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         Carlsson Arvid:     more books (21)
  1. Stress in Health and Disease
  2. Progress in Dopamine Research Schizophrenia: A Guide for Physicians
  3. Arvid Carlsson: "nunca entenderemos el cerebro": Premio Nobel de Medicina en 2002: el investigador sueco, que ha dedicado su vida al estudio del cerebro, ... An article from: Epoca by María Corisco, 2004-04-30
  4. People Connected to Lund University: Lars Hörmander, Arvid Carlsson, Ernst Wigforss, Gustaf Retzius, Etzel Cardeña, Johannes Rydberg
  5. Swedish Neuroscientists: Torsten Wiesel, Ulf Von Euler, Arvid Carlsson, Lars Leksell, Tomas Hökfelt, Peter Eriksson, Sten Grillner
  6. Biologiste Suédois: Gustaf Magnus Retzius, Torsten Wiesel, Olof Rudbeck le Jeune, Arvid Carlsson, Anders Retzius, Svante Pääbo, Adam Afzelius (French Edition)
  7. Swedish Physiologists: Swedish Neuroscientists, Torsten Wiesel, Ulf Von Euler, Arvid Carlsson, Lars Leksell, A. J. Carlson, Tomas Hökfelt
  8. Catecholamines PT. a: Basic & Peripheral Mechanisms (Neurology and Neurobiology) by Earl Usdin, Arvid Carlsson, et all 1984-05
  9. Messengers of the Brain by Arvid Carlsson, Lena Carlsson, 2002-01-01
  10. Dopamine Receptor Agonists 2. Acta Pharmaceutica Suecica Suppl. 1983/2 by Arvid & Nilsson, J. Lars G., eds Carlsson, 1983
  11. Cellular localization of brain monoamines, (Acta physiologica Scandinavica) by Arvid Carlsson, 1962
  12. Analysis of the Mgtt -ATP dependent storage mechanism in the amine granules of the adrenal medulla, (Acta physiologica Scandinavica) by Arvid Carlsson, 1963
  13. Ciencia: Los Nobel de la comunicación.(TT: Science: The Nobel of communication.): An article from: Siempre! by René Anaya, 2000-10-26
  14. NOTICIARIO CULTURAL.(TT: Cultural news.): An article from: Siempre! by José Gordon, 2000-10-19

81. Medyczny Nobel 2000
Laureatami tegorocznej Nagrody Nobla w dziedzinie fizjologii i medycyny zostaliArvid carlsson, Paul Greengard i Eric Kandel, za badania nad przekazywaniem
http://www.nil.org.pl/xml/nil/gazeta/numery/n2000/n200011/n20001114
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Numer 2000-11

S³owo wstêpne Redaktora Naczel...
Rzecznik prasowy NRL informuje List Prezesa NRL do Prezydenta... ... Szkolenie Naczelnego S±du Leka... Medyczny Nobel 2000 Wspania³y kongres Zaduszkowe wspominki Medyczny Internet bez tajemnic Prywatyzacja, komercjalizacja,... ... Nekrolog
Medyczny Nobel 2000
Laureatami tegorocznej Nagrody Nobla w dziedzinie fizjologii i medycyny zostali Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard i Eric Kandel, za badania nad przekazywaniem sygna³ów w uk³adzie nerwowym. Nagroda dla profesora Carlssona jest kolejnym wyró¿nieniem farmakologów, najwy¿sz± nagrod± naukow±. Przypomnijmy, ¿e w okresie minionych trzech dekad by³o ich kilka - w tym za wykrycie leków blokuj±cych receptory beta adrenergiczne - dla Sir Jamesa Blacka (1998 r) i za odkrycie dzia³ania prostacykliny dla Sir Roberta Vane'a (1982).
Arvid Carlsson jest jednym z najlepiej znanych neuro-psychofarmakologów na ¶wiecie i jego badania mo¿na uznaæ za kluczowe dla rozwoju psychofarmakologii, a tak¿e po¶rednio psychiatrii w drugiej po³owie mijaj±cego stulecia. Nie jest, jak to niektórzy s±dz±, jednym z wielu naukowców pracuj±cych w dziedzinie neurofizjologii, jego prace nad rol± neuroprzeka¼ników, szczególnie katecholamin, w czynno¶ci mózgu s± pionierskie i stworzy³y podwaliny wspó³czesnej wiedzy w tym zakresie.
Jego badania przyczyni³y siê przede wszystkim do ustalenia, ¿e jedna z katecholamin, dopamina jest nie tylko prekursorem noradrenaliny i adrenaliny, ale tak¿e szczególnie w niektórych neuronach mózgu - ostatecznym samodzielnym neuroprzeka¼nikiem (neurotransmiterem) ("Science" 1958, 127, 471). Wykaza³ wiele jej dzia³añ, szczególnie behawioralnych takich jak pobudzenie ruchowe i stereotypie.

82. Yer 2000's Nobel Prize
This year, the nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine recognized the great ArvidCarlsson (University of Gothenburg, Sweden) Working at the NIH in the 1950s
http://www.txtwriter.com/Onscience/Articles/nobel2000.html
View articles by date ON SCIENCE Home Page View articles by topic Explaining this year's Nobel Prize: How long-term changes in the brain create mood and memory Every fall, about the time the leaves change, a few scientists become recognized as superstars. That is when the Nobel Prizes are awarded. Being a biologist, my interests focus on the science I know best, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. This year, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine recognized the great advances that have been made in understanding how our brains create mood and memory. The award was shared by three scientists like a play in three acts, this understanding developed in three stages. ACT ONE. Arvid Carlsson (University of Gothenburg, Sweden) Working at the NIH in the 1950s, Arvid Carlsson was one of an army of scientists trying to sort out how the brain changes from day to day. Mood and memory were blank slates, their mechanism a mystery, but brain scientists like Carlsson suspected that the bizarre zoo of chemicals present in the brain might provide a clue. Carlsson was studying a chemical called dopamine. It wasn't thought to be particularly important simply raw material for making everyday communication signals.

83. Belga Direct Press Releases
a special honor for Merck to collaborate with a company that was founded by ArvidCarlsson, whose nobelprize winning work in the area of neurosciences has
http://www.pressreleases.be/script_UK/newsdetail.asp?nDays=w&ID=6892

84. UCD News September 2001
Physiology, UCD and chairman of the local organising committee; Professor ArvidCarlsson, Department of Pharmacology, Goteborg, Sweden and nobel Prize Winner
http://www.ucd.ie/~ucdnews/sep01/brain_conf.htm

UCD Homepage

May 2001
Welcome Class of 2001. UCD wins Clinton Centre for American Studies Registration 2001. Conway Institute Festival of Research ...
Camera on Campus
E-mail: ucdnews@ucd.ie International Brain Research Conference The 9th International Conference on In Vivo Methods, Monitoring Molecules in Neuroscience was held in University College Dublin, Ireland in June. This meeting is one of a series that began in Nottingham, UK, in 1982 and follows on from previous successful conferences in Britain (1989), Holland (1991), France (1994), Spain (1996) and the USA (1999). Following the opening addresses - by Dr Billy O’Connor, lecturer in the Department of Human Anatomy and Physiology, UCD and chairman of the local organising committee, Professor Hugh Brady representing the Conway Institute, and Alderman Michael Conaghan, Deputy Lord Mayor of Dublin - some 55 papers were read and 150 posters were presented over three days by 300 delegates from over 20 countries. It was a measure of the interest in this conference that it managed to attract over £50,000 in international sponsorship and hosted 12 biomedical research company exhibits. The topics addressed included advances in the ability to monitor various aspects of brain function, especially chemical neurotransmission in the brains of living organisms, including man. There were special sessions devoted to on-going technical and methodological advances, including the development of biosensor technology and analytical techniques with the ability to detect molecules in the brain with great sensitivity.

85. The Gairdner Foundation's Latest News!
STOCKHOLM (APReuters) - Two Americans and a Swede won the nobel Prize in ArvidCarlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel will share the almost $1.4 million
http://www.gairdner.org/news11.html
This page contains the latest news releases concerning events which affect The Gairdner Foundation and the illustrious group of scientists who have won either the International Award or The Wightman Award. Reports reprinted are the property of the news institution quoted and can only be used with permission by the author. Foundation press releases may be republished in whole or in part for the benefit of the media and the general public. Home This Year's Winners Past Winners History ... Contact Us Reprinted October 10, 2000 Two Americans, Swede share Nobel
Research into brain cell communication earns medicine prize

The Toronto Star STOCKHOLM (AP-Reuters) - Two Americans and a Swede won the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for discoveries about how brain cells communicate - research that laid the groundwork for Prozac and other drugs for depression and Parkinson's disease. Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel will share the almost $1.4 million prize for pioneering work that could lead to new treatments for schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, addiction and other mental disorders. ``The payoffs are potentially enormous,'' said Dr. Stephen Hyman, director of the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health.

86. 325-nobel

http://www.feaps.org/voces/325/325-nobel.htm
PERIÓDICO DE LA CONFEDERACIÓN ESPAÑOLA DE ORGANIZACIONES
EN FAVOR DE LAS PERSONAS CON RETRASO MENTAL DICIEMBRE 2000
Entrevista con uno de los premiados con el Nobel de Medicina 2000
"La buena comunicación entre las neuronas es fundamental para el aprendizaje y la memoria",
dice el Profesor Arvid Carlsson La Academia sueca destaca sus "descubrimientos esenciales" sobre transmisión de señales entre diferentes células nerviosas
La Academia Sueca ha otorgado el Premio Nobel de Medicina del año 2000 a los científicos Arvid Carlsson, de la Universidad de Gotemburgo (Suecia); Paul Greengard, de la Universidad Rockefeller; y Eric Kandel, de la Universidad de Columbia (ambas de Estados Unidos), por sus estudios sobre la transmisión de señales en el sistema nervioso. La Academia destacó que los tres científicos han hecho "descubrimientos esenciales sobre un tipo importante de transmisión de la señal entre diferentes células nerviosas, lo que en términos científicos se denomina transmisión sináptica lenta". Estos estudios, añade, han sido "determinantes para la comprensión de las funciones normales del cerebro y de las condiciones en las que perturbaciones en esta transmisión de señales pueden dar lugar a enfermedades neurológicas o físicas. Tales descubrimientos han conducido al desarrollo de nuevos fármacos", indica el Instituto Karolinska en un comunicado.

87. ... Rede Medicina - Pré-Vestibular Especializado ...

http://www.redemedicina.com.br/nobel.asp
Projeto Pedagógico Cursos Qualidade Testemunhos ... Mapa do Local
Nobel de Medicina sai para três cientistas
por pesquisas sobre o cérebro
Fonte: CNNBrasil
Data: 09 de Outubro de 2000
ESTOCOLMO Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard e Eric Kandel foram laureados, na manhã desta segunda-feira, com o prêmio Nobel de Medicina por sua descobertas relacionadas a como as mensagens são transmitidas através do sistema nervoso.
Os três vencedores dividirão um prêmio de 915 mil dólares por sua descobertas pioneiras, em que conseguiram focalizar um "tipo de sinal de transdução entre células nervosas, como uma vagarosa transmissão cináptica", de acordo com a citação feita pela comissão do Nobel em Estocolmo, a capital da Suécia. Essas descobertas foram cruciais para um entendimento da função normal do cérebro e resultaram no desenvolvimento de novas drogas, ainda segundo a comissão do Nobel, que divulgou os nomes dos laureados numa entrevista coletiva realizada no Instituto Karolinska.
O sueco Carlsson, de 77 anos, trabalha na Universidade de Goteburgo, na Suécia; o norte-americano Greengard, de 74, colabora com a Universidade Rockfeller, em Nova York; e Kandel, de 70, é austríaco naturalizado norte-americano e desenvolve suas pesquisas na Columbia University, em Nova York.
O Nobel de Medicina foi o primeiro anunciado numa semana de premiações que incluem, ainda, as áreas de Física e Química (na terça-feira), de Economia (na quarta-feira) e o da Paz (cujo anúncio está marcado para a sexta-feira, em Oslo, a capital da Noruega).

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