Skip to main content
University of California San Francisco
UCSF Health
Search UCSF
About UCSF
Search form
Search...
Twitter
About
Outreach
Vision
Neuroscience Program Bylaws
CBC
Support for Students with Disabilities
Admissions
Application Process
Other Considerations
Frequently Asked Questions
Graduate Student Fair
Curriculum
Course List
UCSF Course Catalog
Study List Filing Info
UCSF Academic Calendar
Faculty
Events
Annual Retreat
Formal Seminar Series
External Postdoc Seminar Program (EPSP)
Neuroscience Program and Community Calendar
RIPS
Kavli Faculty Seminar
Contact
Program Resources
You are here
Home
>
Brain research
Brain research
Comparison of the antinociceptive and motor effects of intrathecal opioid agonists in the rat.
High-dose epinephrine acts at alpha 2-adrenoceptors to suppress experimental arthritis.
High-dose epinephrine acts at alpha 2-adrenoceptors to suppress experimental arthritis.
Turtle cortical neurons survive glutamate exposures that are lethal to mammalian neurons.
Turtle cortical neurons survive glutamate exposures that are lethal to mammalian neurons.
Evidence that inhibition of a nociceptive flexion reflex by stimulation in the rostroventromedial medulla in rats occurs at a premotoneuronal level.
Effects of cyclooxygenase products of arachidonic acid metabolism on cutaneous nociceptive threshold in the rat.
The circadian activity rhythms of rats with mid- and parasagittal 'split-SCN' knife cuts and pinealectomy.
Alpha-adrenergic receptor agonists, but not antagonists, alter the tail-flick latency when microinjected into the rostral ventromedial medulla of the lightly anesthetized rat.
Analgesic synergy and improved motor function produced by combinations of mu-delta- and mu-kappa-opioids.
Pages
« first
‹ previous
…
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
…
next ›
last »