The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
about
Respiration following spinal cord injury: evidence for human neuroplasticityReorganization of Respiratory Descending Pathways following Cervical Spinal Partial Section Investigated by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in the RatThe impact of spinal cord injury on breathing during sleep.Rapid diaphragm atrophy following cervical spinal cord hemisection.Decreased spinal synaptic inputs to phrenic motor neurons elicit localized inactivity-induced phrenic motor facilitation.Influence of vagal afferents on supraspinal and spinal respiratory activity following cervical spinal cord injury in ratsHypoxia triggers short term potentiation of phrenic motoneuron discharge after chronic cervical spinal cord injuryReduced respiratory neural activity elicits phrenic motor facilitation.Ipsilateral inspiratory intercostal muscle activity after C2 spinal cord hemisection in rats.Phrenic long-term facilitation requires PKCθ activity within phrenic motor neurons.Respiratory function following bilateral mid-cervical contusion injury in the adult rat.Contribution of the spontaneous crossed-phrenic phenomenon to inspiratory tidal volume in spontaneously breathing ratsTheophylline regulates inflammatory and neurotrophic factor signals in functional recovery after C2-hemisection in adult ratsSpinal atypical protein kinase C activity is necessary to stabilize inactivity-induced phrenic motor facilitation.Forelimb muscle plasticity following unilateral cervical spinal cord injury.Phrenic motoneuron discharge patterns following chronic cervical spinal cord injury.Inactivity-induced respiratory plasticity: protecting the drive to breathe in disorders that reduce respiratory neural activityEnhanced recovery of breathing capacity from combined adenosine 2A receptor inhibition and daily acute intermittent hypoxia after chronic cervical spinal injury.Neuromuscular adaptations to respiratory muscle inactivity.Treatments to restore respiratory function after spinal cord injury and their implications for regeneration, plasticity and adaptation.Common mechanisms of compensatory respiratory plasticity in spinal neurological disorders.Plasticity in respiratory motor neurons in response to reduced synaptic inputs: A form of homeostatic plasticity in respiratory control?Enhancing neural activity to drive respiratory plasticity following cervical spinal cord injury.Phrenic motor outputs in response to bronchopulmonary C-fibre activation following chronic cervical spinal cord injury.Anatomical Recruitment of Spinal V2a Interneurons into Phrenic Motor Circuitry after High Cervical Spinal Cord Injury.Recovery of inspiratory intercostal muscle activity following high cervical hemisection.A murine model of cervical spinal cord injury to study post-lesional respiratory neuroplasticity.New perspectives for investigating respiratory failure induced by cervical spinal cord injury.Respiratory motor outputs following unilateral midcervical spinal cord injury in the adult rat.Intermittent hypoxia promotes recovery of respiratory motor function in spinal cord-injured mice depleted of serotonin in the central nervous system.High-frequency epidural stimulation across the respiratory cycle evokes phrenic short-term potentiation after incomplete cervical spinal cord injury.Supraspinal respiratory plasticity following acute cervical spinal cord injury.Mild Acute Intermittent Hypoxia Improves Respiratory Function in Unanesthetized Rats With Midcervical Contusion.Spinal TNF is necessary for inactivity-induced phrenic motor facilitation.Cell-type specific expression of constitutively-active Rheb promotes regeneration of bulbospinal respiratory axons following cervical SCI.Effects of serotonergic agents on respiratory recovery after cervical spinal injury.Spontaneous respiratory plasticity following unilateral high cervical spinal cord injury in behaving rats.
P2860
Q26830125-A57A3C5F-5B2D-4F0C-9404-31643F50041EQ27324219-D3B6248E-0801-44FA-BDFD-C7242B8E4DD9Q33597688-10CA0EEA-D3FA-48A7-B7D9-F291D466B82CQ33597749-3F04F33D-F450-4143-8E10-AD029E93B02FQ33836955-83726079-15F9-424B-9254-776463A8A954Q34085458-6F78CD6B-D12C-4D1F-9AD4-D61F2AE23D13Q34674493-8D699B27-B84E-4DAF-9DD2-BD54E135AC75Q34706755-A5580E1E-8443-4E08-9CAE-66BBF1045C9CQ35418680-F58E8995-3945-4DDA-A138-87E5090305AEQ35649463-E3768831-313D-4320-81AC-0484F96CEBB0Q35723383-0AE60374-95DA-4FDB-95F4-5CBCF1B3087AQ35790193-7E04A31B-4A49-4319-B29F-C5991DBD2FE9Q36370787-AE75B07A-2866-4E28-BD8C-D86C0CB78120Q36488893-564D67A2-E25E-4FD2-94D7-2262BA7C73EEQ36522034-48B28899-3D35-475D-83FB-8C0B6B8AE135Q37340433-4DF5024E-F92A-4D23-BE0D-0BE0A1983715Q37504342-FBADF8EB-7126-413E-B763-8D949ED10EF8Q37540272-5AB3C08C-7554-4F30-A8F9-5E2A1CB7CB03Q37594997-E09F67B8-2A5A-4F8A-92DE-7B2519864372Q37971436-9EC3470D-F6C0-478E-BFEF-2E7455F5CCE5Q38111142-89896236-FD15-474B-ADE4-1384D2FD4C0BQ38908062-4D0FD9F6-8E30-4E7E-A8FD-0326EFEF7086Q38942953-600DD696-A096-4E01-976E-6A3E99AFDBB6Q39829096-507CB79B-D391-41BD-A5AB-389ECA4DCD6BQ40184060-FBC4B9C1-7C04-4B74-AA9E-3D43CDA99016Q42126229-29B302A3-6D9E-432B-839D-AC36A5697A5FQ42138942-7A4C9E5A-B1A1-42A2-80E8-1D002315BCE2Q42218880-E58BAD29-5BC0-4250-83B6-6E4CAF60D5F0Q43453651-16FD13B2-EF3A-4ADE-8659-1B72CC27C7D1Q47838102-D325F0C2-8B7A-4B80-9DCF-5A56E1295014Q47862614-70BFC7ED-4D8F-4D26-ACB6-39C4E4F5AA62Q47912466-4ECFB778-02CD-45C5-8E3F-ED362EAE9522Q47941390-91817404-6F91-4D49-948E-90B299E124F8Q47953924-EAA9DCC4-2BF1-43EB-8BFE-D5B347BD868CQ49905283-2CA3CAA3-F698-4134-95B9-CD41EFD08F5EQ51596190-4C892AE3-6307-4E31-9C3A-844FD6DBFCA3Q53422901-D8151E41-7361-4048-8321-502DFBAC739E
P2860
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on 17 June 2009
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@en
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@nl
type
label
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@en
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@nl
prefLabel
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@en
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@nl
P2860
P1476
The crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
@en
P2093
Harry G Goshgarian
P2860
P356
10.1016/J.RESP.2009.06.005
P577
2009-06-17T00:00:00Z