiatry Institute of the University of Illinois, College of Medicine of Chicago. This was the beginning of a long relationship, as Dr. Koketsu joined Dr. Karczmar at Loyola as Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics and Director of the Neurophysiology Laboratory at the Stritch School of Medicine. It was not long before Dr. Syogoro Nishi-Dr. Koketsu's former colleague on the Faculty of Medicine at Kurume University, and at that time a Research Fellow in Neurophysiology at the Rockefeller Institute in New York joined Drs. Koketsu and Karczmar at Loyola. Although in due time Drs.