C. A. Pentz
Syracuse University
5 Papers
20 Citations
C. A. Pentz is an academic researcher from Syracuse University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Visual field. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
“Spontaneously” hypertensive mice: A potential genetic model for the study of the relationship between heart size and blood pressure
TL;DR: It was raised that compensatory mechanisms for high blood pressure, e.g., cardiac hypertrophy, may operate very early in development for animals who are hypertensive by virtue of selective breeding for blood pressure extremes.
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The Role of Genotype in Behavioral Responses to Anesthetics
Merrill F. Elias,C. A. Pentz +1 more
- 01 Jan 1975
TL;DR: Studies concerned with the more general effects of anesthesia on performance have been concerned with a wide range of behaviors, including those involving memory processes, and deal with the long and short term behavioral effects of acute or chronic exposure to anesthetic vapors.
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Hemisphere-hand interactions for the matching of letters.
TL;DR: The data indicate that sharing of information between hemispheres under certain circumstances increases the efficiency of information processing relative to that observed with unilateral visual half-field (hemisphere) presentations and that hand or finger response relative to visual field of presentation is an important factor which must be controlled and examined relative toVisual field of present.
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Blood pressure extremes and activity in aging mice
Merrill F. Elias,C. A. Pentz +1 more
TL;DR: It was concluded that differences in activity for young adult high and low blood pressure mice of similar ages could not be attributed to genetic linkage, pleiotropy or a more direct causal relationship between blood pressure extremes and behavior.
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Heart/body weight ratios for aging high and low blood pressure mice.
TL;DR: It was concluded that high blood pressure mice do not exhibit cardiac hypertrophy in the strictest sense of a disproportionately greater increase in heart/body weight ratios across the life span than low blood pressure for this particular stock.
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