POSTER SESSION I - THURSDAY
TOP STUDENT ABSTRACTS - FINAL JUDGING SESSION:
Presentation
Time |
# |
Abstract Title | Submitting Author |
Author Affiliation |
10:00
- 10:15 |
40
|
The Role Of L-selectin In Demyelination Of White Matter In The Murine Spinal Cord After Contusion Injury | A Olivas |
University of California, San Francisco, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
65
|
LIPID RAFTS MEDIATE TNF RECEPTOR-1 SIGNALING IN THE NORMAL AND TRAUMATIZED BRAIN | G Lotocki
|
Departments of Neurological Surgery and Miami Project to Cure Paralysis University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
98
|
Engineering Nerve Constructs for Clinical Application | B.J.
Pfister |
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
133
|
Living Nerve Constructs bridging peripheral nerve lesions demonstrate long-term survival and restoration of function | JH Huang
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
136
|
EFFECT OF FRESH FROZEN PLASMA IN PREVENTION OF DELAYED INTRACEREBRAL HEMATOMA IN SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | H Baharvahdat
|
Neurosurgical Department, Emdadi Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran |
11:00
- 11:15 |
170
|
EFFECTS OF IFENPRODIL ON THE LEVEL OF CALPAIN AND CASPASE-3 MEDIATED CELL DEATH IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS | M.N.
DeRidder |
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
180
|
TRANSPLANTS OF NEURONAL AND GLIAL RESTRICTED PRECURSORS PROMOTE RECOVERY OF FUNCTION IN INJURED SPINAL CORD | T Mitsui
|
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
199
|
THE EFFECT OF GENDER ON INTERSTITIAL GLUTAMATE AND LACTATE/PYRUVATE LEVELS IN HUMAN BRAIN AFTER SEVERE HEAD INJURY | A. M.
Puccio |
University of Pittsburgh Brain Trauma Research Center, Pittsburgh, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
210 |
SYNAPTIC NMDA RECEPTORS ARE AN INITIATING FACTOR IN THE CYTOSOLIC CALCIUM RESPONSE TO STRETCH | DM Geddes |
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
09:45 - 10:00 |
219 |
THE RAT CEREBELLUM IS HIGHLY VULNERABLE TO INDIRECT TRAUMA FOLLOWING MILD AND SEVERE FOREBRAIN FLUID PERCUSSION INJURY | E Park |
Cara Phelan Center for Trauma Research, St. Michael's Hospital, Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
10:15
- 10:30 |
220 |
EVIDENCE FOR ALTERED METABOLIC PATHWAYS IN ANIMALS FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: A 13C NMR STUDY. | B.L.
Bartnik |
UCLA Brain Injury Research Center, Division of Neurosurgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
236 |
IN VIVO ELECTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF METHYLPHENIDATE ON STRIATAL DOPAMINE NEUROTRANSMISSION AFTER EXPERIMENTAL TBI: AN INITIAL ANALYSIS | JE Sokoloski
|
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
250 |
Cerebrospinal Fluid Caffeine Levels are Increased and Associated with Favorable Outcome After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury in Humans. | KT Sachse
|
Safar Center for Resuscitation Research, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
284 |
Role of FAS in apoptosis of oligodendrocytes after neurotrauma: In vitro studies in a human oligodendrocyte cell line | J.W.
Austin |
University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
11:15
- 11:30 |
285 |
CULTURE CONFIGURATION AND LOCAL STRAIN REGIME AFFECT THE RESPONSE TO HIGH RATE DEFORMATION IN NEURONS CULTURED IN TWO- AND THREE-DIMENSIONS | DK Cullen
|
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
293 |
Evidence For Neuro-Plasticity After Traumatic Brain Injury: A Prospective 2-Year Magnetic Resonance Study | P Goetz
|
Oxford Centre for Magnetic Resonance, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom |
ALL OTHER PRESENTATIONS:
Presentation
Time |
# |
Abstract Title | Presenting Author |
Presenting Author Affiliation |
09:45
- 10:00 |
003 |
DECOMPRESSIVE CRANIECTOMY-TREATMENT OPTION
IN SEVERE HEAD INJURY PATIENTS |
I. Aksiks
|
Neurosurgery Clinic of the University Hospital, Riga, Latvia |
10:00
- 10:15 |
006 |
DYSREGULATION OF THE Nav1.3 VOLTAGE-GATED SODIUM CHANNEL IS NECESSARY AND SUFFICIENT FOR ENABLING NEUROPATHIC PAIN AFTER SCI | BC Hains
|
Dept. Neurology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
007 |
BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF MALE AND FEMALE MOTOR PERFORMANCE ON THE BEAM-WALKING TASK AFTER A UNILATERAL CORTICAL INJURY | T Schmanke
|
TMA Technology, Grapevine, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
008 |
Noninvasive Monitoring of CSF Mobility for Optimization of Treatment of Craniocerebral Trauma Consequences | Yu.E. Moskalenko
|
Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Russian Acad.Sci., St.Petersburg, Russia |
10:45
- 11:00 |
009 |
Application of Manipulative Osteopathic Techniques for Treatment of Craniocerebral Trauma Consequences | V.M. Frymann
|
Osteopathic Cednter for Children, San Diego, CA, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
010 |
Heat Shock Protein Modulation of KATP and Kca Channel Cerebrovasodilation After Brain Injury | WM Armstead
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
011 |
USE OF MRI TO STUDY THE NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF AGMATINE FOLLOWING EXCITOTOXIC SCI IN THE RAT | SA Berens
|
University of Florida, Gainesville, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
012 |
Penetrating Gunshot Brain Injuries Out of Wartime: Prevention of Infection Complications by Continuous Infusion of Antibiotics into the Carotid Artery | M.D. Blagodatsky
|
Irkutsk Medical University, Irkutsk, Russia |
11:45
- 12:00 |
013 |
INCREASED PROLINE-RICH AKT SUBSTRATE (PRAS40) EXPRESSION IN SOD1 TRANSGENIC RATS PROTECTED MOTOR NEURONS FROM DEATH AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY | F Yu |
Stanford University, Palo Alto, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
014 |
WITHDRAWAL FROM POST-TBI PROGESTERONE TREATMENT RESULTS IN SELECTIVE DEFICITS FOR LONG-TERM RECOVERY | SM Cutler
|
Georgia Tech/Emory Department of Biomedical Engineering, Atlanta, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
015 |
GLUTAMATE TOXICITY TO THE SPINAL CORD CAUSES LOCOMOTER IMPAIRMENTS | G.-Y. Xu
|
Dept. of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, TX, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
016 |
PROTEIN RELEASE FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY | L. NIe |
Dept. of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
017 |
INCREASED EXPRESSION AND ACTIVATION OF CASPASE-7 AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN RATS | SF Larner
|
University of Florida, Gainesville, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
018 |
MANAGEMENT OF SEVERE HEAD INJURY AND ITS RESULTS | B. Djurovic
|
Clinical Centre of Serbia, Belgrade, Yugoslavia |
10:30
- 10:45 |
019 |
Microglial Response to Unilateral Spinal Cord Compression in Rabbits | H Ozawa |
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan |
10:45
- 11:00 |
020 |
NEUROLYSES OF BRACHIAL PLEXUS | V. Matejcik
|
Neurosurgical Clinic of Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia |
11:00
- 11:15 |
021 |
NEUROLYSES OF PERIPHERAL NERVES IN LOWER EXTREMITIES | V. Matejcik
|
Neurosurgical Clinic of Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia |
11:15
- 11:30 |
022 |
DELIBERATE OPERATIONS OF PERIPHERAL NERVES OF UPPER EXTREMITIES | V. Matejcik
|
Neurosurgical Clinic of Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia |
11:30
- 11:45 |
023 |
Dynamic regulation of scar related genes after spinal cord injury (SCI) | P. Gris |
Robarts Research Institute, London, Canada |
11:45
- 12:00 |
024 |
TRAUMATIC AXONAL INJURY INDUCES PROTEOLYTIC CLEAVAGE OF THE VOLTAGE-GATED SODIUM CHANNELS MODULATED BY TETRODOTOXIN AND PROTEASE INHIBITORS | A Iwata |
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
025 |
Analysis Of Reactive Astrocytes After Cortical Contusion Injury In Transgenic Mice | D. J. Myer
|
UCLA, Los Angeles, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
026 |
GENETIC MANIPULATION OF AFFERENT FIBER SPROUTING FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY MODULATES THE SEVERITY OF AUTONOMIC DYSREFLEXIA. | A.A. Cameron
|
University of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
027 |
ESTROGEN NOT UNCOUPLING PROTEIN-2 (UCP-2) ALTERS THE DEVELOPMENT OF AUTONOMIC DYSREFLEXIA IN MICE. | A. A. Webb
|
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PE, Canada |
10:00
- 10:15 |
028 |
TELEMETRIC MONITORING IN CONSCIOUS RATS OF MICTURITION AND PENILE ERECTILE EVENTS USING CORPUS SPONGIOSUM PENIS PRESSURES FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY | Y.S. Nout
|
The Ohio State University, Columbus, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
029 |
MITOCHONDRIAL PERMEABILITY TRANSITION IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: CAUSE OR EFFECT? | P.G. Sullivan
|
University of Kentucky Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, Lexington, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
030 |
BOTH ESTROGEN AND PROGESTERONE IMPROVE FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME AFTER DIFFUSE TBI IN FEMALE AND MALE ANIMALS | C O'Connor
|
University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia |
10:45
- 11:00 |
031 |
ATP and Glutamate Modulate Interleukin 1-Beta Release From Microglia. | C. Liang
|
Va College of Osteopathic Medicine/Va Tech, Blacksburg, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
032 |
POSTTRAUMATIC HYPOTHERMIA PROVIDES PERSISTING CEREBROVASCULAR PROTECTION. ~PIAL MICROCIRCULATION EVALUATED BY CLOSED CRANIAL WINDOW METHOD 7 DAYS AFTER IMPACT ACCELERATION INJURY IN RATS~ | Y Ueda |
Dept of Neurosurgery Shuto General Hospital, Yanai, Japan |
11:15
- 11:30 |
033 |
ENVIRONMENTAL ENRICHMENT INCREASES NEURAL PROGENITORS IN THE HILUS FOLLOWING LATERAL FLUID PERCUSSION BRAIN INJURY | R.R. Hicks
|
University of Washington, Seattle, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
034 |
Regional Cell Death in the Hippocampus is Dependent on Tissue Biomechanics after a Controlled Deformation Stimulus | B. Morrison III
|
Columbia University, New York, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
035 |
AUTOLOGOUS SKIN-COINCUBATED MACROPHAGES, A CELL THERAPY FOR ACUTE SPINAL CORD INJURY: TRANSLATION OF PRECLINICAL DEVELOPMENT FOR THE CLINIC | J.B. Marder
|
Proneuron Biotechnologies, Ness Ziona, Israel |
12:00
- 12:15 |
036 |
CONTRASTING MECHANISMS OF SPINAL CORD INJURY - CONTUSION, DISLOCATION AND DISTRACTION | AM Choo |
The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada |
12:15
- 12:30 |
037 |
A PROTEOMIC STUDY OF OXIDATIVELY MODIFIED MITOCHONDRIAL PROTEINS FOLLOWING EXPERIMENTAL TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY. | W.O Opii
|
University of Kentucky,Department of chemistry , Lexington, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
038 |
NORMOXIC VENTILATORY RESUSCITATION FOLLOWING CONTROLLED CORTICAL IMPACT REDUCES REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES-MEDIATED PROTEIN NITRATION IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS | ES Ahn |
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
039 |
HEAD ACCELERATIONS AND PRE-IMPACT KINEMATICS IN SOCCER HEADING | PV Bayly
|
Washington University, St. Louis, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
041 |
THE ROLE OF BIOETHICS TO INTRODUCE NEW SURGICAL METHOD IN THE TREATMENT OF LIFETHREATENING TRAUMATIC BRAIN SWELLING | A. Csókay
|
Markusovszky Hosp., Szombathely, Hungary |
10:30
- 10:45 |
042 |
SIMULTANEOUS BREAKDOWN OF ΑII- AND ΒII-SPECTRIN BY CALPAIN AND CASPASE-3 IN RAT CEREBROCORTICAL CULTURE UNDER ONCOTIC, APOPTOTIC AND EXCITOTOXIC CHALLENGES | W Zheng |
University of Florida, Gainesville, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
044 |
CLINICAL CORRELATION OF HEMORRHAGIC SHEARING LESIONS IN CHILDREN AND ADULTS WITH TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | K.A. Tong
|
Loma Linda University Medical Center, Loma Linda, CA, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
045 |
Role of RyR-Receptors And Immunophillin (FK-506) After Hypoxic Injury | S.K. Agrawal
|
University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
046 |
NEUROPATHIC PAIN AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO GLIA AND ATP RECEPTOR UPREGULATION | MR Detloff
|
The Ohio State University College of Medicine and Public Health, Columbus, OH, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
048 |
GRADED TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN THE P7 RAT PUP | EE Black
|
Washington University, St. Louis, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
049 |
IN VIVO MEASUREMENT OF STRAIN AND STRAIN RATE IN AN ANIMAL MODEL OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | PV Bayly
|
Washington University, St. Louis, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
050 |
CHARACTERIZATION OF THE OLFACTORY ENSHEATHING CELL (OEC) PROTEOME AND ITS UTILITY IN DISTINGUISHING OECS FROM SCHWANN CELLS IN VITRO AND IN VIVO | JG Boyd |
Queen's University, Kingston, Canada |
12:15
- 12:30 |
051 |
TRAUMATIC AXONAL INJURY WITHIN PERISOMATIC DOMAINS: SPATIOTEMPORAL PROGRESSION AND HETEROGENEITY OF AXONAL / SOMATIC / DENDRITIC RESPONSES TO INJURY | BJ Kelley
|
Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
053 |
ELEVATION OF SERUM S100B AND NSE IN TBI AFTER BLOCKING OF VEGF RECEPTOR 2. | M.K. Sköld
|
Karolinska Institutet, Department of Neuroscience, Stockholm, Sweden |
10:00
- 10:15 |
054 |
EVALUATION OF MOTOR, SENSORY AND AUTONOMIC FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME MEASURES IN THE FORCEPS COMPRESSION MODEL OF SPINAL CORD INJURY | A Ganguly
|
Acorda Therapeutics, Hawthorne, New York, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
055 |
THE EFFECTS OF CHONDROITINASE ON SOMATIC AND AUTONOMIC MOTOR FUNCTION FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY IN THE RAT | A O Caggiano
|
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc, Hawthorne, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
056 |
MECHANISM OF NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF CALPAIN INHIBITOR MDL-28170, ON TRAUMATIC BRAIN WHITE MATTER INJURY | J AI |
Traumatic Brain Injury Laboratory, Cara Phelan Center for Trauma Research, St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada |
10:45
- 11:00 |
057 |
NEUROSURGICAL INJURIES FROM OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM TREATED AT ECHELON V FACILITIES DURING THE FIRST YEAR | CJ Neal |
National Capital Consortium, Washington DC, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
058 |
EVALUATION OF MINOCYCLINE IN A FORCEPS COMPRESSION MODEL OF SPINAL CORD INJURY IN RAT | MP Zimber
|
Acorda Therapeutics, Hawthorne, NY, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
059 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: I. MODELING A SURVIVABLE, HIGH VELOCITY GUNSHOT WOUND TO THE HEAD WITHOUT USING A FIRED PROJECTILE. | A.J. Williams
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
060 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: II. NEUROLOGICAL AND BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS. | X-C.M. Lu
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
061 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: III. INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE, BRAIN SWELLING AND PHYSIOLOGIC PARAMETERS. | A.J. Williams
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
062 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: VI. NEUROPROTECTION TREATMENT WITH RECOMBINANT FACTOR VIIA (rFVIIa). | A.J. Williams
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
063 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: VII. PROTEOMICS BASED IDENTIFICATION OF PROTEIN EXPRESSION | J.R. Dave
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
064 |
POSTUROGRAPHY IN THE CLINICAL EVALUATION OF MILD TRAUMA BRAIN INJURY PATIENTS | A. DE TOMMASI
|
CHAIR OF NEUROSURGERY UNIVERSITY OF BARI, Bari, Italy |
10:00
- 10:15 |
066 |
A NOVEL NEUROPROTECTANT, PAN-811, DECREASES INFARCT VOLUME FOLLOWING TRANSIENT FOCAL CEREBRAL ISCHEMIA IN RATS | XCM LU |
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
067 |
RESUSCITATION WITH ALBUMIN IMPROVES CEREBRAL OXYGENATION FOLLOWING HEMORRHAGE IN RATS | GMT Hare
|
St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
10:30
- 10:45 |
068 |
ESTABLISHMENT OF A GRADED SPINAL CORD INJURY MODEL IN COMMON MARMOSETS | J Yamane
|
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio Unversity, Tokyo, Japan |
10:45
- 11:00 |
069 |
CHONDROITINASE ABCI TOXICITY AND ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY IN A RAT MODEL OF SCI | JF Iaci |
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc., Hawthorne, NY, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
070 |
HYPERCARBIA PROVIDES NEUROPROTECTION IN FLUID PERCUSSION INJURED RATS. | ML Rolli
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
071 |
PHYSIOLOGIC LIMITS OF TOLERABLE HYPOXIA AND HEMORRHAGE IN THE SETTING OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY. | ML Rolli
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
072 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: IV. PERSISTENCE OF CORTICAL SPREADING DEPRESSION | JA Hartings
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
073 |
MATRIX METALLOPROTEINASE 9 ACTIVITY AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IS ATTENUATED BY HYPOTHERMIA | JS Truettner
|
Department of Neurological Surgery, Neurotrauma Research Center, and The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
074 |
PERI-INFARCT DEPOLARIZATIONS REGULATE IMMEDIATE EARLY GENE EXPRESSION 8-24 HR FOLLOWING FOCAL BRAIN ISCHEMIA | JA Hartings
|
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
075 |
PENETRATING BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT: V. CHARACTERIZATION OF ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHIC ABNORMALITIES | JA Hartings
|
Walter Reed Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
076 |
Inhibition of astrocytic activation prevents induction and maintenance of central neuropathic pain following spinal cord injury in rat. | Y.S. Gwak
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
077 |
MECHANICAL STRAIN STIMULATES PHOSPHORYLATION OF GLYCOGEN SYNTHASE KINASE-3BETA IN ASTROCYTES | JT Neary
|
Depts Pathol, Biochem & Molec Biol, Neurosci Prog, Univ Miami Sch Med, Miami, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
078 |
PAN-811, A NOVEL NEUROPROTECTANT, PROVIDES NEUROPROTECTION IN PRIMARY NEURONAL CULTURES BY UP-REGULATING BCL-2 EXPRESSION. | JR Dave |
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
079 |
PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF THE PKC ACTIVATOR PHORBOL MYRISTATE ACETATE ON BRAIN EDEMA FOLLOWING MIDDLE CEREBRAL ARTERY OCCLUSION IN THE RAT | A Kleindienst
|
Dept. of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
081 |
REDUCED EXPRESSION OF THE KCl CO-TRANSPORTER, KCC2, IN DENTATE GYRUS FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY, A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR COMPROMISED INHIBITION. | DP Bonislawski
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
082 |
THE TIME COURSES OF METHYLPREDNISOLONE CONCENTRATION CHANGES IN CSF AND IN BLOOD FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY | L. WU |
Neurology,UTMB, Galveston, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
083 |
INDUCTION AND MAINTENANCE OF AREA CA1 LONG TERM POTENTIATION (LTP) IS LOSSED FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN THE MOUSE. | EP Schwarzbach
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
084 |
EFFECTS OF MEDROXYPROGESTERONE ACETATE ON CEREBRAL EDEMA AND SPATIAL ACQUISITION FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | PA Bryant
|
Emory University, Atlanta, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
085 |
DIRECT, LIPID-MEDIATED, AND INDIRECT, CELL-MEDIATED, GENE THERAPY FOR SPINAL CORD INJURY: A COMBINATORIAL APPROACH. | LL Hall |
University of California Davis, Davis, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
086 |
INHIBITION OF CYCLIN-DEPENDENT KINASES BY FLAVOPIRIDOL IMPROVES FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN RATS | I Cernak
|
Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20057, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
087 |
SYMPTOM QUESTIONNAIRE USE FOLLOWING MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: A STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING ANALYSIS | L.A. Kreber
|
University of Colorado, Boulder, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
088 |
PROFILING NEURONAL DEGENERATION AND REGENERATION AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY: COMPARING mRNA PATTERNS AFTER HEMISECTION OR RADIAL GLIAL CELL TRANSPLANT INTO CONTUSED SPINAL CORD | S. Batteur-Parmentier
|
Rutgers Univesity, Piscataway NJ, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
089 |
INCREASED PENTOSE PHOSPHATE CYCLE FLUX FOLLOWING SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: A 13C-LABELING STUDY | JR Dusick
|
UCLA Medical Center - Division of Neurosurgery, Los Angeles, CA, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
090 |
LACTATE:PYRUVATE RATIOS AFFECT VASCULAR TONE OF ISOLATED RAT MIDDLE CEREBRAL ARTERIES | TC Glenn
|
Harbor-UCLA Neurosurgery, Torrance, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
091 |
A RAT MODEL OF FAILED BACK SURGERY SYNDROME: INSIGHTS INTO ETIOLOGY. | B. A. Rooney
|
UTMB, Galveston, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
092 |
Novel Strategies for Functional Recovery After Complete Spinal Cord Transection Based on the Implantation of Synthetic Hydrogel Tubes | H.N Nomura
|
Toronto Western Hospital Research Institute, Toronto, Canada |
11:00
- 11:15 |
093 |
GENDER OUTCOME DIFFERENCES IN PRE- AND POST-MENOPAUSAL PATIENTS WITH MODERATE-TO-SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | DP Davis
|
UC San Diego, San Diego, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
094 |
SPINAL CORD INJURY ACTIVATES INTRASPINAL SIGNALING CASCADES ASSOCIATED WITH LONG-TERM POTENTIATION AND CENTRAL SENSITIZATION | ED Crown
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
095 |
QUANTIFICATION OF HIPPOCAMPAL NEURONS CONTRALATERAL TO UNILATERAL BRAIN INJURY: A STEREOLOGY STUDY | L.D. Tran
|
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
096 |
ACUTE COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT AFTER LATERAL FLUID PERCUSSION BRAIN INJURY RECOVERS BY ONE MONTH: EVALUATION BY CONDITIONED FEAR | J. Lifshitz
|
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
097 |
TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY ACTIVATES ADULT HIPPOCAMPAL NEURAL STEM CELLS IN GFP-EXPRESSING TRANSGENIC MICE | T.S. Yu |
UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dallas, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
099 |
HEMOCOAGULATIONS PARAMETERS DURING MILD HYPOTHERMIA THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH SEVERE HEAD INJURY | Roman Gal
|
Department of Anesthesiology, University Hospital Brno, Brno, Czech Republic |
09:45
- 10:00 |
100 |
NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF KETOGENIC DIET FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN JUVENILE RATS | M.L. Prins
|
UCLA, Los Angeles, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
101 |
NAAG PEPTIDASE INHIBITOR REDUCES ACUTE NEURONAL DEGENERATION AND ASTROCYTE DAMAGE FOLLOWING LATERAL FLUID PERCUSSION TBI IN RATS | C. Zhong
|
UC Davis, Davis, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
102 |
LIPID-MEDIATED DELIVERY OF THE X-LINKED INHIBITOR OF APOPTOSIS GENE IMPROVES FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD CONTUSION INJURY | JJ Overman
|
University of California Davis, Davis, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
103 |
TREATMENT WITH THE CYCLOSPORIN DERIVATIVE NIM811 IMPROVES MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION AND REDUCES OXIDATIVE DAMAGE FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD CONTUSION | ML McEwen
|
University of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
104 |
HIGH LACTATE/GLUCOSE RATIO CORRELATES WITH POOR OUTCOME 3 AND 6 MONTHS AFTER HUMAN SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI) | A.T. Mazzeo
|
Department of Neurosciences, Psychiatric and Anesthesiological Sciences, University of Messina / Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Virginia, Messina, Italy |
11:00
- 11:15 |
105 |
SEVERE HUMAN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY DEPRESSES ACTIVATED LYMPHOCYTES: EFFECT ON INCIDENCE OF INFECTION AND HOSPITAL STAY | C. Gilman
|
Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
106 |
GDNF Gene Therapy Together with Cerebral Blood Flow Augmentation Reduces Contusion Size but not Behavioral Deficits Following CCI | ML DeGeorge
|
DePaul University, Chicago, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
107 |
Brain Dependent Processes Contribute to the Adverse Consequences of Uncontrollable Stimulation on the Recovery of Function | A.C. Bopp
|
Texas A&M University, College Station, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
108 |
UNCONTROLLABLE STIMULATION UNDERMINES RECOVERY OF FUNCTION AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY | SN Washburn
|
Texas A&M University, Dept of Psychology, College Station, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
109 |
TRAUMATIC NEURONAL PLASMALEMMAL DISRUPTION CAN LEAD TO CELL DEATH NOT NECESSARILY ASSOCIATED WITH CONCOMITANT CALPAIN ACTIVATION. | O. Farkas
|
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
110 |
GENDER INFLUENCES THE PATHOGENESIS OF DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY IN A RAT MODEL OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY. | A. Zsombok
|
1Department of Neurosurgery, Pecs University, Pecs, Hungary |
09:45
- 10:00 |
111 |
LONG-TERM ACCUMULATION OF AMYLOID-ß IN AXONS WITHOUT PROLONGED AMYLOID PLAQUE FORMATION AFTER BRAIN TRAUMA IN HUMANS | XHC Chen
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
112 |
ADULT RAT FORELIMB DYSFUNCTION AFTER DORSAL CERVICAL SPINAL CORD INJURY | S M Onifer
|
University of Louisville, School of Medicine, Department of Neurological Surgery, Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, Louisville, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
113 |
Stimulation of Endogenous Ependymal Region Stem/Progenitor Cells by Neurotrophic Factors to Promote Axonal Regeneration and Recovery After Spinal Cord Injury | AM Parr |
University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
10:30
- 10:45 |
114 |
DERIVATIVES OF 4-AMINOPYRIDINE INCREASE AXONAL CONDUCTION WITHOUT ALTERING ELECTRICAL RESPONSIVENESS FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD TRAUMA | JM McBride
|
Department of Basic Medical Sciences and Center for Paralysis Research, Purdue University, West Lafayette, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
115 |
TRANSPLANTATION OF A LINEAR BIODEGRADABLE FOAM AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY | Y Jin |
University of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
116 |
Decreased Cellular Proliferation Results In Decreased Contusion Size and Improved Behavioral Outcome In Rats Following CCI | KE Soderstrom
|
DePaul University, Chicago, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
117 |
EPIDEMIOLOGY OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: FINDINGS FROM AN 88-HOSPITAL "REGISTRY" | D L McArthur
|
David Geffen Sch Med, Los Angeles, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
118 |
TAT FUSION PROTEINS AND ADENOVIRAL VECTORS AS STRATEGIES FOR ELEVATING CELLULAR CALPASTATIN LEVELS AND INHIBITING CALPAIN ACTIVITY IN NEURONS | T Sengoku
|
University of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
119 |
BLOCKADE OF N-TYPE VOLTAGE-GATED CALCIUM CHANNELS IS NEUROPROTECTIVE FOLLOWING STRETCH-INJURY OF NEURONAL-GLIAL CELL CULTURES | K Shahlaie
|
University of California, Davis, Davis, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
120 |
ACUTE SECONDARY ADRENAL INSUFFICIENCY AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | JR Dusick
|
UCLA Center for Health Sciences Division of Neurosurgery, Los Angeles, CA, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
121 |
NEUROBEHAVIORAL IMPACT OF GROWTH HORMONE DEFICIENCY AFTER MODERATE OR SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | JR Dusick
|
UCLA Center for Health Sciences Division of Neurosurgery, Los Angeles, CA, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
122 |
PROTON MRS PREDICTS DISABILITY AND EMPLOYABILITY IN SEVERELY INJURED TBI PATIENTS. | BA Holshouser
|
Loma Linda University Medical Center, Loma Linda,CA, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
123 |
FATE AND ACTION OF NEURAL STEM CELLS TRANSPLANTED INTO THE SPINAL CORD AFTER ACUTE TRAUMATIC INJURY | A. Gorio
|
University of Milano, Milano, Italy |
10:15
- 10:30 |
124 |
IL-8 RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST PROMOTES RECOVERY AND NEUROREGENERATION AFTER TRAUMATIC SPINAL CORD INJURY | A. M. Di Giulio
|
UNiversity of Milano, Milano, Italy |
10:30
- 10:45 |
125 |
Brain interstitial glutamate and glutamine levels after intravenous administration of nutritional amino acids in the neuro-ICU | T Karlsson
|
Dept of Anesthesiology, Uppsala, Sweden |
10:45
- 11:00 |
126 |
SYNAPTOPHYSIN EXPRESSION FOLLOWING EXPERIMENTAL TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN THE IMMATURE RAT | PD Adelson
|
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
127 |
IS DEPTH OF CORTICAL COMPRESSION OR IMPACT VELOCITY MORE PREDICTIVE OF CORTICAL AND HIPPOCAMPAL PATHOLOGY? | SW Scheff
|
University of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
128 |
COMPUTER CONTROLLED CORTICAL CONTUSION DEVICE FOR THE MOUSE | KN Roberts
|
Univeresity of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
129 |
EARLY REGIONAL SENSITIVITY TO TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY AS DETERMINED BY FLUORO-JADE B STAINING | KM Miller
|
University of Kentucky, Lexington, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
130 |
Disturbed brain glucose metabolism in patients with early global edema following aneurysmal SAH | M Zetterling
|
Dept of Neurosurgery, Uppsala, Sweden |
12:00
- 12:15 |
131 |
Imipramine Treatment Increases Cell Proliferation Following Fluid-Percussion Injury in Rats | RF Groff
|
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
132 |
Evolution of Pressure Reactivity Over Time in Brain Trauma Patients | TP Howells
|
Dept of Neurosurgery, Uppsala, Sweden |
09:45
- 10:00 |
134 |
ADMINISTRATION OF FK506 DIFFERENTIALLY ATTENUATES NEUROFILAMENT ALTERATIONS AND IMPAIRED AXONAL TRANSPORT IN DISTINCT POPULATIONS OF INJURED AXONS FOLLOWING DIFFUSE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | C.R. Marmarou
|
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
135 |
THE EFFECTS OF INTENSIVE LOCOMOTOR TRAINING AND CUTANEOUS FEEDBACK ON LOCOMOTOR RECOVERY AFTER INCOMPLETE SPINAL CORD INJURY IN RATS | R. Smith
|
University of Louisville, Louisville, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
137 |
CRITICAL ROLE OF L-TYPE CALCIUM CHANNELS AND INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM STORES IN MEMBRANE RESEALING FOLLOWING AXONAL TRANSECTION. | A Nehrt |
Purdue University, Basic Medical Sciences Department, Center for Paralysis Research, West Lafayette, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
138 |
SPINAL CORD INJURY TRIGGERS B-CELL ACTIVATION AND ANTIBODY SYNTHESIS | DP Ankeny
|
The Ohio State University College of Medicine & Public Health, Columbus OH, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
139 |
ESTROGEN: A POTENTIAL NEUROPROTECTANT IN SPINAL CORD INJURY. | E. A. Sribnick
|
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
140 |
REGULATION OF INNATE IMMUNITY AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY IN MICE: INVOLVEMENT OF TOLL-LIKE (TLR) RECEPTORS | K.A. Kigerl
|
The Ohio State University, Columbus, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
141 |
SPINAL CORD CONTUSION INJURY INDUCES UPREGULATION OF CALCIUM-CALMODULIN-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE II IN SPINOTHALAMIC TRACT NEURONS | K.M. Johnson
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
142 |
Quantitative Analysis Of Interleukin-1 Beta (IL-1β), Caspase 3 (CASP3) and Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) In The Hippocampus Of Young And Aged Mice After Traumatic Brain Injury | SA Shah |
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
143 |
CORRELATION OF NEURONAL DEGENERATION IN RAT HIPPOCAMPUS WITH SEVERITY OF BRAIN INJURY | BA Capra
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
144 |
PHARMACOLOGICAL PROFILE OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN ORGANOTYPIC HIPPOCAMPAL RAT SLICE CULTURES FOLLOWING SUBSTRATE DEFORMATION | HL Cater
|
University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom |
12:15
- 12:30 |
145 |
IMMUNOHISTOLOGICAL CHARACTERISATION OF NEURONAL PROCESS DAMAGE IN A NOVEL IN VITRO MODEL OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | SM Davis
|
University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom |
09:45
- 10:00 |
146 |
DEGENERATING FLUORO-JADE-POSITIVE NEURONS IN THE RAT HIPPOCAMPUS AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY ARE ZINC-TOXIC | KA Eidson
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
147 |
GLOBAL GENE CHIP ANALYSIS SHOWS A DRAMATIC SUPPRESSION OF GENE EXPRESSION IN INJURED RAT HIPPOCAMPAL NEURONS | DR Kennedy
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
148 |
MODELING CHRONIC CENTRAL NEUROPATHIC PAIN USING ADJUSTMENTS IN FORCE AND DWELL-TIME IN CONTUSIVE SPINAL CORD INJURY (SCI) | M.W. Carter
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
149 |
NEUROPROTECTIVE GENE EXPRESSION IS DOWNREGULATED IN INJURED HIPPOCAMPAL NEURONS AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY | JM Garcia
|
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
150 |
CONNEXIN EXPRESSION IN CEREBRAL BLOOD VESSELS IS UPREGULATED AFTER FLUID PERCUSSION INJURY | M Avila |
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galvston, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
151 |
CONNEXIN 43 EXPRESSION IS INCREASED ACUTELY AFTER MODERATE LATERAL FLUID PERCUSSION TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN THE RAT | CL Floyd
|
University of California, Davis, Davis, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
152 |
COMBINATION THERAPY OF NEURONAL AND GLIAL RESTRICTED PRECURSORS TRANSPLANTS WITH TAMSULOSIN, AN ALPHA 1A-ADRENERGIC ANTAGONIST, IMPROVES BLADDER FUNCTION IN SPINAL CORD INJURY RATS | T Mitsui
|
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Drexel University College of Medicine , Philadelphia, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
153 |
MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY IN PEDIATRIC TBI: PREDICTION OF COGNITIVE BUT NOT MOTOR DEFICITS | JP Phillips
|
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, United States |
11:45
- 12:00 |
154 |
EMBRYONIC RADIAL GLIA BRIDGE SPINAL CORD LESIONS, PROTECT TISSUE ARCHITECTURE, AND PROMOTE FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY | Y CHANG |
W. M. KECK CENTER FOR COLLABORATIVE NEUROSCIENCE, RUTGERS UNIVERSITY, PISCATAWAY, United States |
12:00
- 12:15 |
155 |
LIPID RAFTS MEDIATE FAS SIGNALING AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY | AR Davis
|
University of Miami, Miami, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
156 |
EFFECT OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY ON ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM AND CYTOSOLIC STRESS GENES IN THE RAT | JS Truettner
|
Department of Neurological Surgery, Neurotrauma Research Center, and The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, Miami, United States |
09:45
- 10:00 |
157 |
POLYETHYLENE GLYCOL IMPROVES FUNCTION OF ISOLATED BRAIN MITOCHONDRIA: IMPLICATIONS IN CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM TRAUMA | H CHEN |
Purdue University, West Lafayette, United States |
10:00
- 10:15 |
158 |
PROGESTERONE ADMINISTRATION REDUCES AQUAPORIN-4 EXPRESSION AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN MALE RATS | Q. Guo |
Emory University, Atlanta, United States |
10:15
- 10:30 |
159 |
Human recombinant factor VIIa is neuroprotective in a model of traumatic brain injury and secondary hypoxemia: preliminary data | R.A. Bauman
|
Div of Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD 20910, United States |
10:30
- 10:45 |
160 |
LONG-TERM VASCULAR EFFECTS OF POSTTRAUMATIC HYPOTHERMIC INTERVENTION FOLLOWING FLUID PERCUSSION BRAIN INJURY | E.P. Wei
|
Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, United States |
10:45
- 11:00 |
161 |
Polyethylene Glycol Treatment Reduces Ethidium Bromide Fluorescence in Injured Neurons after Traumatic Brain Injury | AO Koob |
Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States |
11:00
- 11:15 |
162 |
ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPY APPLICATIONS IN NEUROTRAUMA | H McNally
|
Purdue University, West Lafayette, United States |
11:15
- 11:30 |
164 |
EVALUATION OF ERYTHROPOIETIN AS A NEUROPROTECTIVE AGENT IN RAT SPINAL CORD CONTUSION AND COMPRESSION MODELS | A Pinzon
|
University of Miami, Miami, United States |
11:30
- 11:45 |
165 |
IMAGING AND ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR OLIGODENDROCYTE-AXONAL COUPLING IN SPINAL CORD WHITE MATTER: IMPLICATIONS FOR NEUROTRAUMA | A.A. Velumian
|
Surgery/Neurosurgery, Toronto Western Hospital and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada |
11:45
- 12:00 |
166 |
AIT-082 AND METHYLPREDNISOLONE SINGLY, BUT NOT IN COMBINATION, ENHANCE FUNCTIONAL AND HISTOLOGICAL IMPROVEMENT AFTER ACUTE SPINAL INJURY IN RATS. | S Jiang |
McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada |
12:00
- 12:15 |
167 |
HALF-CENTERS OF THE HINDLIMB CPG: INDEPENDENT OR INTERDEPENDENT? | DSK Magnuson
|
University of Louisville, Louisville, United States |
12:15
- 12:30 |
168 |
GUANOSINE INDUCES REMYELINATION AND IMPROVES FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY | S Jiang |
McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada |