All Relations between frontal cortex and basal ganglia

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
J S Meyer, J Kawamura, Y Terayam. White matter lesions in the elderly. Journal of the neurological sciences. vol 110. issue 1-2. 1992-09-23. PMID:1506848. however, as white matter lesions progress among the elderly they are likely to become associated with cognitive impairments and motor dyspraxias presumably resulting from cortico-subcortical disconnections, particularly involving the frontal cortex and basal ganglia and may themselves be considered a radiological "risk factor" or precursor for dementia. 1992-09-23 2023-08-11 Not clear
H Karbe, V A Holthoff, J Rudolf, K Herholz, W D Heis. Positron emission tomography demonstrates frontal cortex and basal ganglia hypometabolism in dystonia. Neurology. vol 42. issue 8. 1992-09-03. PMID:1641150. positron emission tomography demonstrates frontal cortex and basal ganglia hypometabolism in dystonia. 1992-09-03 2023-08-11 human
R M Cohen, M Gross, T E Nordahl, W E Semple, D A Oren, N Rosentha. Preliminary data on the metabolic brain pattern of patients with winter seasonal affective disorder. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 49. issue 7. 1992-08-12. PMID:1627045. compared with controls, patients with seasonal affective disorder with and without light treatment had globally lower metabolic rates, relatively lower superior medial frontal cortex rates, and somewhat higher basal ganglia rates. 1992-08-12 2023-08-11 Not clear
A Y Tien, G D Pearlson, S R Machlin, F W Bylsma, R Hoehn-Sari. Oculomotor performance in obsessive-compulsive disorder. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 149. issue 5. 1992-06-02. PMID:1575255. neuroimaging studies have shown abnormalities of the frontal cortex and basal ganglia in persons with obsessive-compulsive disorder. 1992-06-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
A Y Tien, G D Pearlson, S R Machlin, F W Bylsma, R Hoehn-Sari. Oculomotor performance in obsessive-compulsive disorder. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 149. issue 5. 1992-06-02. PMID:1575255. since lesions in the frontal cortex and basal ganglia areas affect performance on goal-guided saccadic eye movements, this study investigated the relation between the diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder and oculomotor performance. 1992-06-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
S P Siva. Dopamine dependent decrease in enkephalin and substance P levels in basal ganglia regions of postmortem parkinsonian brains. Neuropeptides. vol 18. issue 4. 1991-07-19. PMID:1711165. this study examined whether a relationship exists between the degree of dopamine (da) loss and the changes in opioid (met5-enkephalin, me; dynorphin a (1-8) (dyn)) or tachykinin (substance p, sp) peptidergic systems in basal ganglia (caudate and putamen) and limbic (frontal cortex) regions of postmortem tissue samples derived from patients who died of parkinson's disease (pd). 1991-07-19 2023-08-11 Not clear
A Pfefferbaum, R B Zipursk. Neuroimaging studies of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia research. vol 4. issue 2. 1991-07-11. PMID:2039761. magnetic resonance imaging (mri) studies, which offer higher resolution and greater flexibility in imaging plane, are currently focussing on specific neuroanatomic sites, such as the limbic system, basal ganglia and frontal cortex, implicated by neuropathological or clinical studies in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. 1991-07-11 2023-08-11 Not clear
S E Nadea. Multi-infarct dementia, subcortical dementia, and hydrocephalus. Southern medical journal. vol 84. issue 5 Suppl 1. 1991-06-21. PMID:2035108. intentional dementia reflects dysfunction of frontal lobe systems, components of which include the frontal cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus, limbic structures, and subcortical white matter. 1991-06-21 2023-08-11 Not clear
K Jellinger, W Paulus, I Grundke-Iqbal, P Riederer, M B Youdi. Brain iron and ferritin in Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. Journal of neural transmission. Parkinson's disease and dementia section. vol 2. issue 4. 1991-05-01. PMID:2078310. semiquantitative histological evaluation of brain iron and ferritin in parkinson's (pd) and alzheimer's disease (dat) have been performed in paraffin sections of brain regions which included frontal cortex, hippocampus, basal ganglia and brain stem. 1991-05-01 2023-08-11 Not clear
S I Rapopor. Integrated phylogeny of the primate brain, with special reference to humans and their diseases. Brain research. Brain research reviews. vol 15. issue 3. 1991-03-29. PMID:2289087. system ii includes segregated circuits involving parts of the frontal cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus, and substantia nigra, and can become defective in obsessive-compulsive disorder, huntington's and parkinson's diseases. 1991-03-29 2023-08-11 human
S Striano, R Luciano, R Meo, L Bilo, G Orefice, A Grass. [The physiopathology of supranuclear structures in oculomotor disorders]. Acta neurologica. vol 12. issue 2. 1990-07-31. PMID:2193486. are analyzed in relation to their topodiagnostic significance, describing oculomotor involvements due to focal lesions of different areas of cns (frontal cortex, parieto-occipital cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, brainstem) and particular syndromes (foville syndromes, locked-in syndrome, parinaud syndrome, anterior internuclear ophthalmoplegia, "one and a half" syndrome, balint syndrome,...). 1990-07-31 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Kitamura, A Terashi, T Araki, S Sakamoto, T Ujike, T Soeda, M Ii. [Cerebral hemodynamics in multiple cerebral infarction with or without dementia]. Nihon Ronen Igakkai zasshi. Japanese journal of geriatrics. vol 26. issue 6. 1990-05-31. PMID:2634120. these results suggest that dysfunction of frontal cortex and parietal cortex, and chronic ischemia might be related to the occurrence of dementia in patients with multiple cerebral infarcts, which were in the basal ganglia and the white matter. 1990-05-31 2023-08-11 Not clear
R G Robinson, S E Starkstei. Mood disorders following stroke: new findings and future directions. Journal of geriatric psychiatry. vol 22. issue 1. 1990-02-13. PMID:2607085. patients with a mild degree of ventricular enlargement perhaps related to perinatal damage may be more likely to develop poststroke major depression following a lesion of the left frontal cortex or left basal ganglia than a patient without preexisting atrophy. 1990-02-13 2023-08-11 Not clear
G Hanson, L Matsuda, J Gib. Neurochemical basis for cocaine and methamphetamine interactions. NIDA research monograph. vol 81. 1988-09-15. PMID:2457162. a 7-day pretreatment with daily doses of cocaine enhanced the neurochemical changes induced by multiple doses of meth in the dopaminergic and serotonergic systems of the basal ganglia and frontal cortex. 1988-09-15 2023-08-11 rat
R G Robinson, J D Boston, S E Starkstein, T R Pric. Comparison of mania and depression after brain injury: causal factors. The American journal of psychiatry. vol 145. issue 2. 1988-03-14. PMID:3341462. patients who developed secondary mania after brain injury (n = 17) had a significantly greater frequency of injury to right hemisphere areas connected with the limbic system than poststroke patients with major depression (n = 31), who had injury primarily in the left frontal cortex and basal ganglia. 1988-03-14 2023-08-11 Not clear
H S Brach. Asymmetric rotational (circling) behavior, a dopamine-related asymmetry: preliminary findings in unmedicated and never-medicated schizophrenic patients. Biological psychiatry. vol 22. issue 8. 1987-09-11. PMID:3607140. it is, for the most part, dopaminergically mediated and related to asymmetry in dopaminergic activity between the left and right basal ganglia or left and right frontal cortex. 1987-09-11 2023-08-11 human
C A Altar, A M Wasley, R F Neale, G A Ston. Typical and atypical antipsychotic occupancy of D2 and S2 receptors: an autoradiographic analysis in rat brain. Brain research bulletin. vol 16. issue 4. 1986-08-04. PMID:2872945. as measured autoradiographically or with tissue homogenates, clozapine, thioridazine, and five other atypical neuroleptics were 4- to 800-times more potent at competing for s2 sites in the frontal cortex than for d2 sites in the basal ganglia. 1986-08-04 2023-08-11 rat
M S Buchsbaum, J Wu, L E DeLisi, H Holcomb, R Kessler, J Johnson, A C King, E Hazlett, K Langston, R M Pos. Frontal cortex and basal ganglia metabolic rates assessed by positron emission tomography with [18F]2-deoxyglucose in affective illness. Journal of affective disorders. vol 10. issue 2. 1986-07-31. PMID:2941470. frontal cortex and basal ganglia metabolic rates assessed by positron emission tomography with [18f]2-deoxyglucose in affective illness. 1986-07-31 2023-08-11 human
A Raab, G Koje. A10 lesion and passive avoidance latency: correlation with limbic tyrosine-hydroxylase-activity. Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior. vol 17. issue 1. 1982-12-02. PMID:6126891. depletion of the thy-activity in the septum (se), the entorhinal cortex (eco), the frontal cortex and the basal ganglia correlated with an impairment in the performance of a passive avoidance task (indicated by testing 24 hours postshock). 1982-12-02 2023-08-12 Not clear