Publications by authors named "Irma Vismara"

Astrogliosis has a very dynamic response during the progression of spinal cord injury, with beneficial or detrimental effects on recovery. It is therefore important to develop strategies to target activated astrocytes and their harmful molecular mechanisms so as to promote a protective environment to counteract the progression of the secondary injury. The challenge is to formulate an effective therapy with maximum protective effects, but reduced side effects.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the ethical principles of Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3R's) in animal research, specifically in the context of spinal cord injury (SCI) models.
  • It assesses the effectiveness of a combination of pain relief methods, finding that a mix of buprenorphine and carprofen significantly reduces acute surgical pain compared to buprenorphine alone.
  • Additionally, it evaluates Infrared Thermography (IRT) as a non-invasive method for monitoring thermoregulation in these mice, demonstrating its usefulness in measuring body temperature post-surgery without causing extra stress to the animals.
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Many preclinical studies seek cures for spinal cord injury (SCI), but when the results are translated to clinical trials they give scant efficacy. One possible reason is that most strategies use treatments directed toward a single pathological mechanism, while a multitherapeutic approach needs to be tested to significantly improve outcomes after SCI. Most of the preclinical reports gave better outcomes when a combination of different compounds was used instead of a single drug.

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a complex pathology that evolves after primary acute mechanical injury, causing further damage to the spinal cord tissue that exacerbates clinical outcomes. Based on encouraging results from preclinical experiments, some cell treatments being translated into clinical practice demonstrate promising and effective improvement in sensory/motor function. Combinatorial treatments of cell and drug/biological factors have been demonstrated to be more effective than cell treatments alone.

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