Search results for "spinal cord"

showing 10 items of 302 documents

Pharmacological Suppression of CNS Scarring by Deferoxamine Reduces Lesion Volume and Increases Regeneration in an In Vitro Model for Astroglial-Fibr…

2015

Lesion-induced scarring is a major impediment for regeneration of injured axons in the central nervous system (CNS). The collagen-rich glial-fibrous scar contains numerous axon growth inhibitory factors forming a regeneration-barrier for axons. We demonstrated previously that the combination of the iron chelator 2,2'-bipyridine-5,5'-decarboxylic acid (BPY-DCA) and 8-Br-cyclic AMP (cAMP) inhibits scar formation and collagen deposition, leading to enhanced axon regeneration and partial functional recovery after spinal cord injury. While BPY-DCA is not a clinical drug, the clinically approved iron chelator deferoxamine mesylate (DFO) may be a suitable alternative for anti-scarring treatment (A…

Central Nervous SystemCollagen Type IVmedicine.medical_specialtyNeuriteCentral nervous systemlcsh:MedicineBiologyPharmacologyDeferoxamineIn Vitro TechniquesIron Chelating AgentsCicatrixIn vivoTransforming Growth Factor betamedicineCyclic AMPNeuritesAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerAxonRats Wistarlcsh:ScienceSpinal cord injurySpinal Cord InjuriesMultidisciplinaryDeferoxamine mesylatelcsh:RFibroblastsSpinal cordmedicine.diseaseAxonsSurgeryNerve RegenerationRatsDeferoxamineDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureAstrocyteslcsh:QFemalemedicine.drugResearch ArticlePloS one
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Cerebral spinal fluid flow, venous drainage and spinal cord compression in achondroplastic children: impact of magnetic resonance findings for decomp…

2001

In order to investigate the diagnostic properties of MRI of the brain and spine in achondroplastic children with regard to decompressive surgery, 25 patients were examined by conventional morphological and by "functional" imaging of CSF flow and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) of the veins and sinuses at the cranial base following a special protocol. The results were compared to those from age-matched controls and were correlated with each other and retrospectively with the neurological findings. Measurements of distances and angulations at the cranio-cervical junction (CCJ) from MR scans showed similar values to those from conventional radiographs and CTs and thus can be used without …

Central Nervous SystemMaleAdolescentEmissary veinsMagnetic resonance angiographyAchondroplasiaCentral nervous system diseaseCerebrospinal fluidSpinal cord compressionmedicineHumansChildmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryInfantMagnetic resonance imagingAnatomymedicine.diseaseSpinal cordMagnetic Resonance Imagingmedicine.anatomical_structureChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalebusinessNuclear medicineSpinal Cord CompressionMyelomalaciaMagnetic Resonance AngiographyEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
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Mapping of phenytoin-inducible cytochrome P450 immunoreactivity in the mouse central nervous system

1991

Abstract The distribution of phenytoin-inducible cytochrome P450 in non-treated mouse brain and spinal cord was analysed immunohistochemically using polyclonal antibodies against phenytoin-induced mouse cerebral microsomal P450. This P450 protein was proved in Ouchterlony [Volk B. et al. (1988) Neurosci. Lett. 84 , 219–224], Western blot, and immunohistochemical analyses to be reactive to the specific antibodies and an IgG fraction raised against phenobarbital-induced rat liver microsomal P450IIB1. The phenytoin-induced P450 is designated P450IIB1 * because immunologically it is comparable with P450IIB1; however, it has not yet been analysed for other characteristics of this enzyme. Immunoc…

Central Nervous SystemMaleCerebellumPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCentral nervous systemPyramidal TractsBiologyMiceCerebellummedicineNeuropilAnimalsNeuronsGeneral NeurosciencePontine nucleiSpinal cordImmunohistochemistryPonsMice Inbred C57BLmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemEnzyme InductionPhenytoinSteroid 11-beta-HydroxylaseElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelBrainstemEpendymaNeuroscience
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Possible Pathomechanisms Responsible for Injury to the Central Nervous System in the Settings of Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency

2012

The discovery of stenoses in the azygous and internal jugular veins, the so-called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency that accompanies multiple sclerosis, has enabled the reinterpretation of knowledge about this neurologic dis- ease. Pathologic venous outflow from the central nervous system appears to lead to two main problems. Firstly, it disas- sembles the blood-brain barrier and may allow the penetration of nervous parenchyma by glutamate and leukocytes. Sec- ondly, it may result in significant hypoperfusion of the brain and spinal cord. These two overlapping pathologies are likely to trigger plaques through caspase-1-driven pyroptosis of oligodendrocytes and to evoke neurodegene…

Central Nervous SystemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCentral nervous systemExcitotoxicityglutamatemultiple sclerosismedicine.disease_causeAxonal injuryCentral Nervous System Diseasescaspase 1venous insufficiencymedicineHumansBrachiocephalic Veinsjugular veinsPharmacologybusiness.industryMultiple sclerosisazygous veinNeurodegenerationPyroptosisGlutamate receptorGeneral Medicineblood-brain barriermedicine.diseaseSpinal cordChronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiencymedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal CordbusinessReviews on Recent Clinical Trials
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Skull and vertebral bone marrow are myeloid cell reservoirs for the meninges and CNS parenchyma.

2021

Getting around the blood–brain barrier The meninges comprise three membranes that surround and protect the central nervous system (CNS). Recent studies have noted the existence of myeloid cells resident there, but little is known about their ontogeny and function, and whether other meningeal immune cell populations have important roles remains unclear (see the Perspective by Nguyen and Kubes). Cugurra et al. found in mice that a large proportion of continuously replenished myeloid cells in the dura mater are not blood derived, but rather transit from cranial bone marrow through specialized channels. In models of CNS injury and neuroinflammation, the authors demonstrated that these myeloid c…

Central Nervous SystemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMyeloidEncephalomyelitis Autoimmune ExperimentalNeutrophilsCentral nervous systemBone Marrow CellsBiologyArticleMonocytesMiceImmune systemMeningesBone MarrowCell MovementCentral Nervous System DiseasesParenchymamedicineAnimalsHomeostasisMyeloid CellsNeuroinflammationSpinal Cord InjuriesMultidisciplinaryInnate immune systemSkullMeningesBrainSpinemedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal CordBone marrowDura MaterScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Mice lacking Plexin-B3 display normal CNS morphology and behaviour

2009

Semaphorins and their receptors, plexins, have emerged as important regulators of a multitude of biological processes. Plexin-B3 has been shown to be selectively expressed in postnatal oligodendrocytes. In contrast to the well-characterized Plexin-A family and the Plexin-B family members Plexin-B1 and -B2, no data are available on the functional role of Plexin-B3 in the central nervous system in vivo. Here we have elucidated the functional significance of Plexin-B3 by generating and analyzing constitutive knock-out mice. Plexin-B3-deficient mice were found to be viable and fertile. A systematic histological analysis revealed no morphological defects in the brain or spinal cord of mutant ani…

Central Nervous Systemanimal structuresCentral nervous systemNerve Tissue ProteinsReceptors Cell SurfaceAnxietyMotor ActivityNeuropsychological TestsBiologyMiceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceSemaphorinmedicineAnimalsReceptorMolecular BiologyCells CulturedMice KnockoutBehavior AnimalPlexinAge FactorsCell BiologySpinal cordMotor coordinationOligodendrogliamedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal Cordembryonic structuresbiology.proteinMotor learningNeuroscienceBiomarkersFunction (biology)Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience
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Effects of Neuromodulation on Gait

2018

In the last decades, non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) has evolved to become a valuable tool in both basic and clinical neuroscience. Various methods of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) have been widely used for diagnostic, prognostic and even therapeutic applications in a broad range of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The rationale for using NIBS techniques lies in the possibility to modulate, in a targeted manner, the activity of different cerebral and cerebellar cortical regions, as well as the functional connections between these areas and distant brain regions also including subcortical structures. The neural circuitry in…

CerebellumCerebellar ataxiaClinical neurosciencebusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentmedicine.diseaseNeuromodulation (medicine)Transcranial magnetic stimulationGait (human)medicine.anatomical_structureNIBS TMS rTMS tES balance gaitBrain stimulationmedicineSettore MED/26 - Neurologiamedicine.symptombusinessSpinal cord injuryNeuroscience
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Multiple mechanisms of secondary hyperalgesia

2000

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the multiple mechanisms of secondary hyperalgesia. The chapter defines the minimal conditions of complexity that must be fulfilled by a model of plasticity of spinal nociceptive transmission in order to explain clinical and psychophysical observations in humans. Secondary hyperalgesia is characterized by a leftward shift of the stimulus-response function for noxious mechanical stimuli. In order to define the afferent pathways involved in inducing central sensitization and in mediating the hyperalgesia to noxious mechanical stimuli, several psychophysical experiments using selective nerve block techniques is performed. Secondary hyperalgesia is likely…

ChemistryNociceptionmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSpinal Cord Dorsal HornNeuropathic painHyperalgesiamedicineNociceptive NeuronsIn patientNeuronmedicine.symptomNeuroscienceSensitization
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THORACIC SYRINGOMYELIA IN A PATIENT WITH AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS

2015

We report a patient with bulba r - onset, clinically defined, sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis bearing an isolated syringomyelia of the lower thoracic portion of the spinal cord. This is a very unusual association between two rare and progressive disorders, both affecting the spinal motoneurons. Syringomyelia might have acted as a phenotypic modifier in this ALS patient.

Community and Home Caremedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.diseasePhenotypic modifierSpinal cordSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureALS syringomyelia case reportmedicineSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisbusinessSyringomyelia
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Social comparison, coping and depression in people with spinal cord injury

2006

The present study among 70 people with spinal cord injury examined the prevalence and correlates of identification (seeing others as a potential future) and contrast (seeing others in competitive terms) in social comparison as related to coping and depression. The most prevalent social comparison strategy was downward contrast (a positive response to seeing others who were worse-off), followed by upward identification (a positive response to perceiving better-off others as a potential future), downward identification (a negative response to perceiving worse-off others as a potential future), and upward contrast (a negative response to seeing others who were better-off). Those with less seve…

Coping (psychology)IMPACTWishful thinkingCoping behaviorADJUSTMENTDevelopmental psychologyDISABLED INDIVIDUALSPSYCHOLOGYsocial comparisonmedicineDOWNWARD EVALUATIONSpinal cord injuryApplied PsychologyCANCER-TREATMENTSocial comparison theoryHEALTH-STATUSPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSELF-EVALUATIONGeneral MedicineGeneral Chemistrymedicine.diseasespinal cord injurycopingPSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIESPositive responseNegative responsedepressionSelf evaluationARTHRITISPsychologyPsychology & Health
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