2 resultados para ACTIVITY INDEX

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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The evaluation of chronic activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is critical for determining the impact of chronic stressful situations. The potential use of hair glucocorticoids as a non-invasive, retrospective, biomarker of long term HPA activity is of great interest, and it is gaining acceptance in humans and animals. However, there are still no studies in literature examining hair cortisol concentration in pigs and corticosterone concentration in laboratory rodents. Therefore, we developed and validated, for the first time, a method for measuring hair glucocorticoids concentration in commercial sows and in Sprague-Dawley rats. Our preliminary data demonstrated: 1) a validated and specific washing protocol and extraction assay method with a good sensitivity in both species; 2) the effect of the reproductive phase, housing conditions and seasonality on hair cortisol concentration in sows; 3) similar hair corticosterone concentration in male and female rats; 4) elevated hair corticosterone concentration in response to chronic stress manipulations and chronic ACTH administration, demonstrating that hair provides a good direct index of HPA activity over long periods than other indirect parameters, such adrenal or thymus weight. From these results we believe that this new non-invasive tool needs to be applied to better characterize the overall impact in livestock animals and in laboratory rodents of chronic stressful situations that negatively affect animals welfare. Nevertheless, further studies are needed to improve this methodology and maybe to develop animal models for chronic stress of high interest and translational value in human medicine.

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Alpha oscillations are linked to visual awareness and to the periodical sampling of visual information, suggesting that alpha rhythm reflect an index of the functionality of the posterior cortices, and hence of the visual system. Therefore, the present work described a series of studies investigating alpha oscillations as a biomarker of the functionality and the plastic modifications of the visual system in response to lesions to the visual cortices or to external stimulations. The studies presented in chapter 5 and 6 showed that posterior lesions alter alpha oscillations in hemianopic patients, with reduced alpha reactivity at the eyes opening and decreased alpha functional connectivity, especially in right-lesioned hemianopics, with concurrent dysfunctions in the theta range, suggesting a specialization of the right hemisphere in orchestrating alpha oscillations and coordinating complex interplays among different brain rhythms. The study presented in chapter 7 investigated a mechanism of rhythmical attentional sampling of visual information in healthy participants, showing that perceptual performance is influenced by a rhythmical mechanism of attentional allocation, occurring at lower-alpha frequencies (i.e., 7 Hz), when a single spatial location is monitored, and at lower frequencies (i.e., 5 Hz), when attention is allocated to two spatial locations. Moreover, the right hemisphere seemed to have a dominance in this rhythmical attentional sampling, distributing attentional resources to the entire visual field. Finally, the study presented in chapter 8 showed that prolonged visual entrainment induce long-term modulations of resting-state alpha activity in healthy participants, suggesting that persistent modifications in the functionality of the visual system are possible. Altogheter, these findings show that functional processes and plastic changes of the visual system are reflected in alpha oscillatory patterns. Therefore, investigating and promoting alpha oscillations may contribute to the development of rehabilitative protocols to ameliorate the functionality of the visual system, in brain lesioned patients.