Academic literature on the topic 'Systemes nerveux et organes des sens'

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Systemes nerveux et organes des sens"

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Torch, Sakina. "Etude quantitative du nerf musculo-cutané humain par morphométrie ultrastructurale et analyse d'image : mise au point des méthodes et application à des cas témoins et pathologiques." Grenoble 1, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988GRE10139.

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Hantraye, Philippe. "Physiologie et physiopathologie des recepteurs des benzodiazepines de type central : etudes chez le singe et l'homme par tomographie par emission de positons." Paris 6, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA066425.

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Godement, Pierre. "Guidage axonal et formation de cartes topographiques dans le système visuel de la souris." Paris 6, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA066148.

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Le travail présenté a comme objectif d'élucider la nature des mécanismes mis en jeu dans le développement du système visuel d'un mammifère, la souris, et plus particulièrement dans la formation des cartes topographiques de la rétine, qui sont des caractéristiques de base de ce système. Le guidage des axones rétiniens vers leurs cibles centrales repose sur la capacité du cône de croissance axonal à reconnaitre des indices positionnels dans son environnement ; ces mécanismes de croissance dirigée sont accompagnés de mécanismes permettant une sélection des projections appropriées.
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Charli, Jean-Louis. "Biosynthese, liberation et inactivation de quelques peptides dans le systeme nerveux central." Paris 6, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA066304.

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CUDENNEC, RAULT ANNIE. "Role des systemes serotoninergiques ascendants dans le controle de l'activite fonctionnelle cerebrale integree chez le rat." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066174.

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Bochet, Pascal. "Marquage des recepteurs opioides delta dans le systeme nerveux central du rat." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066089.

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Dalal, Abderrahim. "Exploration de la fonction vagale chez le mouton eveille par la methode des sutures nerveuses croisees." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066177.

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Khater-Boidin, Josette. "Recherches sur le developpement du systeme nerveux chez le premature, le nouveau-ne a terme et l'enfant (donnees histologiques et electrophysiologiques)." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066328.

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Etude des aspects du developpement postnatal du systeme nerveux chez l'homme: excitabilite des fibres nerveuses peripheriques et de fibres musculaires par la mesure des periodes refractaires absolues; conduction centrale et peripherique; reflexes spinaux et de clignement. Etude histologique fragmentaire des fibres myeliniques des nerfs peripheriques au cours du developpement
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Giros, Bruno. "Etude des mecanismes d'inactivation des enkephalines dans le cerveau de rat." Paris 6, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA066008.

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Cesaro, Pierre. "Etude anatomique et electrophysiologique des noyaux intralaminaires du rat : hypotheses sur leur role dans la survenue de certaines douleurs centrales." Paris 6, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA066128.

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Books on the topic "Systemes nerveux et organes des sens"

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Séguy, Bernard. Atlas d'anatomie et de physiologie: Fascicule 3 -- appareil uro-génital, glandes endocrines, système nerveux, organes des sens. s.n.], 1985.

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Werner, Kahle, and Michael Frotscher. Atlas De Poche D'Anatomie: Système Nerveux Et Organes Des Sens (French Edition). Educa Books, 2015.

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Platzer, Werner, Werner Kahle, Horst Léonhardt, Gerhard Spitzer, Elizabeth Vitte, and Dominique Hasboun. Atlas de poche d'anatomie, tome 3 : Système nerveux et organes des sens. Flammarion médecine-sciences, 2002.

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Anatomie, atlas commenté d'anatomie humaine pour les étudiants et praticiens, volume 3 : Système nerveux et organes des sens. Flammarion médecine-sciences, 1993.

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Bouchet and Cuilleret. Anatomie topographique, descriptive et fonctionnelle, tome 1. Le système nerveux central, la face, la tête et les organes des sens, 2e édition. Editions Masson, 1997.

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(Editor), T. Kumazawa, L. Kruger (Editor), and K. Mizumura (Editor), eds. The Polymodal Receptor - A Gateway to Pathological Pain (Progress in Brain Research). Elsevier Science, 1996.

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Takao, Kumazawa, Kruger Lawrence, and Mizumura Kazue, eds. The polymodal receptor: A gateway to pathological pain. Elsevier, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Systemes nerveux et organes des sens"

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Curatolo, Paolo, and Elisa D’Agati. "Tuberous Sclerosis Complex." In Cognitive and Behavioral Abnormalities of Pediatric Diseases. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195342680.003.0046.

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Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetic, variably expressed, multisystem disorder that can cause circumscribed, benign, noninvasive lesions in any organ (Curatolo 2003; Gomez 1999). It affects about 1 newborn in every 6000 (Osborne, Fryer et al. 1991). The term tuberous sclerosis of the cerebral convolutions was used more than a century ago to describe the distinctive findings at autopsy in some patients with seizures and mental subnormality; the term tuberous describes the potato-like consistency of gyri with hypertrophic sclerosis (Bourneville 1880). The wide range of organs affected by the disease implies an important role for the TSC1 and TSC2 genes encoding hamartin and tuberin in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation. Tuberous sclerosis complex is a protean disease: the random distribution, number, size, and location of lesions cause varied clinical manifestations, involving the brain, skin, eyes, heart, kidney, lung (Curatolo et al. 2008). Some lesions, such as renal angiomyolipomas, do not occur until a certain age; by contrast, cardiac rhabdomyomas appear in the fetus and almost always regress spontaneously in infancy (Sosunov et al. 2008). About 85% of children and adolescents with TSC have central nervous system (CNS) manifestations, including epilepsy, learning difficulties, mental retardation, challenging behavioral problems, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which can be associated with the structural CNS features generally seen in TSC (Curatolo et al. 1991; Gillberg et al. 1994). Abnormalities of neuronal migration and cellular differentiation, and excessive cell proliferation, all contribute to the formation of the various TSC brain lesions including cortical tubers, subependymal nodules (SENs), subependymal giant cell astrocytomas (SEGAs), and widespread gray and white matter abnormalities, these latter being identified even in patients with average intelligence (Ridler et al. 2001; de Vries et al. 2005; Ridler et al. 2007). Further characterization of these typical lesions has been provided by progress in structural and functional imaging (DiMario 2004; Luat et al. 2007). Major and minor criteria exist to diagnose TSC (Table 32.1). The diagnosis is made when two major features, or one major and two minor ones, can be detected.
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Liberati, Diego. "Information Technology in Brain Intensive Therapy." In Encyclopedia of Healthcare Information Systems. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-889-5.ch093.

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In order to control a process, especially in a computer and instrumented assisted way, like in Brain Intensive Therapy (IT), a model of its behavior is needed. In order to do that, a first point is to be able to select the best set of a few (thus understandable and manageable) truly relevant variables. In manufactured systems, also used in Brain IT, physics is in fact often quite known, with a manageable number of degrees of freedom: for instance, in robots kinematics, natural state variables may be (angular) positions and velocities. Some natural systems are also as well easily characterized by state variables with physical meaning: for instance reservoirs, like lakes, but also body organs with respect to soluble substances, may be characterized by volumes, concentrations, fluxes, gradients among compartments (Liberati and Turkheimer 1999). In other cases, the "natural" variables of the systems are not the best ones for identifying and control a process: a transformation of some of them may be needed: for instance, in the autonomous nervous control of the hearth system, the differential inter-beat measure is the one that almost linearly interact with baro-reflex in the feedback control loop (Baselli et al., 1986). In many cases, mainly for natural, especially neural processes, it is not easy to formulate a model based on variables whose physical meaning is a-priori known: for instance the electroencephalogram (EEG) is a very far field shielded measure of the interacting activity of billions of neurons: many actors are thus playing, each one with many meaningful state variables, also depending on the investigated level, but with high reciprocal correlation. It would not be efficient to model every single variable for global monitoring, like it is not useful to take into account the kinetics of every single molecule of a gas when only global effects of pressure are of interest. A quest of some higher level variables, even without a direct physical meaning, is thus natural, in order to easily manage the complexity of the problem. Once such salient variables are found, the problem often arises to correlate in logical and/or mathematical sense their dynamics, in order to properly model, forecast and control the patient features. Such interrelated problems will be briefly addressed in the present contribution, where Intensive Therapy is chosen as a paradigmatic application because of its critical conditions, while the approaches described in the following, and whose rationale is better analyzed in the referred bibliography, are of a quite general use in health information systems.
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