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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Plasticidade induzida por treinamento locomotor na medula espinal intacta em ratos: correlatos morfol?gicos

Nunes, Ana Carla Lima 02 July 2009 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:16:04Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 AnaCLN.pdf: 1365991 bytes, checksum: a91aa932e949e0fb6e624f6ad5057083 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009-07-02 / Coordena??o de Aperfei?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior / The locomotion is one of the most important capabilities developed by the animals, whose improvement is dependent on several neural centers, including the spinal cord. This activity promotes a lot of spinal modifications that enable it to adapt and improve their connections. This study aimed to observe the morphological changes occurring in the spinal cord after locomotor training in intact rats. For that we used male Wistar rats, which were submitted to locomotor training in wheel activity in protocols 1, 3 and 7 days (30min/day), and the results were compared to a control group not subjected to exercise. Coronal sections of 40 μm of the lumbosacral spinal cord were subjected to immunohistochemical techniques anti-Egr1, anti-NMDA and anti-SP, to characterize the spinal plasticity related to these substances. Egr1-immunoreactive cells were increased in all laminas, essentially in those more intensely activated by locomotion, laminas IV-X levels L4-S3. All observed sections expressed NMDA-immunoreactivity. Analysis of SP in the spinal dorsal horn resulted no significant variations of this neuropeptide related to locomotion. The results suggest that locomotor training provides synaptic plasticity similar to LTP in all laminas of the lumbosacral spinal cord, in different intensities. However, the SP appears do not participate of this process in the spinal dorsal horn. This work will contribute for consolidating and characterization of synaptic plasticity in the spinal cord / A locomo??o ? uma das mais importantes capacidades desenvolvidas pelos animais, cujo aperfei?oamento ? dependente de v?rios centros neurais, incluindo a medula espinal. Esta atividade promove v?rias modifica??es espinais que a possibilita se adaptar e aperfei?oar suas conex?es. Este trabalho teve por objetivo observar as altera??es morfol?gicas ocorridas na medula espinal ap?s o treinamento locomotor de ratos intactos. Para isso foram utilizados ratos Wistar machos, os quais foram submetidos ao treinamento locomotor na roda de atividade em protocolos de 1, 3 e 7 dias (30min/dia), e os resultados foram comparados aos de um grupo controle, n?o submetido ao exerc?cio. Cortes coronais de 40 μm da medula espinal lombossacral foram submetidos a t?cnicas imunohistoquimicas anti-Egr1, anti-NMDA e anti-SP, para caracterizarmos a plasticidade espinal quanto a essas subst?ncias. C?lulas imunorreativas a Egr1 estavam aumentadas em todas as l?minas, intensamente nas regi?es mais ativadas pela locomo??o, l?minas IV-X dos n?veis L4-S3. Todas as sec??es observadas expressaram imunorreatividade a NMDA. A an?lise da SP no corno dorsal espinal resultou em aus?ncia de varia??es significantes deste neuropept?deo relacionadas com a locomo??o. Diante dos resultados, sugerimos que o treinamento locomotor proporciona plasticidade sin?ptica semelhante a LTP em todas as l?minas da medula espinal, em intensidades diferenciadas. No entanto, esse processo parece n?o ter a participa??o da SP no corno dorsal espinal. Este trabalho vem contribuir para a consolida??o e caracteriza??o da plasticidade sin?ptica na medula espinal

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