Publication | Closed Access
Depletion of Brain Catecholamines: Failure of Ocular Dominance Shift After Monocular Occlusion in Kittens
440
Citations
40
References
1976
Year
Visual Cortical NeuronsCritical PeriodOptic NerveGanglion CellNeural MechanismVisual CorticesNeurologyNeurochemistryCataractHealth SciencesOphthalmologyVision ResearchNervous SystemVertebrate VisionDopamineBrain CatecholaminesMonocular OcclusionOcular Dominance ShiftExperimental OphthalmologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Monocularly deprived kittens were compared with littermates that had had their eyelids sutured for the same time but that had, in addition, been treated with 6-hydroxydopamine to deplete their forebrains of catecholamines. The visual cortices of all the catecholamine-depleted kittens showed high proportions of binocular neurons, in contrast to the control group, most of whose visual cortical neurons were driven exclusively by the nondeprived eye. Catecholamines may play an important role in the maintenance of cortical plasticity during the critical period.
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