Anales de la Facultad de Medicina
Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
Copyright© 1999

ISSN 1025 - 5583
Vol. 60, Nº 4 - 1999

 

BIBLIOGRAFÍA


1) Volpe J. Neurology of the newborn. 3rd. Ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1995, p.211-369.

2) Johnston M. Neurotransmitter alterations in a model of perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury. Ann Neurol 1983; 13: 511-8.

3) Levine S. Anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy in rats. Am J Pathol 1960; 36: 1-17.

4) Rice JE 3d, Vannucci RC, Brierley JB. The influence of immaturity on hypoxic-ischemic brain damage in the rat. Ann Neurol 1981; 9: 131-41.

5) Kirino T, Tamura A, Sano K. Selective vulnerability of the hippocampus to ischemia-reversible and irreversible types of ischemic cell damage. Prog Brain Res 1985; 63: 39-58.

6) Mallard EC, Gunn AJ, Williams CE, Johnston BM, Gluckman PD. Transient umbilical cord occlussion causes hippocampal damage in the fetal sheep. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1992; 167(5): 1423-30.

7) Brown IR. Hyperthermia induces the synthesis of heat shock protein by polysomes isolated from the fetal and neonatal mammalian brain. J Neurochem 1983; 40(5): 1490-3.

8) Gonzalez MF, Shiraishi K, Hisanaga K, Sagar SM, Mandabach M, Sharp FR. Heat shock proteins as markers of neural injury. Mol Brain Res 1989; 6(1): 93-100.

9) Ferriero DM, Soberano HQ, Simon RP, Sharp FR. Hypoxia-ischemia induces heat shock protein-like (HSP72) immunoreactivity in neonatal rat brain. Dev Brain Res 1990; 53(1): 145-50.

10) Tucker RP. The roles of microtubule-associated proteins in brain morphogenesis: a review. Brain Res Rev 1990; 15(2): 101-20.

11) Kitagawa K, Matsumoto M, Niinobe M, Mikoshiba K, Hata R, Ueda H, y col. Microtubule-associated protein 2 as a sensitive marker for cerebral ischemic damage: immunohistochemical investigation of dentritic damage. Neuroscience 1989; 31(2): 401-11.

12) Ota A, Ikeda T, Ikenoue T, Toshimori K. Sequence of neuronal responses assessed by immunohistochemistry in the newborn rat brain after hypoxia-ischemia. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1997; 177(3): 519-26.

13) Ota A. Temporal profile of the hypoxic-ischemic brain damage in newborn rats. Proceedings of the 44th. Annual Meeting of the Society for Gynecologic Investigation. J Soc Gynecol Invest 1997; 4: 150.

14) Mortola JP, Dotta A. Effects of hypoxia and ambient temperature on gaseous metabolism of newborn rats. Am J Physiol 1992; 263(2) Pt 2: R267-72.

15) Vass K, Welch WJ, Nowak TS Jr . Localization of 70-kDa stress protein induction in gerbil brain after ischemia. Acta Neuropathol (Berl) 1988; 77(2): 128-35.

16) Sherwood N. A stereotaxic atlas of the developing rat brain. Berkeley (CA): University of California Press; 1970.

17) Bilger A, Nehlig A. Regional cerebral blood flow response to acute hypoxia changes with postnatal age in the rat. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 1993; 76(2): 197-205.

18) Vannucci RC, Lyons DT, Vasta F. Regional cerebral blood flow during hypoxia-ischemia in inmature rats. Stroke 1988; 19(2): 245-50.

19) Mallard EC, Gunn AJ, Williams CE, Johnston BM, Gluckman PD. Transient umbilical cord occlusion causes hippocampal damage in the fetal sheep. AmJ Obstet Gynecol 1992; 167(5): 1423-30.

20) Towfighi J, Yager JY, Housman C, Vannucci RC. Neuropathology of remote hypoxic-ischemic damage in the immature rat. Act Neuropathol (Berl) 1991; 81(5): 578-87.

21) Rothman SM. Synaptic activity mediates death of hypoxic neurons. Science 1983; 220(4596): 536-7.

22) Bayer SA. Development of the hippocampal region in the rat, I: Neurogenesis examined with 3H-thymidine autoradiography. J Comp Neurol 1980; 190(1): 87-114.

23) Liu Y, Kato H, Nakata N, Kogure K. Temporal profile of heat shock protein 70 synthesis in ischemic tolerance induced by preconditioning ischemia in rat hippocampus. Neuroscience 1993; 56(4): 921-7.