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Nikolic Dimitrije M - - 2012
Juvenile myasthenia gravis is an acquired, autoimmune disease occurring before age 16 years. Thymoma is exceedingly rare in children, especially in association with juvenile myasthenia gravis. We describe a 14-year-old boy with juvenile myasthenia gravis and thymoma. He presented with difficulties chewing and swallowing, nasal speech, and fluctuating weakness of ...
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Tellioglu Ali Teoman - - 2012
BACKGROUND: Smiling causes a deformity in some rhinoplasty patients that includes drooping of the nasal tip, elevation and shortening of the upper lip, and increased maxillary gingival show. The depressor septi muscle leads this deformity. The dermocartilaginous ligament originates from the fascia of the upper third of the nose and ...
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Fall E H - - 2012
Trichosomoides nasalis (Trichinelloidea) is a parasite of Arvicanthis niloticus (Muridae) in Senegal. Female worms that harbour dwarf males in their uteri, occur in the epithelium of the nasal mucosa. Young laboratory-bred A. niloticus were either fed females containing larvated eggs or intraperitoneally injected with motile first-stage larvae recovered from female ...
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Pessemesse Laurence - - 2011
In vertebrates, skeletal muscle myofibers display different contractile and metabolic properties associated with different mitochondrial content and activity. We have previously identified a mitochondrial triiodothyronine receptor (p43) regulating mitochondrial transcription and mitochondrial biogenesis. When overexpressed in skeletal muscle, it increases mitochondrial DNA content, stimulates mitochondrial respiration, and induces a shift ...
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Sullivan Lauren A - - 2011
To compare tissue oxygen saturation in ovariohysterectomized dogs recovering postoperatively on room air versus nasal oxygen insufflation. Prospective clinical study. University teaching hospital. Twenty dogs undergoing ovariohysterectomy. Dogs were randomized to breathe either room air or 100 mL/kg/min of nasal oxygen insufflation for 2 hours postoperatively. Tissue oxygen saturation (StO(2)) ...
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Marsili Alessandro - - 2011
The FoxO3-dependent increase in type II deiodinase (D2), which converts the prohormone thyroxine (T(4)) to 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T(3)), is required for normal mouse skeletal muscle differentiation and regeneration. This implies a requirement for an increase in D2-generated intracellular T(3) under these conditions, which has not been directly demonstrated despite the presence ...
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Lee Sang Beom - - 2011
Morphometric data for the sympathetic ganglia (SG) of the upper thoracic spine was investigated to identify the exact location of the SG in order to reduce normal tissue injury in the thoracic cavity during thoracoscopic sympathectomy. In 46 specimens from 23 formalin-fixed adult cadavers, the authors measured the shortest distance ...
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McCormack Ann C - - 2011
A best evidence topic was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was, in what proportion of patients is the nerve of Kuntz identifiable? A total of 55 papers were found using the reported search, of which six represented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The ...
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Voermans N C - - 2011
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of inherited connective tissue disorders characterised by joint hypermobility, skin hyperextensibility and tissue fragility. It has recently been shown that muscle weakness occurs frequently in EDS, and that fatigue is a common and clinically important symptom. The aim of this ...
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Bleier Benjamin S - - 2011
Recent anatomic dissections have redefined the sinonasal parasympathetic pathway suggesting that individual rami project from the pterygopalatine ganglion (PPG) to innervate the nasal mucosa via multiple small nerve fascicles. The purpose of this study is correlate these anatomic descriptions with endoscopic findings and to define the pattern and location of ...
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Monacelli G - - 2011
English version Summary: Treatment of persistent radial nerve palsy through "tendon minimal transfer" technique. G. Monacelli, A.M. Spagnoli, M.I. Rizzo, V. Sorvillo, L. Quadrini, N. Scuderi Palliative tendon transfer procedures for radial nerve palsy are continuing to evolve. This paper reports outcomes of 10 patients with isolated and traumatic radial ...
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Celletti C - - 2011
Effects of muscle mechanical vibration on movement disorders still need accumulation of a pertinent body of evidence. The aim of this study was to explore the effects of repeated muscle vibration stimulation (rMV) using a protocol, previously demonstrated able to induce plastic reorganization of the primary motor cortex in an ...
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Pintér Sándor - - 2010
Although adult motoneurons do not die if their axons are injured at some distance from the cell body, they are unable to survive injury caused by ventral root avulsion. Some of the injured motoneurons can be rescued if the ventral root is re-inserted into the spinal cord. Brachial plexus injuries ...
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Proctor J - - 2010
In earlier work, we have developed an integrated model for insect locomotion that includes a central pattern generator (CPG), nonlinear muscles, hexapedal geometry and a representative proprioceptive sensory pathway. Here, we employ phase reduction and averaging theory to replace 264 ordinary differential equations (ODEs), describing bursting neurons in the CPG, ...
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Geertsen Svend S - - 2011
Despite decades of research, the classical idea that 'reciprocal inhibition' is involved in the hyperpolarisation of motoneurones in their inactive phase during rhythmic activity is still under debate. Here, we investigated the contribution of reciprocal Ia inhibition to the hyperpolarisation of motoneurones during fictive locomotion (evoked either by electrical stimulation ...
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Verhovshek Tom - - 2010
In adult male rats, androgens are necessary for the maintenance of the motoneurons and their target muscles of the sexually dimorphic, steroid-sensitive spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) neuromuscular system, regulating motoneuron and muscle morphology, function, and expression of trophic factors. Castration of males results in somal, dendritic, and muscle ...
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Petruska Jeffrey C - - 2010
We examined whether elevating levels of neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) would alter connections made by muscle spindle afferent fibers on motoneurons. Adeno-associated virus (AAV) serotypes AAV1, AAV2 and AAV5, selected for their tropism profile, were engineered with the NT-3 gene and administered to ...
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Simony Erez - - 2010
A mechanistic description of the generation of whisker movements is essential for understanding the control of whisking and vibrissal active touch. We explore how facial-motoneuron spikes are translated, via an intrinsic muscle, to whisker movements. This is achieved by constructing, simulating, and analyzing a computational, biomechanical model of the motor ...
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de Almeida Anoushka T R - - 2010
Intracellular recordings were made from motoneurones with axons in the intercostal nerves of T9 or T10 in adult rats, with neuromuscular blockade and artificial ventilation, under hypercapnia and under either anaesthesia or decerebration. In nearly all motoneurones, central respiratory drive potentials (CRDPs) were seen, which included an excitatory wave in ...
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Alvarez Francisco J - - 2010
After peripheral nerve injuries to a motor nerve, the axons of motoneurons and proprioceptors are disconnected from the periphery and monosynaptic connections from group I afferents and motoneurons become diminished in the spinal cord. Following successful reinnervation in the periphery, motor strength, proprioceptive sensory encoding, and Ia afferent synaptic transmission ...
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Manning C D - - 2010
During prolonged contractions, few studies have reported rotation among low threshold motoneurons. The question arises whether a motoneuron stops firing due to an increase in firing threshold or whether it is due to regional switching of activity among muscle fascicles. We postulated that if the rest period resulted from an ...
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Guo Xiufang - - 2010
To date, the coculture of motoneurons (MNs) and skeletal muscle in a defined in vitro system has only been described in one study and that was between rat MNs and rat skeletal muscle. No in vitro studies have demonstrated human MN to rat muscle synapse formation, although numerous studies have ...
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Nakanishi S T - - 2010
During early postnatal development, between birth and postnatal days 8-11, mice start to achieve weight-bearing locomotion. In association with the progression of weight-bearing locomotion there are presumed developmental changes in the intrinsic electrical properties of spinal -motoneurons. However, these developmental changes in the properties of -motoneuron properties have not been ...
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Xu Qing-Gui - - 2010
OBJECT: Surgical repair of peripheral nerves following chronic nerve injury is associated with poor axonal regeneration and outcome. An underlying possibility is that chronic injuries may increase motoneuron cell death. The hypothesis that substantial motoneuron death follows chronic and sequential nerve injuries was tested in adult rats in this study. ...
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Verhovshek Tom - - 2010
The lumbar spinal cord of rats contains the sexually dimorphic, steroid-sensitive spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB). Androgens are necessary for the development of the SNB neuromuscular system, and in adulthood, continue to influence the morphology and function of the motoneurons and their target musculature. However, estrogens are also involved ...
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Cruz Yolanda - - 2010
In mammals the mechanisms underlying female sexual and reproductive biology are poorly understood. Little attention has been paid to striated muscles and their neural regulation. The aim of the present study was to describe the components of the vaginocavernosus reflex in adult rabbits. It was found that mechanical stimulation of ...
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B?cskai T?mea - - 2010
Application of different fluorescent tracers to the right and left hypoglossal nerve of the frog revealed the extent of dendrites crossing the midline into the territory of contralateral hypoglossal motoneurons. By using confocal microscopy, a large number of close appositions were detected between hypoglossal motoneurons bilaterally, which formed dendrodendritic and ...
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Verhovshek Tom - - 2010
Trophic factors maintain motoneuron morphology and function in adulthood. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) interacts with testosterone to maintain dendritic morphology of spinal motoneurons. In addition, testosterone regulates BDNF's receptor (trkB) in motoneurons innervating the quadriceps muscles as well as in motoneurons of the highly androgen-sensitive spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus ...
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Magloire Vincent - - 2009
In co-cultures of embryonic rat spinal cord slices and skeletal muscle, spinal motoneurons innervate muscle fibres and drive muscle contractions. However, multi-electrode array (MEA) recordings show that muscle contractions often appear in the absence of population activity in the spinal cord networks. Such uncorrelated muscle activity persists when the population ...
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Schreyer S - - 2009
Orexin-A, synthesized by neurons of the lateral hypothalamus helps to maintain wakefulness through excitatory projections to nuclei involved in arousal. Obvious changes in eye movements, eyelid position and pupil reactions seen in the transition to sleep led to the investigation of orexin-A projections to visuomotor cell groups to determine whether ...
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Boudrias Marie-Hélène - - 2010
In this study, forelimb organizations and output properties of the supplementary motor area (SMA) and the dorsal cingulate motor area (CMAd) were assessed and compared with primary motor cortex (M1). Stimulus-triggered averages of electromyographic activity from 24 muscles of the forelimb were computed from layer V sites of 2 rhesus ...
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Fortun Jenny - - 2009
Here we propose the use of adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors as a non-invasive vehicle for the nervous system to deliver genes to spinal motoneurons, based on their retrograde transport from muscle. Long-term protein expression in lower cervical motoneurons was achieved after injections of AAV into the triceps, independently of serotypes ...
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Deák Adám - - 2009
The aim of this work was to study whether the vestibular afferent fibers establish direct connections with the motoneurons of glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves of the frog, Rana esculenta. In anaesthetized animals the vestibulocochlear nerve and the common root of glossopharyngeal-vagus and accessory (IX-X-XI) nerves were simultaneously labeled with fluorescein ...
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Mantilla Carlos B - - 2009
Studies of motoneuron plasticity during development or in response to injury or disease rely on the ability to correctly identify motoneurons innervating specific muscle groups. Commonly, injections of retrograde tracer molecules into a target muscle or into a transected nerve are used to label specific motoneuron pools. However, intramuscular injection ...
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Tsukahara Naoki - - 2009
Bird vocalizations are produced by contractions of syringeal muscles, which are controlled by the hypoglossal nucleus. In oscines, syringeal muscles are controlled by the hypoglossal nucleus ipsilaterally, whereas syringeal innervation is bilateral in non-oscines. We have determined the course of hypoglossal nerves in the jungle crow Corvus macrorhynchos. Our results ...
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Riddle C Nicholas - - 2009
Although the reticulospinal tract is a major descending motor pathway in mammals, its contribution to upper limb control in primates has received relatively little attention. Reticulospinal connections are widely assumed to be responsible for coordinated gross movements primarily of proximal muscles, whereas the corticospinal tract mediates fine movements, particularly of ...
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Niel Lee - - 2009
The spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) neuromuscular system is a highly conserved and well-studied model of sexual differentiation of the vertebrate nervous system. Sexual differentiation of the SNB is currently thought to be mediated by the direct action of perinatal testosterone on androgen receptors (ARs) in the bulbocavernosus/levator ani ...
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Little Christine M - - 2009
Motoneuron loss is a significant medical problem, capable of causing severe movement disorders or even death. We have previously shown that partial depletion of motoneurons from sexually dimorphic, highly androgen-sensitive spinal motor populations induces dendritic atrophy in remaining motoneurons, and this atrophy is attenuated by treatment with testosterone. To test ...
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Franz Colin K - - 2009
BACKGROUND: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is neurodegenerative disease characterized by muscle weakness and atrophy due to progressive motoneuron loss. The death of motoneuron is preceded by the failure of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) and axonal retraction. Thus, to develop an effective ALS therapy you must simultaneously preserve motoneuron somas, motor axons ...
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Yuan Qiuju - - 2009
BACKGROUND: The growth-associated protein GAP-43 plays a crucial role in axonal regeneration in injured neurons. METHODS: We have used immunohistochemistry to investigate the expression of GAP-43 in spinal motoneurons during nerve reconstruction following root avulsion in the neonatal and adult rats. RESULTS: Following the injury, GAP-43-immunoreactivity (IR) could be found ...
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Bawa Parveen - - 2008
This study was designed to extend to humans the findings of classical studies on anesthetized cats, which have examined the discharge of spinal motoneurons in response to high-frequency stimulus trains delivered to Ia afferents. Experiments were conducted on the monosynaptic pathway in the flexor carpi radialis (FCR) and soleus muscles. ...
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Williams Elizabeth R - - 2009
Recordings of motor cortical activity typically show oscillations around 10 and 20 Hz; only those at 20 Hz are coherent with electromyograms (EMGs) of contralateral muscles. Experimental measurements of the phase difference between approximately 20-Hz oscillations in cortex and muscle are often difficult to reconcile with the known corticomuscular conduction ...
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Blouin Jean-Sébastien - - 2009
Control of posture and movement requires control of the output from motoneurons. Motoneurons of human lower limb muscles exhibit sustained, submaximal activity to high-frequency electrical trains, which has been hypothesized to be partly triggered by monosynaptic Ia afferents. The possibility to trigger such behavior in upper limb motoneurons and the ...
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Lamy Jean-Charles - - 2008
The neural control for muscle coordination during human locomotion involves spinal and supraspinal networks, but little is known about the exact mechanisms implicated. The present study focused on modulation of heteronymous recurrent inhibition from knee extensors to ankle motoneurones at different times in the gait cycle, when quadriceps (Quad) muscle ...
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Schwarz Peter B - - 2008
Postural muscle tone is potently suppressed during sleep and cataplexy. Since brainstem noradrenergic cell discharge activity is tightly coupled with state-dependent changes in muscle activity, it is assumed that noradrenergic drive on to somatic motoneurones modulates basal muscle tone. However, it has never been determined whether noradrenergic neurotransmission acts to ...
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Li Yang - - 2008
Proper wiring of the nervous system requires tight control of the number of nerve terminals that innervate a target tissue. Recent work by Deppmann et al., now suggests that this is achieved by feedback-mediated neuronal competition for target-derived survival cues. The authors' model is inspired by the theory for pattern ...
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Jordan Cynthia L - - 2008
Kennedy disease (KD, or spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy) is caused by a CAG/polyglutamine expansion in the androgen receptor (AR) gene. Both motoneurons and muscles are affected by KD, but where mutant ARs act to initiate this disease is not clear. We discuss recent insights into this disease with two ...
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Fenik V B - - 2008
Noradrenergic (NE) excitatory drive maintains activity of hypoglossal (XII) motoneurons during wakefulness. In predisposed persons, sleep-related decrements of NE cell activity may contribute to hypotonia of upper airway muscles innervated by XII motoneurons. The goal of this study was to determine whether NE neurons of the pontine A7 group, an ...
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Zempoalteca R - - 2008
Despite the importance of rabbits in reproductive studies, little information is available on the anatomy and participation of the striated-perineal muscles in male copulatory behavior. In our study, we describe the gross anatomy of two striated-perineal muscles: the ischiocavernosus (ICm) and the bulbospongiosus (BSm). Both muscles have their origin at ...
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Welsh Lillian - - 2009
Zebrafish embryos offer a unique opportunity to investigate the mechanisms by which nicotine exposure impacts early vertebrate development. Embryos exposed to nicotine become functionally paralyzed by 42 hpf suggesting that the neuromuscular system is compromised in exposed embryos. We previously demonstrated that secondary spinal motoneurons in nicotine-exposed embryos were delayed ...
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