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1 mpus, thalamus, tectum, tegmentum, and lower brain stem).
2 tioning and examining the entire tissue (0/6 brain stems).
3 rons, which are located primarily within the brain stem.
4 ic resonance imaging (MRI) of the orbits and brain stem.
5 mygdala, hippocampus, putamen, thalamus, and brain stem.
6 ls, and HSV-1-specific CD8(+) T cells to the brain stem.
7 esencephalic trigeminal nucleus (Me5) of the brain stem.
8 e hippocampus, amygdala, olfactory bulb, and brain stem.
9 rinB3, but not ephrinB2, is expressed in the brain stem.
10  linked to productive HSV-2 infection in the brain stem.
11 tonergic and adrenergic projections from the brain stem.
12 tory neurotransmitter in the spinal cord and brain stem.
13 eral terminals and its site of origin in the brain stem.
14  increased sensory afferent discharge to the brain stem.
15 of approximately 20 microm were found in the brain stem.
16 nd internal capsule, and infrequently in the brain stem.
17 ectious virus could not be identified in the brain stem.
18 nvolve asymmetries in cortical inputs to the brain stem.
19 e spinal cord or in CNS areas outside of the brain stem.
20 or beta-endorphin in specific regions of the brain stem.
21 3 patients with diffuse axonal injury of the brain stem.
22 g in rostral structures and less abundant in brain stem.
23 on than in the frontal lobes, cerebellum, or brain stem.
24 er estimates for the thalamus, striatum, and brain stem.
25 or examination of PP receptor binding in the brain stem.
26  nigra and other neurons of the midbrain and brain stem.
27  in the basal ganglia, centrum semiovale, or brain stem.
28  and diencephalon, and in the medulla of the brain stem.
29 within the mouse hypothalamus, amygdala, and brain stem.
30 rons in the immediate vicinity of the caudal brain stem.
31 ebrain synaptically linked to neurons in the brain stem.
32 cated on neurons within the hypothalamus and brain stem.
33 ting from the cerebellum and the surrounding brain stem.
34 vation in the periaqueductal gray and caudal brain stem.
35 putamen, pallidum, caudate, hippocampus, and brain stem.
36 eatest involvement noted in the thalamus and brain stem.
37 reads from the cortex and hippocampus to the brain stem.
38 hed regions of the cortex, limbic system and brain stem.
39 h cerebellar hemispheres and the ipsilateral brain stem.
40 erves that transmit taste information to the brain stem.
41 Cav2.1 and Cav2.2 in cortex, cerebellum, and brain stem.
42 n brain, especially that associated with the brain stem.
43 emporal cortices, hippocampus, thalamus, and brain stem.
44 ime within respiratory-related nuclei of the brain stem.
45  greater in the TG than that detected in the brain stem.
46 f large motor neurons in the spinal cord and brain stem.
47  circuitries residing in the spinal cord and brain-stem.
48 m (71%), endocardium (93%), cerebrum (183%), brain stem (177%), renal cortex (53%), ileal mucosa (69%
49 esser increases occurred in the midbrain and brain stem (2-4-fold).
50 0.7 vs. 3.6 +/- 1.2 mg/100 g/min, P < 0.05), brain stem (2.2 +/- 0.4 vs. 2.8 +/- 0.5 mg/100 g/min, P
51 .8 vs. 3.5 +/- 0.8 mg/100 g/min, P = NS) and brain stem (2.5 +/- 0.5 vs. 2.6 +/- 0.5 mg/100 g/min, P
52 icant elevation in cGMP concentration in the brain stem 3 days after application of KCl.
53  interval (CI) 97.15-100%) than IHC of obex (brain stem, 76.56%, CI 57.00-91.46%) or retropharyngeal
54 oral and spatial movement of prions from the brain stem along cranial nerves into skeletal muscle as
55 ad and retrograde transport to the brain and brain stem along descending spinal tracts (i.e., lateral
56 turtles, and, generally, for the function of brain stem and cerebellar neural circuits in vertebrates
57  malformations that significantly affect the brain stem and cerebellum (pathogenesis partly or largel
58 plastic or dysplastic neuronal tissue in the brain stem and cerebellum can become epileptogenic in pe
59 tamate receptor subunits was examined in the brain stem and cerebellum of the pond turtle, Chrysemys
60 utamate receptor subunit distribution in the brain stem and cerebellum of turtles is similar to that
61  Considerable immunoreactivity in the turtle brain stem and cerebellum was observed with regional dif
62 t mice results in pathogenic invasion of the brain stem and cerebellum with attendant clinical sympto
63 sed to identify immunoreactive nuclei in the brain stem and cerebellum.
64 on in the cerebellum and lower levels in the brain stem and cortex.
65 n in the cerebellum with lower levels in the brain stem and cortex.
66 hways related to balance control in both the brain stem and forebrain.
67 50 mg/kg, i.p.) can penetrate into the shrew brain stem and frontal cortex; 3) whether GR73632 (2.5 m
68  increases Kv2 currents in both the auditory brain stem and hippocampus (>3-fold) transforming synapt
69 espite marked elevations in Ang II levels in brain stem and hypothalamus at these later time points.
70 hine-induced receptor desensitization in the brain stem and hypothalamus, consistent with exon 7 invo
71    The expression of Nhlh1 in the developing brain stem and in the vagal nuclei in the wild-type mous
72 neuropathies, cerebellar ataxia, myelopathy, brain stem and limbic encephalopathy.
73 virus from the brain, and clearance from the brain stem and lumbar spinal cord was delayed, followed
74  hemangioblastomas of the cerebellum, spine, brain stem and retina.
75 ed by progressive atrophy of the cerebellum, brain stem and spinal cord and sensory axonal neuropathy
76 activation of microglia and monocytes in the brain stem and spinal cord during disease progression.
77  spongiform neurodegeneration throughout the brain stem and spinal cord.
78 pothalamus, such as autonomic regions of the brain stem and spinal cord.
79  mediate inhibitory neurotransmission in the brain stem and spinal cord.
80                   Coordinated development of brain stem and spinal target neurons is pivotal for the
81 ting in neurodegeneration in the cerebellum, brain stem and spinocerebellar tracts.
82  more NK cells (NK1.1+ CD3-) residing in the brain stem and spleen of infected wild-type mice.
83 demonstrate HSV-1 gains access to the murine brain stem and subsequently brain ependymal cells, leadi
84 ized in subsets of neurons, including in the brain stem and the ventricular zone.
85 tected more frequently in the TG than in the brain stem and, in all but one case, the amount of virus
86  and cerebellum and leukoencephalopathy with brain-stem and spinal cord involvement and elevated whit
87 and cerebellum, and leukoencephalopathy with brain-stem and spinal cord involvement and elevated whit
88 rence in glucose metabolism in the thalamus, brain stem, and cerebellum between comatose and noncomat
89 nsciousness, CMRglc values for the thalamus, brain stem, and cerebellum significantly correlated with
90 cal bilirubin staining of the basal ganglia, brain stem, and cerebellum, and is associated with hyper
91 r, thalamus, basal ganglia, cerebral cortex, brain stem, and cerebellum.
92 tic disorder that affects the limbic system, brain stem, and cerebellum.
93 lls (NSCs) from perinatal murine cerebellum, brain stem, and forebrain.
94 i, the hippocampus, the amygdala, the caudal brain stem, and midbrain dopaminergic neurons.
95        GlyR are found in the spinal cord and brain stem, and more recently they were reported in high
96 eration of motor neurons in the spinal cord, brain stem, and motor cortex.
97 lial activation in the facial nucleus in the brain stem, and on axon degeneration and immune cell inf
98 chemotherapeutic options for supratentorial, brain stem, and optic track gliomas are discussed.
99                  Ventral striatal, amygdala, brain stem, and orbitofrontal responses to hypoglycemia
100 d in sleep, and insults to the hypothalamus, brain stem, and reticular activating system are some of
101 ia of the corpus callosum, a small flattened brain stem, and specific cystic lesions in the white mat
102 ative disease where motor neurons in cortex, brain stem, and spinal cord die progressively, resulting
103 d synaptotagmin-2 levels in mouse forebrain, brain stem, and spinal cord.
104 of the motor neurons in the cerebral cortex, brain stem, and spinal cord.
105 d SINV infection and clearance in the brain, brain stem, and spinal cords of severe combined immunode
106 death was observed in the cerebral cortices, brain stems, and cerebella of caspase 3(-/-) mice.
107                Their axon tracts through the brain stem are established by a simple set of pioneer ax
108 abundantly expressed in forebrain limbic and brain stem areas that regulate stress and emotional beha
109 n primary cultures from the hypothalamus and brain stem areas to study the role of ROS on the cellula
110 r; alterations in metabolic signaling to the brain stem as a result of chronic liver disease could in
111 in pituitary, cerebellum, and in portions of brain stem associated with sensorimotor function.
112 results of IHC staining of sections from the brain stem at the convergence of the dorsal motor nucleu
113      After bilateral CSX, transection of the brain stem at the mid-pontine level abolished PD in resp
114 control of the pupil, and transection of the brain stem at the mid-pontine level blocks access of vag
115 atory infiltrates were seen in the lungs and brain stems at day 2 and day 6 after infection, respecti
116 rological status, along with measurements of brain stem auditory evoked potential (BAEP) changes.
117 nificant delay in the FIV-induced effects on brain stem auditory evoked potentials, and demonstrated
118 d [3H]strychnine binding activity in several brain stem auditory nuclei.
119 s part of acoustic information processing in brain stem auditory pathways and contributes to the regu
120 using a brain slice preparation of the avian brain stem auditory system have shown that activation of
121       In contrast, FIV-associated changes in brain stem auditory-evoked potentials were slow to devel
122 e examined the embryonic origins of cells in brain-stem auditory nuclei with particular emphasis on N
123 ex ("barrels"), thalamus ("barreloids"), and brain stem ("barrelettes").
124  on the other of more diffuse afferents from brain stem, basal forebrain, and other regions.
125 l disorder characterized by hydranencephaly; brain stem, basal ganglia, and spinal cord diffuse clast
126 ed and normalized by the whole-brain (WB) or brain stem (BS) average values as SUV ratio (SUVR((WB))
127 to 5 structures (thalamus [TH], cortex [CX], brain stem [BS], cerebellum [CB], and half brain).
128 sive transsynaptic infection not only of the brain stem but also of areas of the forebrain synaptical
129 of SP selectively and rapidly penetrated the brain stem but not the frontal cortex.
130 s individuals, this surge of activity in the brain stem, but also in medial wall cortical regions pro
131 9 mice results from widespread damage in the brain stem caused by destructive inflammatory responses
132 hat are similar to the processes observed in brain stem cells and lung progenitors.
133 olecular mechanisms preventing self-renewing brain stem cells from oncogenic transformation are poorl
134 le in driving a tumor suppressor response in brain stem cells upon oncogenic insult.
135  N-cadherin to stabilize apical junctions in brain stem cells.
136 ers the specific effects of high iron on the brain, stem cells, and the process of erythropoiesis and
137 om hemorrhagic lesions), striatum, thalamus, brain stem, cerebellar cortex, and whole brain was compa
138 neuritis, incomplete transverse myelitis, or brain-stem/cerebellar syndrome) and at least two charact
139 somes and other cellular organelles from the brain stem, cerebellum and spinal cord of the mouse brai
140 lls and astrocytes were present in thalamus, brain stem, cerebellum and spinal cord, indicating regio
141 st in the caudate nuclei, putamena, thalami, brain stem, cerebellum, and occipital cortex of each sub
142 ter only within the CNS, particularly in the brain stem, cerebellum, and spinal cord.
143 rominent involvement of large neurons in the brain stem, cerebellum, basal ganglia, thalamus, and spi
144 ised balance) could be representative of the brain stem/cerebellum dysfunction.
145                             This increase in brain stem cGMP was abolished by tonabersat pre-treatmen
146 elect vagal subnuclei that may represent the brain stem circuit involved in the abdominal vagal-affer
147 r control because they are precise and their brain-stem circuitry is already well understood.
148    These observations suggest that different brain stem circuits are involved in swallow-induced and
149 control pathways in enabling spinal cord and brain stem circuits to generate meaningful motor pattern
150                      Therefore, thalamic and brain stem CMRglc may have a closer correlation than doe
151 P < 0.05.) but was not related to GCSpet and brain stem CMRglc.
152       Keywords: Adults and Pediatrics, Brain/Brain Stem, CNS, Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD), Compute
153 infection in the trigeminal ganglia (TG) and brain stem compared to the control-vaccinated group.
154 raining lymph nodes, spleen, spinal cord, or brain stem comparing HSV-2-infected wild-type to CCR5-/-
155 ccompanied by increasing infiltration of the brain stem, cortex and thalamus by CD68 positive microgl
156                      The results from bovine brain stem, cortex, and cerebellum demonstrated the repr
157 lity of analysis of HS, 15 mum frozen bovine brain stem, cortex, and cerebellum tissue sections were
158  hyperphosphorylated TAU in the spinal cord, brain stem, cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of adult
159 of cannabinoids in CB(1)(-/-) membranes from brain stem, cortex, hippocampus, diencephalon, midbrain,
160 ng in intensive care units who were possibly brain stem dead (comatose, apparently apnoeic with unres
161                       Cadaveric kidneys from brain-stem-dead donors continue to be limited because th
162 d rates for harvested kidneys is higher than brain-stem-dead donors.
163 Data on bowel offering from 657 donors after brain stem death (DBD) and on 46 patients on the active
164 after cardiac death (DCD) and donation after brain stem death (DBD) cohorts.
165    Donor after cardiac death and donor after brain stem death (DBD) had equivalent 1-, 3-, and 5-year
166 splantation using organs from donation after brain-stem death (DBD) donors.
167 se include migraine, encephalopathy, chorea, brain stem dysfunction, myelopathy, mononeuritis multipl
168 e serum of patients with subacute limbic and brain-stem dysfunction and testicular cancer contains an
169 patients with cancer, symptoms of limbic and brain-stem dysfunction may result from a paraneoplastic
170 red neuronal activity in the neurons of both brain stem emetic nuclei and the enteric nervous system
171 sticular cancer and paraneoplastic limbic or brain-stem encephalitis (or both), 10 had antibodies in
172                     Paraneoplastic limbic or brain-stem encephalitis occurs more frequently with test
173                                     Although brain-stem evoked responses and distortion product otoac
174 , in which the largest increases are seen in brain stem, followed by striatum, thalamus, and frontal
175 ified in the trigeminal ganglia (TG) and the brain stem from the same latently infected animal using
176 ren with a newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic brain stem glioma (BSG) and to investigate associations
177 trocytoma (n = 7), low-grade glioma (n = 9), brain stem glioma (n = 4), medulloblastoma (n = 2), and
178 intense uptake throughout the tumor, whereas brain stem gliomas (BSGs) had low uptake in less than 50
179             The auditory nuclei of the chick brain stem have distinct morphologies and highly specifi
180  of sympathetic activation that occurs after brain stem herniation and are not associated with allogr
181 wer interpreted the first ECG obtained after brain stem herniation in 980 potential organ donors mana
182  cord (wild type [WT]) or the cerebellum and brain stem (IFN-gamma deficient).
183 rt of reactivated virus from the TG into the brain stem.IMPORTANCE Latent herpes simplex virus (HSV)
184                     The ratio of striatum to brain stem in mice and the binding potential (BP) in the
185 in the parasympathostimulatory nuclei of the brain stem in normal young and aged animals were measure
186 ped primarily on the ipsilateral side of the brain stem, in the cerebellum, and contralateral side of
187         Within neurons of the cerebellum and brain stem, in the context of WNV infection, a deficienc
188 , RaD, and MD in all major tracts except the brain stem, indicating that age-related changes in white
189 d other causes, including neoplasm, GCA, and brain stem infarction.
190 ers to undetectable levels but did not alter brain stem inflammation or mortality.
191 pinal cord invasion and block cerebellar and brain stem invasion.
192                         The findings suggest brain stem involvement as an additional site of neurodeg
193 uggest that infectious virus detected in the brain stem is primarily the result of transport of react
194                   The regional CMRglc of the brain stem is relatively unaffected by the TBI.
195 6) mice developed intense focal inflammatory brain stem lesions of primarily F4/80(+) macrophages and
196 calized to areas in the hypothalamus and the brain stem located outside the blood-brain barrier in a
197 els show autonomic dysfunction involving the brain stem locus coeruleus (LC).
198 e largest population of LepRb neurons in the brain stem, mediate this process.
199 ins, including cerebral cortex, hippocampus, brain stem, mid brain, cerebellum, and hypothalamus.
200 cing of mRNA and miRNA from cerebral cortex, brain stem, midbrain and cerebellum of 4L;C* mice.
201 ole for the vestibular system and descending brain stem motor pathways to the erectores spinae muscle
202                              The cerebellum, brain stem, neocortex, hippocampus and adrenal gland med
203  entry and pathology may underlie the severe brain stem neuronal dysfunction seen in fatal Nipah vira
204 rasympathetic information from preganglionic brain stem neurons to the heart.
205       Virus was cleared from spinal cord and brain stem neurons, but not from cortical neurons, and r
206 (CCK), has also been linked to activation of brain stem neurons, suggesting that it might act partial
207 pal pyramidal neurons and rapid infection of brain stem neurons.
208 egeneration of cerebellar Purkinje cells and brain stem neurons.
209 een observed in immature spiral ganglion and brain-stem neurons and is likely to depend on cochlear i
210                   N-myc(T58A) cerebellar and brain stem NSCs generated medulloblastoma/primitive neur
211  heteropentameric glycine receptors in these brain stem nuclear groups.
212  was undertaken in seven respiratory-related brain stem nuclei and one nonrespiratory nucleus in P0-2
213 objective of this study was to determine the brain stem nuclei and physiological responses activated
214 egrates neural signals from hypothalamic and brain stem nuclei and regulates feeding behavior, autono
215 eurons in the cochlear ganglion and auditory brain stem nuclei preserve the relative timing of action
216 reflect impoverished cortical signals to the brain stem nuclei that control eye movements.
217 leucoagglutinin, with projections to over 50 brain stem nuclei.
218 l PET scanners allow for investigating small brain stem nuclei.
219 gal efferent neurons that originate from two brain stem nuclei: the nucleus ambiguus and the dorsal m
220 uron shows that the human locus coeruleus, a brain stem nucleus containing cell bodies of noradrenerg
221                 Two groups of neurons in the brain stem, octopus cells in the posteroventral cochlear
222 ly, NK activity from cells isolated from the brain stem of HSV-2-infected wild-type mice was greater
223 red from both the trigeminal ganglia and the brain stem of latently infected mice following a reactiv
224 demonstrated a pathological signature in the brain stem of Stat1-deficient mice characterized by upre
225 udy, we compared host gene expression in the brain stems of mice infected with either FrCas(E) or the
226  PBS or HCl on c-fos immunoreactivity of the brain stem or on physiological variables, and the effect
227 neuritis, incomplete transverse myelitis, or brain-stem or cerebellar syndrome) and evidence of prior
228 ctivity in SMS, both at the bedside (cortex, brain stem, or spinal cord) and at the bench (neuronal c
229 , anterior cingulate cortex, caudate nuclei, brain stem periaqueductal gray matter, cerebellum, and o
230 s (cerebellar gray matter, whole cerebellum, brain stem/pons, eroded subcortical white matter [WM], a
231 ls of aldolase C mRNA than other midbrain or brain stem populations in both control and IPD material.
232 ism and oxidative phosphorylation than other brain stem populations.
233 ophysiological recordings within the ventral brain stem pre-Botzinger respiratory complex were also a
234                   TME PrP(Sc) entry into the brain stem preceded PrP(Sc) detection in the rostral cer
235                         In the working heart-brain stem preparation of the Cx36-KO mouse, respiratory
236 y 4 p.i. (24 h after HSV-1 first reaches the brain stem) reduced nervous system viral titers to undet
237 01 showed bilateral attenuated activation of brain stem regions and less deactivation in lateral orbi
238 uted abnormalities of midline cerebellum and brain stem regions associated with Joubert syndrome.
239 of the pedunculopontine nucleus and in other brain stem regions in a pattern similar to what has been
240  the expression of adenosine A(2A)Rs mRNA in brain stem regions where GABAergic neurons are located;
241           The localization of substance P in brain-stem regions associated with vomiting, and the res
242  aquaporins play a role in hearing, auditory brain stem response (ABR) thresholds were compared in wi
243 nd 10 weeks of age were measured by auditory brain stem response (ABR).
244 of otoacoustic emission testing and auditory brain stem response according to national guidelines, an
245 ants exhibit significantly elevated auditory-brain stem response thresholds and reduced distortion-pr
246 indicated by an elevation in auditory-evoked brain stem response thresholds at 3 or 7 days postinocul
247                              Auditory-evoked brain-stem response thresholds were used to assess heari
248  inbred strains detected linkage of auditory brain-stem response thresholds with a locus on distal ch
249 aluate this hypothesis, we measured auditory brain stem responses (ABRs), hair cell loss, and free ra
250 bor/+) and C57BL/6J showed variable auditory brain-stem responses and cochlear coiling.
251  food intake and lower body weight through a brain-stem-restricted receptor.
252  and executive regions, with its peak in the brain stem reticular activating system.
253  organized cell group closely related to the brain stem reticular formation, it can now be seen as a
254 rimary motor cortex (M1) strongly innervates brain stem reticular nuclei containing whisker premotor
255                      Neural circuits connect brain stem sites that regulate vigilance state with the
256 sensory cortex (S1) strongly projects to the brain stem spinal trigeminal interpolaris nucleus, which
257           Axonal degeneration was evident in brain stem, spinal cord and white matter of cerebellum a
258 on of aggregated alpha-synuclein in specific brain stem, spinal cord, and cortical regions.
259 ically expressed, being detected only in the brain stem, spinal cord, and thalamic/hypothalamic areas
260                                              Brain stem-spinal cord recordings reveal reduced neurona
261 isions of patients who become locked-in with brain stem stroke or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis to be
262  have been shown to arise from somatosensory brain stem structures, but the nature of the projection
263                                              Brain stem subnuclei including interstitial, intermediat
264 tic target nuclei in the developing auditory brain stem, such a role for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GAB
265  found within the reticular formation of the brain stem, suggesting that MSCs also may have different
266 plex neurophysiological system involving the brain stem, superior colliculus, and several cortical ar
267 The CM pathway may act together with several brain-stem systems that also act directly with motoneuro
268 neurons with input from the motor-cortex and brain-stem systems.
269  and CCL5 in the vagina, spinal cord, and/or brain stem than did wild-type mice.
270 connections between neural structures in the brain stem that control eye movements.
271 parabrachial nucleus (PBN) is an area of the brain stem that controls eating and contains endogenous
272 bunit switching may be a common theme in the brain stem that may mediate different functional propert
273  the longitudinal (rostrocaudal) axis of the brain stem that was consistent with the classically desc
274 ripts and HSV-1 lytic cycle genes within the brain stem, the ependyma (EP), containing the limbic and
275 emotor neurons, which are located within the brain stem, the midbrain, and the neocortex.
276 SV-2 levels in the vaginal, spinal cord, and brain stem tissue of wild-type but not CCR5-/- mice.
277 oid analgesic, is known to act in the rodent brain stem to produce highly effective antinociception i
278 s, in part because tissue from low-grade and brain stem tumors is not readily available, and also bec
279       sEH expression in the hypothalamus and brain stem, two cardioregulatory brain areas, was increa
280 e among all gray matter regions, whereas the brain stem, uncus, and hippocampus had the lowest uptake
281                     We aimed to identify the brain stem vagal subnuclei involved in these reflexes.
282 d a frequency-dependence that paralleled the brain stem velocity storage mechanism.
283 0), inferior orbital frontal lobe (area 11), brain stem (ventral tegmentum), anteromesial temporal lo
284 hyperintense bilateral lesions in the dorsal brain stem vestibular nucleus (VN) and cerebellum of sev
285  The earliest presence of infectivity in the brain stem was detected at 24 mpi, whereas PrP(Sc) accum
286  (200 microg/kg) and c-fos expression in the brain stem was examined.
287 ns, and the initial appearance of TME in the brain stem was found in the hypoglossal nucleus at 2 wee
288 ut a cellular source for reactivation in the brain stem was not identified, despite serially sectioni
289 1-weighted MRI scans, the GM fraction of the brain stem was reduced in all HTLV-1-infected patients c
290 acytoid dendritic cell infiltration into the brain stem was reduced in CD118(-/-) mice following infe
291 e use of functional genomics on the infected brain stems, we determined gene signatures that were rep
292 flammatory cells infiltrating the cornea and brain stem were isolated and stained for flow cytometric
293 G, tryptophan and 5-HIAA in hypothalamus and brain stem were not significantly altered.
294                   Orbital structures and the brain stem were prepared for tracer detection and immuno
295 suggesting that pathways at the level of the brain stem were principally intact.
296  in the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, and brain stem; whereas HK483 was not recovered in these tis
297 viral replication were high in the brain and brain stem, while levels of viral genome equivalents wer
298 l, ethidium bromide-induced demyelination of brain stem white matter (with intervening recovery) on t
299 ) region of the cerebellum as well as in the brain stem with a relatively uniform distribution and ha
300  were elevated in the trigeminal ganglia and brain stem with virus disseminating rapidly to the drain

 
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