Chapter
The Effects of Ablation of the Septal Nuclei in the Rat on Circadian Variation and Stress Response Pattern of Corticosterone, Growth Hormone and Prolactin
Abstract
It has long been known that destruction of the septal nuclei in rats is followed by a very dramatic change in affective behavior (3). This change has frequently been dubbed the septal syndrome and is characterized by behavioral overreaction to most environmental stimuli. Once present, however, the septal syndrome is a self-limiting condition observed to persist for postoperative periods of 7–75 days (12,17). Normal attenuation of the syndrome …
Authors
Seggie J; Brown GM
Book title
The Septal Nuclei
Series
Advances in Behavioral Biology
Volume
20
Pagination
pp. 335-344
Publisher
Springer Nature
Publication Date
1976
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4684-3084-4_14