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Anders Björklund
Researcher at Lund University
Publications - 771
Citations - 87172
Anders Björklund is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Dopamine. The author has an hindex of 165, co-authored 769 publications receiving 84268 citations. Previous affiliations of Anders Björklund include University of Washington & Institute for the Study of Labor.
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Serotonin neuron-dependent and -independent reduction of dyskinesia by 5-HT1A and 5-HT1B receptor agonists in the rat Parkinson model
TL;DR: The effect of increasing doses of 5-HT1A and 5- HT1B receptor agonists on AIMs induced by either L-DOPA or apomorphine is investigated, suggesting that such effect is independent on activation of pre-synaptic 5-ht1 receptors.
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Transplantation of embryonic ventral forebrain neurons to the neocortex of rats with lesions of nucleus basalis magnocellularis—I. Biochemical and anatomical observations
TL;DR: Reconstruction of the extrinsic cholinergic input to the cortex by transplantation provides a useful tool for understanding the functions of this pathway.
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Transmitter expression and morphological development of embryonic medullary and mesencephalic raphé neurones after transplantation to the adult rat central nervous system. II. Grafts to the hippocampus.
G. A. Foster,Marianne Schultzberg,Fred H. Gage,Anders Björklund,T. Hökfelt,A.C. Cuello,Albert A.J. Verhofstad,Theo J. Visser,Piers C. Emson +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, mesencephalic raphe cells derived from the 13-14 day old rat brain were injected into the spinal cord of adult rats which had been previously denervated with 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine.
Posted Content
Generating Equality and Eliminating Poverty, the Swedish Way
TL;DR: This article showed that Sweden achieved its egalitarian income distribution and eliminated poverty largely because of its system of earnings and income determination, not because of the homogeneity of the population nor of its educational system.
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Cells of origin of the ventral cholinergic septohippocampal pathway undergoing compensatory collateral sprouting following fimbria-fornix transection
TL;DR: It was demonstrated, by destroying these cells unilaterally, that they were responsible to a large extent for the cholinergic compensatory collateral sprouting in the hippocampus that has previously been shown to develop following complete fimbria-fornix transection.