1 • The Cholinergic Hypothesis a Generation Later: Perspectives Gained on the Use and Integration of Animal Models.- 2 • Patterns of Cognitive Decline in the Aged Rhesus Monkey.- 3 • Cholinergic Lesions as a Model of Alzheimer’s Disease: Effects of Nerve Growth Factor.- 4 • The Immunolesioned Animal as a Model of Transmitter Dysfunction.- 5 • An Intracerebral Tumor Necrosis Factor-? Infusion Model for Inflammation in Alzheimer’s Disease.- 6 • The Senescence-Accelerated Mouse as a Possible Animal Model of Senile Dementia.- 7 • Transgenic Mice Overexpressing Presenilin cDNAs: Phenotype and Utility in the Modeling of Alzheimer’s Disease.- 8 • Intervention Strategies for Degeneration of Dopamine Neurons in Parkinsonism: Optimizing Behavioral Assessment of Outcome.- 9 • Development of Behavioral Outcome Measures for Preclinical Parkinson’s Research.- 10 • Behavioral Assessment in the Unilateral Dopamine-Depleted Marmoset.- 11 • Molecules for Neuroprotection and Regeneration in Animal Models of Parkinson’s Disease.- 12 • Antisense Knockdown of Dopamine Receptors.- 13 • Is Trophic Factor Gene Disruption a “Knockout” Model for Parkinson’s Disease?.- 14 • Operant Analysis of Striatal Dysfunction.- 15 • Intrastriatal Injections of Quinolinic Acid as a Model for Developing Neuroprotective Strategies in Huntington’s Disease.- 16 • Systemic Administration of 3-Nitropropionic Acid: A New Model of Huntington’s Disease in Rat.- 17 • Replicating Huntington Disease’s Phenotype in Nonhuman Primates.- 18 • Transgenic Mouse Models of Huntington’s Disease.- 19 • Rigid Indentation Models of Traumatic Brain Injury in the Rat.- 20 • Rodent Ischemia Models of Embolism and Ligation of the Middle Cerebral Artery: Clinical Relevanceto Treatment Strategies of Stroke.- 21 • A Primate Model of Hypertensive Cerebrovascular Disease.- 22 • Nictotinic Therapeutics for Tourette Syndrome and Other Neuropsychiatric Disorders: From Laboratory to Clinic.- 23 • Neural Grafting for Parkinson’s and Huntington’s Disease.- 24 • Future Prospects of Gene Therapy for Treating CNS Diseases.
Springer Book Archives
"This book is an elegant survey of primate and nonprimate models
for the most important of the CNS diseases, examining the prospects
of treatment from various (slightly) promising drug therapies to
the newest forms of fetal-tissue grafting. But more than that, the
editors have compiled a paradigmatic study on the critical need for
animal experimentation for the elucidation and treatment of human
disease. Each chapter points out how animal models provided the
only nonsuperficial insight available on various CNS syndromes, and
perhaps equally important, how animals served as models for
verification of theories and as test subjects for potential
treatments. "- Modern Drug Discovery
"...the contributions contained in this monograph represent a
serious attempt by many of the most important researchers in
neuroscience to critically assess the most useful animal models in
development today... this is an excellent volume which will be an
essential reading for all experimental neuropharmacologists and a
constant source of reference to both clinical and basic
psychopharmacologists. The editors are to be congratulated for
gathering together such an authoritative group of authors who have
explained their research interests in an easily accessible way." -
Human Phychopharmacology
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