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- Alzheimer's disease (AD) (2)
- Cancer (2)
- Prion disease (PrD) (2)
- Tauopathies (2)
- Advanced stage carcinoma (1)
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- Alzheimer’s disease (AD) (1)
- Atypical protein folding (1)
- Cachexia (1)
- Clinical outcomes (1)
- Disability index (1)
- Frontotemporal degeneration (FTD) (1)
- Hemicrania continua (1)
- Human RPE cells (1)
- Indomethacin (1)
- Inflammatory cytokines (1)
- Interlaminar stabilization (1)
- Ischemia–reperfusion (1)
- K -ATPase + + (1)
- Lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) (1)
- Low back pain (1)
- Lumbar laminectomy (1)
- Lumbar spinal stenosis (1)
- Metabolic dysregulation (1)
- MiRNA-30b-5p (1)
- Microbiome and dysbiosis (1)
- NF-kB (p50/p65) (1)
- Na (1)
- Neurodegeneration (1)
- Neurofilament (1)
- Neurofilament light (NF-L) (1)
Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Goal Attainment After Treatment With Abobotulinumtoxina And A Tailored Home Therapy Programme In Children With Upper Limb Spasticity: Descriptive, Exploratory Analysis Of A Large Randomized, Controlled Studya, Jorge Carranza-Del Río, Nigar Dursun, Cigdem Cekmece, Marcin Bonikowski, Weronika Pyrzanowska, Edward Dabrowski, Ann Tilton, Joyce Oleszek, Magali Volteau, Simon Page, Angela Shierk, Mauricio R. Delgado
Goal Attainment After Treatment With Abobotulinumtoxina And A Tailored Home Therapy Programme In Children With Upper Limb Spasticity: Descriptive, Exploratory Analysis Of A Large Randomized, Controlled Studya, Jorge Carranza-Del Río, Nigar Dursun, Cigdem Cekmece, Marcin Bonikowski, Weronika Pyrzanowska, Edward Dabrowski, Ann Tilton, Joyce Oleszek, Magali Volteau, Simon Page, Angela Shierk, Mauricio R. Delgado
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
OBJECTIVE: This exploratory analysis of a large, randomized, double-blind study (NCT02106351) describes the effect of treatment with abobotulinumtoxinA followed by a tailored home exercises therapy programme in enabling children with upper limb spasticity due to cerebral palsy to achieve their functional goals using goal attainment scaling (GAS). METHODS: Children with cerebral palsy and spasticity in ≥ 1 upper limb received up to 4 injection cycles of abobotulinumtoxinA (2 U/kg (cycle 1 only), 8U/kg and 16U/kg) into the elbow and wrist flexors and other upper limb muscles selected to support individual treatment goals. Children followed a home exercises therapy programme, which …
Impact Of Dietary Walnuts, A Nutraceutical Option, On Circulating Markers Of Metabolic Dysregulation In A Rodent Cachectic Tumor Model, Lauri O. Byerley, Hsiao Man Chang, Brittany Lorenzen, Jessie Guidry, W. Elaine Hardman
Impact Of Dietary Walnuts, A Nutraceutical Option, On Circulating Markers Of Metabolic Dysregulation In A Rodent Cachectic Tumor Model, Lauri O. Byerley, Hsiao Man Chang, Brittany Lorenzen, Jessie Guidry, W. Elaine Hardman
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Background: Nutraceutical foods, like walnuts which are rich in immunonutrients, can have medicinal benefits. Dietary walnuts have been shown to slow or prevent tumor growth in mice genetically programmed to grow breast or prostate tumors. This study investigated whether walnuts could exert the same preventable effect in a transplantable carcinoma rat model. Methods: Eighteen rats were randomly fed a diet containing walnuts (10% of food by weight), and 36 were fed a diet without walnuts (control) for 21 days. On day 22, 18 control diet rats were switched to the walnut diet. All other animals remained on their same diet. …
Downregulation Of Neurofilament Light Chain Expression In Human Neuronal-Glial Cell Co-Cultures By A Microbiome-Derived Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Mirna-30b-5p, Aileen I. Pogue, Vivian R. Jaber, Nathan M. Sharfman, Yuhai Zhao, Walter J. Lukiw
Downregulation Of Neurofilament Light Chain Expression In Human Neuronal-Glial Cell Co-Cultures By A Microbiome-Derived Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Mirna-30b-5p, Aileen I. Pogue, Vivian R. Jaber, Nathan M. Sharfman, Yuhai Zhao, Walter J. Lukiw
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Microbiome-derived Gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has been shown by multiple laboratories to reside within Alzheimer's disease (AD)-affected neocortical and hippocampal neurons. LPS and other pro-inflammatory stressors strongly induce a defined set of NF-kB (p50/p65)-sensitive human microRNAs, including a brain-enriched Homo sapien microRNA-30b-5p (hsa-miRNA-30b-5p; miRNA-30b). Here we provide evidence that this neuropathology-associated miRNA, known to be upregulated in AD brain and LPS-stressed human neuronal-glial (HNG) cells in primary culture targets the neurofilament light (NF-L) chain mRNA 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR), which is conducive to the post-transcriptional downregulation of NF-L expression observed within both AD and LPS-treated HNG cells. A deficiency of NF-L …
Crel And Wnt5a/Frizzled 5 Receptor-Mediated Inflammatory Regulation Reveal Novel Neuroprotectin D1 Targets For Neuroprotection, Jorgelina M. Calandria, Khanh V. Do, Sayantani Kala-Bhattacharjee, Andre Obenaus, Ludmila Belayev, Nicolas G. Bazan
Crel And Wnt5a/Frizzled 5 Receptor-Mediated Inflammatory Regulation Reveal Novel Neuroprotectin D1 Targets For Neuroprotection, Jorgelina M. Calandria, Khanh V. Do, Sayantani Kala-Bhattacharjee, Andre Obenaus, Ludmila Belayev, Nicolas G. Bazan
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Abstract: Wnt5a triggers inflammatory responses and damage via NFkB/p65 in retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells undergoing uncompensated oxidative stress (UOS) and in experimental ischemic stroke. We found that Wnt5a-Clathrin-mediated uptake leads to NFkB/p65 activation and that Wnt5a is secreted in an exosome-independent fashion. We uncovered that docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and its derivative, Neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1), upregulate c-Rel expression that, as a result, blunts Wnt5a abundance by competing with NFkB/p65 on the Wnt5a promoter A. Wnt5a increases in ischemic stroke penumbra and blood, while DHA reduces Wnt5a abundance with concomitant neuroprotection. Peptide inhibitor of Wnt5a binding, Box5, is also neuroprotective. DHA-decreased …
Decompression And Interlaminar Stabilization For Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: A Cohort Study And Two-Dimensional Operative Video, Olivia E. Gilbert, Sarah E. Lawhon, Twila L. Gaston, Jared M. Robichaux, Gabriel Claudiu Tender
Decompression And Interlaminar Stabilization For Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: A Cohort Study And Two-Dimensional Operative Video, Olivia E. Gilbert, Sarah E. Lawhon, Twila L. Gaston, Jared M. Robichaux, Gabriel Claudiu Tender
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Background and Objectives: Lumbar spinal stenosis is one of the most common causes of disability in the elderly and often necessitates surgical intervention in patients over the age of 65. Our study aimed to evaluate the clinical efficacy of interlaminar stabilization following decompressive laminectomy in patients with lumbar stenosis without instability. Materials and Methods: Twenty patients with lumbar stenosis underwent decompressive laminectomy and interlaminar stabilization at our academic institution. Clinical outcomes were measured using the visual analog scale (VAS) and Oswestry disability index (ODI) at the 2-month, 6-month, and 1-year postoperative visits, and these outcomes were compared to the preoperative …
Targeted Osmotic Lysis: A Novel Approach To Targeted Cancer Therapies, Harry J. Gould, Dennis Paul
Targeted Osmotic Lysis: A Novel Approach To Targeted Cancer Therapies, Harry J. Gould, Dennis Paul
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
The conventional treatment of cancer has been based on the delivery of non-selective toxins and/or ionizing energy that affect both the cancer and normal tissues in the hope of destroying the offending disease before killing the patient. Unfortunately, resistance often develops to these treatments and patients experience severe, dose-limiting adverse effects that reduce treatment efficacy and compromise quality of life. Recent advances in our knowledge of the biology of tumor cells and their microenvironment, the recognition of surface proteins that are unique to specific cancers and essential to cell growth and survival and signaling pathways associate with invasion and metastasis …
The Spectrum Of Indomethacin-Responsive Headaches In Children And Adolescents, Kenneth A. Myers, Rebecca Barmherzig, Nichelle R. Raj, Saoussen Berrahmoune, Pablo Ingelmo, Christine Saint-Martin, Afsheen Q. Khan, Megan Kouri, Cynthia Morris, Andrew D. Hershey, Joanne Kacperski, Marielle A. Kabbouche, Nada Mohamed, Rashmi R. Rao, Ana Marissa Lagman-Bartolome, Amy A. Gelfand, Christina L. Szperka, Serena L. Orr
The Spectrum Of Indomethacin-Responsive Headaches In Children And Adolescents, Kenneth A. Myers, Rebecca Barmherzig, Nichelle R. Raj, Saoussen Berrahmoune, Pablo Ingelmo, Christine Saint-Martin, Afsheen Q. Khan, Megan Kouri, Cynthia Morris, Andrew D. Hershey, Joanne Kacperski, Marielle A. Kabbouche, Nada Mohamed, Rashmi R. Rao, Ana Marissa Lagman-Bartolome, Amy A. Gelfand, Christina L. Szperka, Serena L. Orr
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Background: Headaches with marked, specific response to indomethacin occur in children, but the phenotypic spectrum of this phenomenon has not been well-studied. Methods: We reviewed pediatric patients with headache showing ≥80% improvement with indomethacin, from seven academic medical centers. Results: We included 32 pediatric patients (16 females). Mean headache onset age was 10.9 y (range 2–16 y). Headache syndromes included hemicrania continua (n = 13), paroxysmal hemicrania (n = 10), primary stabbing headache (n = 2), short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (n = 1), primary exercise headache (n = 1) and primary cough headache (n …
Recent Advances In Our Molecular And Mechanistic Understanding Of Misfolded Cellular Proteins In Alzheimer’S Disease (Ad) And Prion Disease (Prd), Walter J. Lukiw
Recent Advances In Our Molecular And Mechanistic Understanding Of Misfolded Cellular Proteins In Alzheimer’S Disease (Ad) And Prion Disease (Prd), Walter J. Lukiw
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Naturally occurring neuron-abundant proteins including amyloid Aβ42 peptide and the microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT) can, over time and under pathological situations, assume atypical conformations, altering their normal biological structure and function, and causing them to aggregate into insoluble and neurotoxic intracellular inclusions. These misfolded proteins ultimately contribute to the pathogenesis of several progressive, age-related and ultimately lethal human neurodegenerative disorders. The molecular mechanism of this pathological phenomenon of neuronal protein misfolding lends support to the ‘prion hypothesis’, which predicts that the aberrant folding of endogenous natural protein structures into unusual pathogenic isoforms can induce the atypical folding of other similar …
New Inroads Into Our Understanding Of The Tauopathies, Alzheimer's Disease, And The Contribution Of Altered Protein Conformation To Human Neurological Disease, Walter J. Lukiw
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.