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Science 9 August 1968:
Vol. 161. no. 3841, pp. 595 - 597
DOI: 10.1126/science.161.3841.595

Articles

Reversible Cryogenic Blockade Brain of Unrestrained Animals of Neural Function in the

James E. Skinner 1 and Donald B. Lindsley 1

1 Departments of Psychology and Physiology, University of California, Los Angeles 90024

Reversible cryogenic blockade of neural systems in the brain may be accomplished by local cooling. A small cryoprobe is described which may be implanted in the brain of an unrestrained, behaving animal. Cooling may be restricted to the tip of the cryoprobe and the temperature of the tip and the shaft may be regulated and monitored independently by miniature thermocouples and appropriate control and indicator devices. Electrophysiological results are presented which show that the cryogenic blocking effect may be localized to within a few millimeters of the tip of the cryoprobe and that the size of the region blocked is proportional to the tip temperature. The system described has been shown to be effective in both electrophysiological and behavioral studies.





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)