Results 171 to 180 of about 159,619 (232)
Pituitary gonadotropin-releasing hormone II as a possible mediator of positive estrogen feedback. [PDF]
Urbanski HF+6 more
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Exploring the functional variations of key candidate genes affecting egg production by hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis in chickens. [PDF]
Wang D+6 more
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Metabolic control of ovarian function through the sympathetic nervous system: role of leptin. [PDF]
Astudillo-Guerrero C+5 more
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Hypothalamic atrophy in primary lateral sclerosis, assessed by convolutional neural network-based automatic segmentation. [PDF]
Kassubek J+7 more
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The Role and Mechanisms of the Hypocretin System in Zebrafish (Danio rerio). [PDF]
Dyachuk V.
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The Hormones of the Hypothalamus
The American Journal of Medicine, 1974Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the hypothalamic hormones that are known as the latest newcomers to the field of endocrinology. These hormones represent the ultimate link between the central nervous system and the endocrine system as the two integrating orders of all homeostasis of the organism.
Roger Guillemin, Ralph E. Peterson
openaire +5 more sources
The hypothalamus and reproduction
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1972Abstract This article has been designed to review recent developments in the field of hypothalamic hormones involved in the control of reproductive functions. A brief resume of early physiologic and anatomic studies was presented initially to give a better understanding of the concept of hypothalamic regulation of the release of gonadotropic hormones ...
Andrew V. Schally+5 more
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Neurological Sciences, 2007
The hypothalamus forms part of the central autonomic network, regulating body homeostasis and controlling pain. To this effect, it is strongly wired to more rostral and caudal areas, in particular the brainstem periaqueductal grey, the locus coeruleus and the median raphe nuclei, all involved in autonomic and sleep mechanisms and also in the descending
CORTELLI, PIETRO, PIERANGELI, GIULIA
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The hypothalamus forms part of the central autonomic network, regulating body homeostasis and controlling pain. To this effect, it is strongly wired to more rostral and caudal areas, in particular the brainstem periaqueductal grey, the locus coeruleus and the median raphe nuclei, all involved in autonomic and sleep mechanisms and also in the descending
CORTELLI, PIETRO, PIERANGELI, GIULIA
openaire +4 more sources
Science, 2023
Neural substrates of wakefulness, rapid eye movement sleep (REMS), and non-REMS (NREMS) in the mammalian hypothalamus overlap both anatomically and functionally with cellular networks that support physiological and behavioral homeostasis. Here, we review the roles of sleep neurons of the hypothalamus in the homeostatic control of thermoregulation or ...
Antoine R. Adamantidis, Luis de Lecea
openaire +2 more sources
Neural substrates of wakefulness, rapid eye movement sleep (REMS), and non-REMS (NREMS) in the mammalian hypothalamus overlap both anatomically and functionally with cellular networks that support physiological and behavioral homeostasis. Here, we review the roles of sleep neurons of the hypothalamus in the homeostatic control of thermoregulation or ...
Antoine R. Adamantidis, Luis de Lecea
openaire +2 more sources