Publications by authors named "B R Kondiles"

Article Synopsis
  • A systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate the effects of commonly used medications on neurological recovery after acute spinal cord injury (SCI), with studies sourced from major databases until March 2021.
  • *Out of 394 studies analyzed, around 42% of animal experiments showed positive disease-modifying effects from drugs like methylprednisolone and melatonin, while morphine and ethanol were linked to negative outcomes.
  • *The findings suggest a need for more human-centered research to explore the potential benefits of drugs like melatonin and atorvastatin for improving recovery after SCI, despite varying research methodologies across studies.
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The development of therapeutic strategies to reduce impairments following spinal cord injury (SCI) motivates an active area of research, because there are no effective therapies. One strategy is to address injury-induced demyelination of spared axons by promoting endogenous or exogenous remyelination. However, previously, we showed that new myelin was not necessary to regain hindlimb stepping following moderate thoracic spinal cord contusion in 3-month-old mice.

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Neural activity and learning lead to myelin sheath plasticity in the intact central nervous system (CNS), but this plasticity has not been well-studied after CNS injury. In the context of spinal cord injury (SCI), demyelination occurs at the lesion site and natural remyelination of surviving axons can take months. To determine if neural activity modulates myelin and axon plasticity in the injured, adult CNS, we electrically stimulated the contralesional motor cortex at 10 Hz to drive neural activity in the corticospinal tract of rats with sub-chronic spinal contusion injuries.

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Electrical stimulation of the cervical spinal cord is gaining traction as a therapy following spinal cord injury; however, it is difficult to target the cervical motor region in a rodent using a non-penetrating stimulus compared with direct placement of intraspinal wire electrodes. Penetrating wire electrodes have been explored in rodent and pig models and, while they have proven beneficial in the injured spinal cord, the negative aspects of spinal parenchymal penetration (e.g.

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