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1 nal degeneration, which is known as "diffuse axonal injury".
2 e same pathophysiological process: traumatic axonal injury.
3 epresents the early degenerative response to axonal injury.
4 with severe traumatic brain injury to assess axonal injury.
5 which are most commonly affected by diffuse axonal injury.
6 ns during neuronal development and following axonal injury.
7 s regulated in association with inflammatory axonal injury.
8 n vivo regulators of glial responsiveness to axonal injury.
9 is up-regulated in oligodendroglia following axonal injury.
10 usion tensor imaging as a measure of diffuse axonal injury.
11 for Drosophila glia to sense and respond to axonal injury.
12 nes following a peripheral but not a central axonal injury.
13 oligodendrocytes and its induction following axonal injury.
14 esulting in inflammation, demyelination, and axonal injury.
15 h regenerative and degenerative responses to axonal injury.
16 in axonal regrowth and remodeling following axonal injury.
17 beneficial for central neuron survival after axonal injury.
18 strates of cognitive outcome after traumatic axonal injury.
19 mice, suggesting increased vulnerability to axonal injury.
20 of p-STAT3 and p-cJun in the cell body after axonal injury.
21 generates targeted primary demyelination and axonal injury.
22 e equipped with mechanisms for responding to axonal injury.
23 were performed to examine synaptogenesis and axonal injury.
24 to the limited regeneration of the CNS after axonal injury.
25 engulfment of debris following apoptosis or axonal injury.
26 oading at thresholds that can induce diffuse axonal injury.
27 SCs) and is strongly reactivated in SCs upon axonal injury.
28 h regenerative and degenerative responses to axonal injury.
29 d sensitive way of identifying the impact of axonal injury.
30 structural connectivity produced by diffuse axonal injury.
31 All nerves had an axonal injury.
32 netic resonance imaging that is sensitive to axonal injury.
33 , which are induced in the DRG by peripheral axonal injury.
34 f significant myelin damage due to sustained axonal injury.
35 d cognitive dysfunction seen after traumatic axonal injury.
36 e tool for assessing the pathogenesis of RGC axonal injury.
37 ated mild traumatic brain injury can involve axonal injury.
38 observed from 6 hours to 14 days, reflecting axonal injury.
39 age surveillance mechanism for responding to axonal injury.
40 oxygen species in apoptosis signaling after axonal injury.
41 nd between patients with and without diffuse axonal injury.
42 hies result from retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axonal injury.
43 e prefrontal cortex of patients with diffuse axonal injury.
44 l of MS, were used to evaluate mechanisms of axonal injury.
45 alpain, is a potential candidate for causing axonal injury.
46 eased neuronal excitability after peripheral axonal injury.
47 trauma, corresponding to relatively isolated axonal injury.
48 nded to demyelination, edema, and persistent axonal injury.
49 c deprivation for signaling cell death after axonal injury.
50 anglion cells (RGCs) undergo apoptosis after axonal injury.
51 minated; this can also happen as a result of axonal injury.
52 have previously been considered a marker of axonal injury.
53 he Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger is associated with axonal injury.
54 e axon elimination in development and during axonal injury.
55 Unchanged NFL was consistent with no acute axonal injury.
56 te between regenerative and non-regenerative axonal injury.
57 xpression after peripheral, but not central, axonal injury.
58 g diffusion MRI assessment of post-traumatic axonal injury.
59 occur in the mature nervous system following axonal injury.
60 ctivation of transcriptional reporters after axonal injury.
61 zation during neuronal development and after axonal injury.
62 n (NfL) represents a promising biomarker for axonal injury.
63 eton and the subsequent processes that drive axonal injury.
64 s similar to those associated with traumatic axonal injury.
65 causes macrophage-mediated demyelination and axonal injury.
66 e disconnection of network hubs by traumatic axonal injury.
67 both methods for the clinical assessment of axonal injury.
68 ts brain connectivity by producing traumatic axonal injury.
69 sufficient to induce disability or increase axonal injury.
72 s undergo early axonal damage and cumulative axonal injuries along subcortical, limbic, and cortical
73 yses of traumatic brain injury, we show that axonal injury also occurs following subarachnoid haemorr
74 t studies have demonstrated that significant axonal injury also occurs in MS patients and correlates
76 on of complex IV augments glutamate-mediated axonal injury (amyloid precursor protein and SMI32 react
81 lination of the CNS axons is associated with axonal injury and degeneration, which is now accepted as
82 n-invasive biomarkers for neuroinflammation, axonal injury and demyelination coexisting in multiple s
87 er understanding of the underlying nature of axonal injury and its long-term processes is needed as c
88 hich markedly suppresses the disease course, axonal injury and its progression, is a candidate for th
91 e investigated the effects of simvastatin on axonal injury and neurite outgrowth after experimental T
93 cute inflammatory CNS injury: demyelination, axonal injury and neuronal degeneration.In this article,
94 applicable to in vivo monitoring of diffuse axonal injury and neuronal loss in traumatic brain injur
95 Glasgow Outcome Scale groups between diffuse axonal injury and non-diffuse axonal injury patients wer
96 st time that MAG also promotes resistance to axonal injury and prevents axonal degeneration both in c
97 animals exhibited increased vulnerability to axonal injury and reduced efficiency of remyelination co
98 xpression is regulated by signals related to axonal injury and regeneration, that CNS myelin appears
100 However, in humans the link between diffuse axonal injury and subsequent neurodegeneration has yet t
102 ter traumatic brain injury relate to diffuse axonal injury and the consequent widespread disruption o
104 mouse, with a wait period of 2 weeks between axonal injury and tracing and 2-8 weeks between tracing
105 rain injury (TBI) often results in traumatic axonal injury and white matter (WM) damage, particularly
106 detection of immunohistochemistry confirmed axonal injury and/or demyelination in middle and rostral
107 arget-derived neurotrophic factors following axonal injury) and glutamate receptor stimulation (to mi
109 egenerative disorder in which neuronal loss, axonal injury, and atrophy of the CNS lead to permanent
110 e more stable following genetic or traumatic axonal injury, and axon loss is delayed in SkpA mutants
111 GEF complex required for glial responses to axonal injury, and demonstrates a critical requirement f
113 head (ONH) is the principal site of initial axonal injury, and elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) i
114 ted function for c-Jun in SCs in response to axonal injury, and identify paracrine Ret signaling as a
116 o the loss of immune homeostasis, myelin and axonal injury, and progressive neurological symptoms.
117 iffusion tensor imaging was used to quantify axonal injury, and test whether structural damage correl
118 ears to activate signaling events that mimic axonal injury, and that NgSR released from QHNgSR may be
119 n summary, diffusion MRI measures of diffuse axonal injury are a strong predictor of post-traumatic n
122 visualization of axonal tracts in myelin and axonal injuries as well as human brain and mouse embryon
123 However, mounting evidence indicates diffuse axonal injury as a likely pathological substrate for con
124 These changes were accompanied with acute axonal injury as characterized by structural and biochem
125 cal brain injury, or the amount of traumatic axonal injury as demonstrated by diffusion tensor imagin
126 trics best predict the presence of traumatic axonal injury, as well as which are most highly associat
127 vealed a decrease in retardance in eyes with axonal injury associated with visual field loss, which i
130 oncussed players had increased levels of the axonal injury biomarker total tau(median, 10.0 pg/mL; ra
132 lter gene expression patterns in response to axonal injury but pathways mediating these responses are
133 ion, glial cell oedema, myelin breakdown and axonal injury, but little intra-parenchymal inflammation
136 or the focal depolarization that accompanies axonal injury can trigger a local decrease in action pot
140 fy a fibre orientation-dependent gradient of axonal injury consistent with a barotraumatic mechanism.
141 t study of a promising drug to treat diffuse axonal injury (DAI) caused by traumatic brain injury, us
145 ral disconnection disorder whereby traumatic axonal injury damages large-scale connectivity, producin
147 pinal cord injury (SCI), causing more severe axonal injury, demyelination, and functional impairment
150 link two important mediators of responses to axonal injury, DLK/Wnd and cAMP/PKA, into a unified and
156 Our data suggest that simvastatin reduces axonal injury, enhances neurite outgrowth and promotes n
157 growth cones from axons re-emerging from an axonal injury express uPAR and that binding of uPA to th
158 technique previously validated in traumatic axonal injury, from these same specimens demonstrates de
162 f cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tau, a marker of axonal injury, have been associated with coma in severe
163 y promotes axonal degeneration shortly after axonal injury, hours before irreversible axon fragmentat
164 arkers of neuronal degeneration, stress, and axonal injury identified additional injured neuronal phe
165 nal ganglion cells (RGCs) die as a result of axonal injury in a variety of optic neuropathies, includ
167 models have shown evidence of a link between axonal injury in active lesions and impaired glutamate m
169 he known predominance of cerebral hemisphere axonal injury in cardiac arrest and chiefly central myel
174 x of sodium and calcium ions, contributes to axonal injury in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelit
176 vealed on DTI were consistent with traumatic axonal injury in many of the subjects with traumatic bra
184 ndex lens technology with a model of diffuse axonal injury in rodents to enable repeated visualizatio
185 ghlights emerging principles in the study of axonal injury in stroke and the role of the axon in neur
186 te matter structure showed greater traumatic axonal injury in the cerebellum and corpus callosum in t
187 However, the exact pathogenesis of neuronal/axonal injury in the neonatal brain remains unclear.
188 ing primary inflammation, demyelination, and axonal injury in the optic nerve and leads to apoptotic
191 resent study explores the extent of neuronal/axonal injury in these infants since this is likely to b
192 rrhage and traumatic brain injury in humans, axonal injury in this model is observed in a multifocal
197 iffusion tensor imaging measures recovery of axonal injury in white matter (WM) tracts after TBI.
198 quantify the specificity of DTI in detecting axonal injury, in vivo DTI maps from the spinal cords of
204 immune encephalomyelitis (EAE), inflammatory axonal injury is a major determinant of disability; howe
207 er, accumulating evidence has indicated that axonal injury is also a predictor of MS clinical disease
208 r the innate immune system in MS lesions, as axonal injury is associated with macrophage activation.
210 mice, Wallerian degeneration in response to axonal injury is delayed because of a mutation that resu
212 ak vulnerability to PWMI in humans, ischemic axonal injury is not mediated by AMPA/kainate receptors.
215 inflammation, a treatable feature, on neuro-axonal injury, is paramount to optimize neuroprotective
216 ignature pathology of traumatic brain injury-axonal injury-is also a functionally significant feature
217 ined in a stabilized steady state, yet after axonal injury it can be transformed into a dynamic struc
218 inflammatory demyelination and irreversible axonal injury leading to permanent neurological disabili
220 age as indicated by co-localization with the axonal injury marker beta amyloid precursor protein.
221 o-accumulation of amyloid precursor protein (axonal injury marker) and calcium was observed in the ip
224 neuritis, corroborating the hypothesis that axonal injury may cause neuronal pathology in multiple s
225 ranscription factors activated by peripheral axonal injury may mediate the conditioning effect by reg
226 esia showed evidence of widespread traumatic axonal injury measured using diffusion magnetic resonanc
228 o sequences in detecting hemorrhagic diffuse axonal injury, more accurate and objective assessment of
229 diffusion tensor imaging are consistent with axonal injury, myelin injury or both in white matter fib
233 SCs reduced CCI-induced spontaneous pain and axonal injury of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and
234 -ganglioside Abs induce sequential nodal and axonal injury of intact myelinated nerve fibers, recapit
235 tusions on MRI, and >/=4 foci of hemorrhagic axonal injury on MRI, were each independently associated
237 ctivity, perhaps secondary to the effects of axonal injury on white matter tracts connecting limbic s
239 were used to test the hypothesis that either axonal injury or the focal depolarization that accompani
242 etween diffuse axonal injury and non-diffuse axonal injury patients were undertaken using effect size
245 an animal model for multiple sclerosis (MS), axonal injury precedes inflammatory demyelinating lesion
248 is that the severity and location of diffuse axonal injury predicts the degree of progressive post-tr
253 STAT3 and DLK/JNK pathways are important for axonal injury responses, and we found that ZDHHC5 and ZD
254 tion can be genetically separated from other axonal injury responses: Raw does not modulate JNK-depen
256 absence of microbleeds (a marker of diffuse axonal injury) revealed diffusion tensor imaging to be m
257 factors were previously known to function in axonal injury signaling and regeneration, Raw's function
258 sponses: Raw does not modulate JNK-dependent axonal injury signaling and regenerative responses, but
259 elayed Wallerian degeneration in response to axonal injury, suggest that axonal degeneration is an ac
266 mTBI have demonstrated evidence of traumatic axonal injury (TAI), associated with adverse clinical ou
268 r these behavioral deficits may be traumatic axonal injury (TAI), which manifests as impaired axonal
270 se spectrin filaments are under tension, any axonal injuries that lacerate spectrin filaments will li
271 oles may constitute a sensitive biomarker of axonal injury that can be identified in mild TBI at acut
272 dentify a novel mechanism of immune-mediated axonal injury that can contribute to axonal pathology in
273 ectivity during development as well as after axonal injury, their role specifically in axonal regener
274 nt degeneration, but also evokes significant axonal injury to DRG cells including those innervating t
275 NCV and amplitude might provide measures of axonal injury to guide clinical practice.Significance: T
277 , we used in vitro and in vivo models of CNS axonal injury to test the hypothesis that uPA binding to
280 ated traumatic brain injury causes traumatic axonal injury, using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), an
286 eurofilament light chain (NFL), a measure of axonal injury, was assessed before and after cART initia
287 ) and elevated excitability after peripheral axonal injury, we examined the contribution of I(h) to e
290 gnificance of these assessments of traumatic axonal injury when combined with other clinical and radi
292 ediating the mpz transcriptional response to axonal injury, which is located between -1 and -4 kb.
293 ant recovery, SLP can be an early marker for axonal injury, which may be used to assess recovery pote
295 llowing TBI compared to controls, indicating axonal injury, with longitudinal increases indicating ax
296 tients showed widespread evidence of diffuse axonal injury, with reductions of fractional anisotropy
297 oups have studied the pressure threshold for axonal injury within a nerve, but difficulty accessing t