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central nervous system injury

Regional Differences in Viral Growth and Central Nervous System Injury Correlate with Apoptosis

Regional Differences in Viral Growth and Central Nervous System Injury Correlate with Apoptosis

... neuronal injury and virus-induced apoptosis throughout the ...of central nervous system injury with damage limited to the hippocampus, sparing other brain ...VarK-induced injury ...

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Central Nervous System Extracellular Matrix as a Therapeutic Bioscaffold for Central Nervous System Injury

Central Nervous System Extracellular Matrix as a Therapeutic Bioscaffold for Central Nervous System Injury

... The present study evaluated the temporospatial macrophage/microglia response to SCI repair to injectable ECM scaffolds. M2 polarized macrophages were present most commonly at the edge of, and often, in the center of the ...

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When friend turns foe: central and peripheral neuroinflammation in central nervous system injury

When friend turns foe: central and peripheral neuroinflammation in central nervous system injury

... immune system play important roles in the inflammatory process is a key to deciphering the cellular, molecular, and genetic pathways of neuroinflammation, and broadens our scope for developing new ...

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Central Nervous System Injury: An in vivo and ex vivo analysis of axon regeneration

Central Nervous System Injury: An in vivo and ex vivo analysis of axon regeneration

... brain injury (Shiiya et al ...cord injury (Roerig et al ...cord injury and may suggest that the normal molecular transport down these axons is negatively impacted, leading to dysfunction (Ahlgren et ...

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Injury to the adult central nervous system (CNS) is devastating

Injury to the adult central nervous system (CNS) is devastating

... Are neurotrophins suf®cient? These studies illustrate one of the principal obstacles to the use of neurotrophins: the need to drive regenerating axons out of a permissive substrate or bridge and into the injured CNS. ...

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Venous endothelial injury in central nervous system diseases

Venous endothelial injury in central nervous system diseases

... MS is a group of immune-mediated demyelinating syn- dromes associated with neurodegeneration in the human CNS, which causes significant neurological disability in largely younger adults (Noseworthy [3], Compston and ...

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The response of the mature central nervous system to traumatic brain injury

The response of the mature central nervous system to traumatic brain injury

... the injury, and either the appropriate extension of new axons to trace a path to their original target, mimicking the path finding abilities demonstrated by axons during development, or the compensatory ...

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Perinatal injury of the central nervous system in Lithuania from 1997 to 2014

Perinatal injury of the central nervous system in Lithuania from 1997 to 2014

... the central nervous system in the newborn peri- od ...brain injury causing neurologic impairment in a newborn is poorly ...brain injury, it is appropriate to use the term ...

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Reovirus infection and tissue injury in the mouse central nervous system are associated with apoptosis.

Reovirus infection and tissue injury in the mouse central nervous system are associated with apoptosis.

... Reovirus serotype 3 strains infect neurons within specific regions of the neonatal mouse brain and produce a lethal meningoencephalitis. Viral replication and pathology colocalize and have a predilection for the cortex, ...

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Bone marrow drives central nervous system regeneration after radiation injury

Bone marrow drives central nervous system regeneration after radiation injury

... the central nervous sys- tem after irradiation injury, mature, and integrate into the existing cellular microenvironment in various brain regions where they dura- bly ...

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Inflammation modulates expression of laminin in the central nervous system following ischemic injury

Inflammation modulates expression of laminin in the central nervous system following ischemic injury

... The extracellular matrix (ECM) of the CNS is essential for maintenance of brain homeostasis. Although its exact composition is not defined, it is thought that hya- luronan, tenascin-C, and proteoglycans are present in ...

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REGENERATION AND REPAIR OF THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

REGENERATION AND REPAIR OF THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

... methods that may promote CNS healing and repair unintended consequences of spinal cord repair Although numerous vascular and traumatic events can affect both the brain and the spinal cord, we will use spinal cord ...

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Innate immunity in the central nervous system

Innate immunity in the central nervous system

... Summary The immune-privileged status of the CNS has evolved to main- tain homeostasis required for neural function and host defense. The inability to generate robust and potentially harmful adap- tive immune responses ...

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CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM (CNS) TRAUMA

CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM (CNS) TRAUMA

... disruption of BVs, & subsequent H, tissue injury, & edema. C Since they are the points of impact, crests of gyri are most susceptible, whereas cerebral cortex along the sulci is less vulnerable. The most ...

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Expression and DNA binding of AP-1 proteins in the central nervous system following neuronal injury

Expression and DNA binding of AP-1 proteins in the central nervous system following neuronal injury

... CRE site when complexed with members of the CREB/ATF families which is similar to the TRE except for an additional central base (5’-TGACGTCA-3’) (described in detail in Chapter 8). In the AP-1 consensus sequence ...

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CiteSeerX — Nervous system reorganization following injury

CiteSeerX — Nervous system reorganization following injury

... Animal and human studies in the last two decades have demonstrated that plasticity reorganization occurs in the mammalian nervous system in response to periph- eral and central injuries. While ...

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Central Nervous System

Central Nervous System

... Normally (as in picture A in the previous slide), neurons terminals have vesicles that contain the amines (Serotonin, Norepinephrine and Dopamine) which are secreted to act on the next[r] ...

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The Central Nervous System

The Central Nervous System

... Damage to the arteries carrying blood to the spinal cord can cause spinal strokes in the same way that damaged arteries in the heart can cause heart attacks.. Our arteries tend to harde[r] ...

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THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

... • The nervous system carries out a complex array of tasks. It allows us to sense various smells, speak, remember past events, provides signals that control body movements and regulates, and cause almost ...
Physiology of the central nervous system

Physiology of the central nervous system

... • segments (levels) of the spinal cord contain regulatory circuits involved in control of the movements of a particular region of the body • muscle stretch reflexes have their inegrat[r] ...

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