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Query: UMLS:C0599766 (
functional recovery
)
13,441
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether experimental spinal trauma would result in urological dysfunction similar to that seen clinically and whether recovery of normal micturition can be correlated with motor
functional recovery
. A standard rat model of spinal impact trauma was employed. Neurologic evaluation included a modified 7 point hindlimb Tarlov scale applied weekly for 4 weeks after injury. Micturition measurement was accomplished by placing the animal in a metabolic
cage
for 24-hour periods and collecting urine on an electronic scale connected to Lotus Measure data acquisition software. All assessments were performed in a blinded fashion. Animals were categorized as normal control (N = 10), sham injured (N = 11), spinal cord injury (SCI) without (N = 11) and with locomotor recovery (N = 11). There were no differences in total micturition volume among the 4 groups, while the number of micturitions per 24 hours was significantly less for SCI without locomotor recovery (10.4 +/- 5.9) than for control (21.3 +/- 4.5). The volume per micturition was significantly greater for SCI (2.0 +/- 0.7 ml.) than for control (0.8 +/- 0.2 ml.). There were no differences among groups in the ratio of number of micturitions night/day. The SCI group had significantly greater largest and smallest micturitional volumes. Results clearly show alterations in micturition patterns induced by SCI. These were proportional to, but did not correlate fully with, the severity of injury and degree of motor recovery. Thus, recovery of a normal micturition pattern did not occur to the same extent as did motor
functional recovery
. This difference underscores the potential value of autonomic measures of SCI for distinguishing outcome categories after experimental SCI.
...
PMID:Micturition patterns after spinal trauma as a measure of autonomic functional recovery. 825 22
Male Wistar rats received bilateral Fimbria lesions and were postoperatively housed in either standard social conditions or in impoverished conditions (one rat per
cage
) for 2 weeks in experiment I, and for 7 months in experiment II. The effects of lesion and housing conditions were investigated in the Morris maze spatial orientation task. Fimbria lesions increased the latency to reach the platform during acquisition in both experiments, which indicates that
functional recovery
of the Morris maze impairment does not occur in 7 months time. Post-operative impoverishment for 2 weeks or for 7 months reduced the lesion induced deficit in Morris maze acquisition, while it had a more general effect in the trial without platform. Interestingly, the impoverishment effects were not more severe after 7 months, but even less easily detected. These findings are interpreted as if impoverishment effects the reactiveness of animals to external stimuli, which may help the animal to compensate for the lesion-induced-deficit in Morris maze learning.
...
PMID:Long-term impoverished housing effects on Morris maze performance after a fimbria lesion. 876 65
These experiments on rats evaluated whether recovery of competence in certain motor tests could be enhanced by practice begun soon after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Before TBI, rats were pre-trained to cross a flat and a pegged beam. Anesthetized animals received a right sensorimotor cortex TBI. One group began task-specific testing (flat and pegged beams) on day 1 after injury and repeated 13 times in 35 days by which time
functional recovery
occurred. Paw preference was evaluated eight times during the 35 day period, beginning the third day after injury. A second group of injured rats remained in their home
cage
without any testing for 35 days after injury. From day 35 they were tested 13 times over the next 35 days on both beam tests and eight times on the paw preference test. At day 35 those rats that remained in their home
cage
without testing (task-specific practice) performed as well on the flat beam as the rats that began testing 1 day after injury. By day 37, their third test day, the untested rats performed as well as the tested rats on the pegged beam. Paw preference was the same in both groups of rats. These results were compared to sham-operated controls. Post-injury performance as measured by these tests indicated that most of the recovery occurred without task-specific practice. However, task-specific practice was necessary to achieve optimum performance on both beam tests. This implies that neural reorganization occurred independent of any practice. Task specific practice served to 'fine tune' the rat's performance after 35 days.
...
PMID:Some functional recovery and behavioral sparing occurs independent of task-specific practice after injury to the rat's sensorimotor cortex. 947 14
This report describes a new technique for treatment of a segmental defect in long bones that uses a cylindrical titanium mesh
cage
, in combination with cancellous bone allograft and demineralized bone matrix putty (Grafton), stabilized with a statically locked intramedullary nail. Two clinical cases of tibia defects treated with this technique are presented. At the one-year follow-up, radiographically both cases demonstrated excellent limb alignment, stability, and bony healing. Immediate full weight-bearing was initiated in each case, and early limb
functional recovery
was achieved. Preliminary data suggest that this technique may be a reasonable alternative to currently used methods for management of select long bone segmental defects.
...
PMID:The cylindrical titanium mesh cage for treatment of a long bone segmental defect: description of a new technique and report of two cases. 1063 Aug 4
Traditional methods of assessing nerve recovery following injury, including histomorphometry and electrophysiology, do not necessarily correlate with return of motor and sensory function. Accordingly, many investigators have used walking track analysis as an assessment of global
functional recovery
following sciatic, peroneal or tibial nerve injury. However, walking track reliability may be compromised by the development of flexion contractures secondary to neurologic loss. To prevent this, regular manual physiotherapy is recommended which is a time-consuming and often frustrating process for both the animal and investigator. We report the use of a wire mesh as a simple post-operative assistive device to provide constant physiotherapy. Twelve Lewis rats were randomized to one of two experimental groups. Each rat received a 2 cm posterior tibial nerve autograft. Postoperatively, animals in group 1 received manual physiotherapy, consisting of repeated flexion and extension exercises of the ankle, knee and hip every two weeks. Group 2 rats were permitted to climb freely on a 30 x 18 cm piece of wire mesh placed at a 45 degree angle within their
cage
. Group 2 rats received no manual physiotherapy throughout the course of the study. Serial walking tracks were performed every four weeks until sacrifice at sixteen weeks. There was no development of flexion contractures in the injured hind limbs of either group. There was no morbidity such as blisters associated with the use of the wire mesh. There was no statistical difference in walking track recovery between groups at any time period. However, a trend towards better
functional recovery
was seen in the group receiving constant physiotherapy via the wire mesh. The use of a wire mesh as a post-operative assistive device is an inexpensive, simple and reliable method to provide continuous physiotherapy to animals following denervation.
...
PMID:Wire mesh as a post-operative physiotherapy assistive device following peripheral nerve graft repair in the rat. 1097 Jan 22
The purposes of this study included: 1) to determine the impact of reloading after hindlimb suspension on the in vitro isometric contractile properties of the rat soleus muscle (experiment 1), and 2) to determine the impact of altered mechanical load on the recovery of muscle contractile properties after reloading-induced injury (experiment 2). Male Sprague-Dawley rats (240-270 g) were used for both experiments. In experiment 1, all rats were hindlimb suspended for a period of 7 d and studied either immediately afterward (no reloading, 0D-RL), after 1 d (24 h) of reloading (1D-RL), or after 2 d (48 h) reloading (2D-RL). In experiment 2, all rats underwent hindlimb suspension for 7 d followed by reloading for 2 d. Rats were then randomly assigned to one of three groups: 1)
cage
-bound, 2) treadmill walking (12m x min(-1) x 20 min daily), or 3) resuspended. Rats were then studied 7 or 14 d later. In experiment 1, maximal isometric specific force (force/cross-sectional area, Po) was significantly decreased by approximately 32% and approximately 50% in the ID-RL and 2D-RL groups (P < 0.05) compared with 0D-RL group. During the recovery phase (experiment 2), Po was significantly higher in the
cage
-bound and treadmill walking groups compared with the resuspended group both at 7 and 14 d. However, there was no significant difference in Po between the
cage
-bound and treadmill walking groups at either time point. Results from this study indicate that skeletal muscle reloading (after a period of unloading) results in a significant force decrement. Additionally, removal of the load during the recovery phase significantly impairs
functional recovery
, whereas mild exercise offers no advantage over
cage
-bound activity.
...
PMID:Impact of mechanical load on functional recovery after muscle reloading. 1112 44
Bradykinesia and rigidity are the symptoms that most directly correlate with loss of striatal dopamine in Parkinson's disease. In the hemiparkinsonian (HP) monkey, this is represented by paucity of movement as measured by coli puterized movement analysis, diminished manual dexterity on clinical examination, and diminished performance on operant behavioral tasks. The present study used an MPTP-induced HP model in rhesus monkeys to evaluate the effectiveness of adrenal medullary and peripheral nerve co-grafts in diminishing parkinsonian symptoms. Unoperated controls (N = 4), surgical controls with caudate lesioning (N = 4), and caudate co-grafted (N = 4) HP monkeys demonstrated diminished movement in the home
cage
following MPTP. This behavior persisted in unoperated controls, but improved in both surgical control and co-grafted monkeys. Functional hand dexterity evaluations demonstrated similar impairment in all three groups but only surgical controls and co-grafted monkeys demonstrated improvement. In general, rotational behavior in response to apomorphine was consistent with
recovery of function
in surgical controls and co grafted monkeys, but marked between-subject variability precluded group statistical analyses. None of the monkeys could perform the operant task using the affected limb following MPTP. However, the performance of two co-grafted animals demonstrated partial recovery. L-dopa improved operant performance, demonstrating a dopaminergic component to the task. The results demonstrate recovery of behavioral function after surgical treatment, with adrenal co-grafted monkeys showing the greatest degree of improvement.
...
PMID:Behavioral evaluation of hemiparkinsonian MPTP monkeys following dopamine pharmacological manipulation and adrenal co-graft transplantation. 1114 58
To date, most research performed in the area of spinal cord injury focuses on treatments designed to either prevent spreading lesion (secondary injury) or to enhance outgrowth of long descending and ascending fiber tracts around or through the lesion. In the last decade, however, several authors have shown that it is possible to enhance locomotor function after spinal cord injury in both animals and patients using specific training paradigms. As a first step towards combining such training paradigms with pharmacotherapy, we evaluated
recovery of function
in adult rats sustaining a spinal cord contusion injury (MASCIS device, 12.5 mm at T8), either housed in an enriched environment or in standard cages (n = 15 in both groups). The animals in the enriched environment were stimulated to increase their locomotor activity by placing water and food on opposite sides of the
cage
. As extra stimuli, a running wheel and several other objects were added to the
cage
. We show that exposure to the enriched environment improves gross and fine locomotor recovery as measured by the Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan (BBB) locomotor rating scale, the BBB subscale, the Gridwalk, and the Thoracolumbar height test. However, no group differences were found on our electrophysiological parameters nor on the amount of spared white matter. These data justify further studies on enriched housing and more controlled exercise training, with their use as potential additive to pharmacological intervention.
...
PMID:Effects of enriched housing on functional recovery after spinal cord contusive injury in the adult rat. 1122 12
This case report describes a Gustilo Anderson type IIIB tibia fracture associated with extensive segmental bone loss at the proximal meta-diaphyseal junction associated with a tibial plateau fracture and an avulsion of the tibial tubercle. After the tibial plateau fracture was stabilized using cannulated lag screws, the shaft fracture was stabilized using a statically locked intramedullary nail in combination with a cylindrical titanium mesh
cage
and cancellous bone graft. The soft tissue defect was covered with local flaps. Immediate full weight bearing was initiated, and early
functional recovery
was achieved. At the final follow-up, plain radiographs demonstrated excellent limb alignment, and bony healing with computed tomography examination revealed bony ingrowth through the
cage
. This technique may be a reasonable alternative in the treatment of segmental bone loss of long bones.
...
PMID:Management of a long segmental defect at the proximal meta-diaphyseal junction of the tibia using a cylindrical titanium mesh cage. 1267 95
Housing rats in an enriched environment improves functional outcome after ischemic stroke, this may reflect neuronal plasticity in brain regions outside the lesion. Which components of the enriched environment that are of greatest importance for recovery after brain ischemia is uncertain. We have previously found that enriched environment and social interaction alone both improve
functional recovery
after focal cerebral ischemia, compared with isolated housing with voluntary wheel-running. In this study, the aim was to separate components of the enriched environment and investigate the effects on some potential mediators of improved
functional recovery
; such as the inducible transcription factors nerve growth factor-induced gene A (NGFI-A) and NGFI-B, and the glucocorticoid and serotonin systems. After permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion, rats were divided into four groups: individually housed with no equipment (deprived group), individually housed with free access to a running wheel (running group), housed together in a large
cage
with no equipment (social group) or in a large
cage
furnished with exchangeable bars, chains and other objects (enriched group). mRNA expression of inducible transcription factors, serotonin and glucocorticoid receptors was determined with in situ hybridisation 1 month after cerebral ischemia. Rats housed in enriched or social environments showed significantly higher mRNA expression of NGFI-A and NGFI-B in cortical regions outside the lesion and in the CA1 (cornu ammonis region of the hippocampus), compared with isolated rats with or without a running wheel. NGFI-A and NGFI-B mRNA expression in cortex and in CA1 was significantly correlated to functional outcome. 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 1A (5-HT(1A)) mRNA expression and binding, as well as 5-HT(2A) receptor mRNA expression were decreased in the hippocampus (CA4 region) of the running wheel rats. Mineralocorticoid receptor gene expression was increased in the dentate gyrus amongst wheel-running rats. No group differences were found in plasma corticosterone levels or mRNA levels of glucocorticoid receptor, corticotropin-releasing hormone, 5-HT(2C) or c-fos. In conclusion, we have found that social interaction is a major component of the enriched environment regarding the effects on NGFI-A and NGFI-B expression. These transcription factors may be important mediators of improved
functional recovery
after brain infarctions, induced by environmental enrichment.
...
PMID:Effects of postischemic environment on transcription factor and serotonin receptor expression after permanent focal cortical ischemia in rats. 1280 85
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