Publications by authors named "Dane M Dewees"

Objective: Acute traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) is followed by a prolonged period of secondary neuroglial cell death. Neuroprotective interventions, such as surgical spinal cord decompression, aim to mitigate secondary injury. In this study, the authors explore whether the effect size of posttraumatic neuroprotective spinal cord decompression varies with injury severity.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study compares two surgical techniques, durotomy and durotomy plus myelotomy, aimed at reducing elevated intraspinal pressure (ISP) after traumatic spinal cord injury in a rodent model.
  • Both surgical options effectively decreased ISP and showed significant benefits for preserving spinal tissue and motor neurons, with myelotomy enhancing tissue sparing by 13.7% compared to durotomy alone.
  • Additionally, while both surgeries improved spinal function, only durotomy alone helped recover bladder control, highlighting the need for targeted treatment strategies in future spinal injury cases.
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Introduction: Severe trauma to the spinal cord leads to a near complete loss of blood flow at the injury site along with significant hypoperfusion of adjacent tissues. Characterization and monitoring of local tissue hypoperfusion is currently not possible in clinical practice because available imaging techniques do not allow for assessment of blood flow with sufficient spatial and temporal resolutions. The objective of the current study was to determine whether ultrafast contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) imaging could be used to visualize and quantify acute hemodynamic changes in a rat traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) model.

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OBJECTIVE Traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) causes an almost complete loss of blood flow at the site of injury (primary injury) as well as significant hypoperfusion in the penumbra of the injury. Hypoperfusion in the penumbra progresses after injury to the spinal cord and is likely to be a major contributor to progressive cell death of spinal cord tissue that was initially viable (secondary injury). Neuroprotective treatment strategies seek to limit secondary injury.

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