Abstract
Experiments on rats show that repeated bilateral microinjections of haloperidiol (5 μg) into globus pallidus or caudal neostriaum impair conditioned passive avoidance reaction and do not affect spontaneous motor activity. Unlike haloperidol injections to the rostral neostriatum, chronic blockade of the pallidal dopamineric system induces vegetative and trophic disturbances.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
A. D. Anichkov, Yu. Z. Polonskii, and D. K. Kambarova,Stereotactic Pointing [in Russian], Leningrad (1985).
Yu. D. Kropotov and V. A. Ponomarev,Neurophysiology of Purposeful Activity [in Russian], St. Petersburg (1993).
Zh. S. Sarkisyan and L. S. Gambaryan,The Pallidum (Morphology and Physiology [in Russian], Erevan (1984).
A. F. Yakimovskii,Byull. Eksp. Biol. med.,112, No. 12, 602–604 (1991).
A. F. Yakimovskii and I. V. Karpova,Zh. Vyssh. Nervn. Deyat.,42, No. 5, 930–935 (1992).
A. F. Yakimovskii and N. B. Saul'skaya,Fiziol. Zh. SSSR,77, No. 2, 43–49 (1991).
L. V. Laitinen, A. T. Bergenheim, and M. I. Hariz,Stereotact. Funct. Neurosurg.,58, No. 1, 14–21 (1992).
Parkinson's Disease — from Clinical Aspects to Molecular Basis. Eds. T. Nagatsu et al., Wien-New York (1991).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Additional information
Translated fromByulleten' Eksperimental'noi Biologii i Meditsiny, Vol. 125, No. 6, pp. 615–617, June, 1998
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Yakimovskii, A.F. Repeated haloperidol microinjections to the globus pallidus induce vegetative components of parkinsonian syndrome in rats. Bull Exp Biol Med 125, 542–544 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02445233
Received:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02445233