The effects of intrahypothalamic injections of norepinephrine upon affective defense behavior in the cat.
The effects of norepinephrine microinjected into the anterior hypothalamus were examined in feline affective defense behavior elicited by electrical stimulation of the region of the ventromedial nucleus. Anterior hypothalamic sites from which affective defense behavior could also be elicited by electrical stimulation and which are known to receive inputs from both the ventromedial nucleus and brainstem noradrenergic neurons were selected for pharmacological analysis. Intracerebral injections of 250 ng (1 nM) and 500 ng (2 nM) quantities of norepinephrine placed into the anterior hypothalamus resulted in a significant lowering of the attack thresholds. These reductions in response thresholds which were reversed by either pre- or post-treatment with yohimbine, indicate that the noradrenergic system may play an important role in the regulation of affective defense behavior.[1]References
- The effects of intrahypothalamic injections of norepinephrine upon affective defense behavior in the cat. Barrett, J.A., Shaikh, M.B., Edinger, H., Siegel, A. Brain Res. (1987) [Pubmed]
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