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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

The Relationship Of Spasticity And Impairments In Force Regulation And Neuromuscular Fatigue Post Stroke, Reivian Berrios Barillas Oct 2015

The Relationship Of Spasticity And Impairments In Force Regulation And Neuromuscular Fatigue Post Stroke, Reivian Berrios Barillas

Dissertations (1934 -)

Hyperreflexia that causes muscle spasticity may contribute to limitations in force regulation and walking ability post stroke. Additionally, neuromuscular fatigue may reduce force regulation, which is important because fatigue can assist to strengthen muscles that control walking. Hyperreflexia may be caused by cortical disinhibition that allows Ia afferents to amplify excitatory synaptic inputs to motoneuron pools. Cortical disinhibition is presumably caused by stroke-related motor cortex damage. Although, other excitatory synaptic sources to motoneurons contribute to motor control, hyperreflexia may be one contributor that affects stroke survivors. However, hyperreflexia is reported infrequently to effect force regulation post stroke. The goal was …


A Neurobiological Pathway That Mediates Stress-Induced Drug Use, Oliver Vranjkovic Oct 2015

A Neurobiological Pathway That Mediates Stress-Induced Drug Use, Oliver Vranjkovic

Dissertations (1934 -)

Cocaine addiction represents a tremendous health and financial burden on our society and the high rate of relapse to cocaine use in abstinent addicts represents a major barrier to effective therapy. Thus, understanding the factors that contribute to relapse and the underlying neurobiological processes is important for guiding the development of treatment for addiction. Stressful life events often trigger drug use in recovering addicts. The contribution of stress to drug use is problematic due to the unpredictable and often uncontrollable nature of stress. A growing literature indicates that norepinephrine and corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) in the brain play key roles …


Neural Plasticity In Response To Intervention In Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorders, Sheryl Jayne Stevens Jul 2015

Neural Plasticity In Response To Intervention In Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorders, Sheryl Jayne Stevens

Dissertations (1934 -)

Current theories of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) suggest that they may develop from the transactional interaction between biological risk factors and environmental processes (Dawson et al., 2009). Due to the brain’s experience-expectant nature, one’s degree of social exposure may have a significant impact on their brain development and behavioral presentation. In addition to the primary critical neurodevelopmental period identified in early childhood, recent research has demonstrated a second period of substantial neurodevelopment during the adolescent period (Sisk & Foster, 2004). This study investigated the neural and behavioral impact of participation in an empirically validated behavioral intervention (The Program for the …


Drug Predictive Cues Activate Aversion-Sensitive Striatal Neurons That Encode Drug Seeking, Daniel S. Wheeler, Mykel A. Robble, Emily M. Hebron, Matthew J. Dupont, Amanda L. Ebben, Robert A. Wheeler May 2015

Drug Predictive Cues Activate Aversion-Sensitive Striatal Neurons That Encode Drug Seeking, Daniel S. Wheeler, Mykel A. Robble, Emily M. Hebron, Matthew J. Dupont, Amanda L. Ebben, Robert A. Wheeler

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Drug-associated cues have profound effects on an addict’s emotional state and drug-seeking behavior. Although this influence must involve the motivational neural system that initiates and encodes the drug-seeking act, surprisingly little is known about the nature of such physiological events and their motivational consequences. Three experiments investigated the effect of a cocaine-predictive stimulus on dopamine signaling, neuronal activity, and reinstatement of cocaine seeking. In all experiments, rats were divided into two groups (paired and unpaired), and trained to self-administer cocaine in the presence of a tone that signaled the immediate availability of the drug. For rats in the paired group, …


Genetic And Molecular Analysis Of Dec-11 In C. Elegans' Intestinal Pacemaker Activity, Adele Joan Gordon Apr 2015

Genetic And Molecular Analysis Of Dec-11 In C. Elegans' Intestinal Pacemaker Activity, Adele Joan Gordon

Master's Theses (2009 -)

Rhythmic behaviors are ubiquitous phenomena in plant and animal phyla. Ultradian rhythmic behaviors occur with a period of less than 24 hours and include such rhythmic behaviors as the beating of the heart and peristalsis in the gut. The nematode C. elegans exhibits three well-characterized ultradian rhythmic behaviors: ovulation, pharyngeal pumping, and the defecation motor program (DMP). The DMP occurs every ~45 seconds in wild-type worms and comprises three distinct muscle contractions: a posterior body contraction (pBoc), an anterior body contraction (aBoc), and an enteric muscle contraction (Emc), which is coupled to expulsion (Exp). The rhythmicity of the DMP is …


Overexpression Of Sox11 Promotes Corticospinal Tract Regeneration After Spinal Injury While Interfering With Functional Recovery, Zimei Wang, Ashley Reynolds, Adam Kirry, Christopher Nienhaus, Murray G. Blackmore Feb 2015

Overexpression Of Sox11 Promotes Corticospinal Tract Regeneration After Spinal Injury While Interfering With Functional Recovery, Zimei Wang, Ashley Reynolds, Adam Kirry, Christopher Nienhaus, Murray G. Blackmore

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Embryonic neurons, peripheral neurons, and CNS neurons in zebrafish respond to axon injury by initiating pro-regenerative transcriptional programs that enable axons to extend, locate appropriate targets, and ultimately contribute to behavioral recovery. In contrast, many long-distance projection neurons in the adult mammalian CNS, notably corticospinal tract (CST) neurons, display a much lower regenerative capacity. To promote CNS repair, a long-standing goal has been to activate pro-regenerative mechanisms that are normally missing from injured CNS neurons. Sox11 is a transcription factor whose expression is common to a many types of regenerating neurons, but it is unknown whether suboptimal Sox11 expression contributes …


Expression Patterns Of Bdnf With Central Anorexigenic Signaling Pathways Involving Pacap In The Hypothalamic Ventromedial Nuclei, Brian Maunze, Matthew M. Hurley, Jon M. Resch, M. J. Reilley, E. M. Wassmann, Sujean Choi Jan 2015

Expression Patterns Of Bdnf With Central Anorexigenic Signaling Pathways Involving Pacap In The Hypothalamic Ventromedial Nuclei, Brian Maunze, Matthew M. Hurley, Jon M. Resch, M. J. Reilley, E. M. Wassmann, Sujean Choi

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a 38-amino acid polypeptide belonging to the secretin super family of peptides. PACAP binds to its type 1 receptor (PAC1R) with greater affinity than for the receptors for vasoactive intestinal polypeptides (VIP), VPAC1 and VPAC2. Although mRNA for PACAP and its receptor PAC1R are found throughout the central nervous system, they are abundantly expressed in the hypothalamic ventromedial nuclei (VMN). In male Sprague Dawley rats, infusions of PACAP into the VMN produce a robust decrease in food intake with concomitant increased energy expenditure, decreased body weight, and significantly elevated brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mRNA …


A New Obesity Model Reveals The Hypophagic Properties Of Pacap Involve The Regulation Of Homeostatic Feeding In The Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus And Hedonic Feeding In The Nucleus Accumbens, Matthew M. Hurley, Brian Maunze, Jon M. Resch, Mogen M. Frenkel, M. J. Reilley, Megan E. Block, David A. Baker, Sujean Choi Jan 2015

A New Obesity Model Reveals The Hypophagic Properties Of Pacap Involve The Regulation Of Homeostatic Feeding In The Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus And Hedonic Feeding In The Nucleus Accumbens, Matthew M. Hurley, Brian Maunze, Jon M. Resch, Mogen M. Frenkel, M. J. Reilley, Megan E. Block, David A. Baker, Sujean Choi

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Binge eating in humans is a complex disorder that often involves discrete, compulsive feeding sessions of highly palatable foods even in the absence of a deprivation state or hunger. Binging can be effectively modeled in rodents by providing subjects with limited access to a palatable food source (Western Diet; WD) as an adjunct to ad lib access to normal chow (Standard Chow; SC). Although this design recapitulates several fundamental characteristics observed in binge eating disorder, the binge eating observed in this paradigm is likely a product of both hedonic and homeostatic drives with the need to balance energy stores still …


Pacap And Cocaine Reinstatement: A Neuropeptide Expressed By Corticostriatal Neurons That Regulates Nucleus Accumbens Astrocytes, Linghai Kong, E. Hess, Brian Maunze, Matthew M. Hurley, Khadijah Makky, Sujean Choi, John R. Mantsch, David A. Baker Jan 2015

Pacap And Cocaine Reinstatement: A Neuropeptide Expressed By Corticostriatal Neurons That Regulates Nucleus Accumbens Astrocytes, Linghai Kong, E. Hess, Brian Maunze, Matthew M. Hurley, Khadijah Makky, Sujean Choi, John R. Mantsch, David A. Baker

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Drug addiction involves heightened relapse vulnerability arising from persistent drug-induced neuro-adaptations, including a) hypofrontality which is thought to reflect reduced firing of cortical afferents to the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and b) altered glutamate homeostasis in NAcc that likely involves reduced glutamate release and uptake by astrocytes. An important question is whether these forms of pathological plasticity are functionally linked such that reduced corticostriatal firing may result in aberrant regulation of astrocytes in the NAcc. To begin to evaluate this possibility, we first determined whether neurons regulate system xc- (Sxc) activity, a mechanism of non-vesicular glutamate release by astrocytes. We found …


Regulation Of System XC- By Pharmacological Manipulation Of Cellular Thiols, Rebecca Albano, Nicholas J. Raddatz, Julie Hjelmhaug, David Baker, Doug Lobner Jan 2015

Regulation Of System XC- By Pharmacological Manipulation Of Cellular Thiols, Rebecca Albano, Nicholas J. Raddatz, Julie Hjelmhaug, David Baker, Doug Lobner

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

The cystine/glutamate exchanger (system xc-) mediates the transport of cystine into the cell in exchange for glutamate. By releasing glutamate, system xc- can potentially cause excitotoxicity. However, through providing cystine to the cell, it regulates the levels of cellular glutathione (GSH), the main endogenous intracellular antioxidant, and may protect cells against oxidative stress. We tested two different compounds that deplete primary cortical cultures containing both neurons and astrocytes of intracellular GSH, L-buthionine-sulfoximine (L-BSO), and diethyl maleate (DEM). Both compounds caused significant concentration and time dependent decreases in intracellular GSH levels. However; DEM caused an increase …


Patterns Of Barbell Acceleration During The Snatch In Weightlifting Competition, Kristof Kipp, Chad Harris Jan 2015

Patterns Of Barbell Acceleration During The Snatch In Weightlifting Competition, Kristof Kipp, Chad Harris

Exercise Science Faculty Research and Publications

The purpose of this study was to determine the association between weightlifting performance and vertical barbell acceleration patterns. Barbell kinematic time-series data were tracked from 18 snatches from six weightlifters during a regional weightlifting competition. These data were used to calculate vertical barbell accelerations. Time-series data were normalised to 100% of lift phase, defined as the time interval between barbell lift-off and maximum height of the barbell during each snatch lift. The time-series data were then entered into a pattern recognition algorithm that extracted principal patterns and calculated principal pattern scores. Body mass-normalised lift weight, which was used to quantify …