Publications by authors named "Lavrov I"

Article Synopsis
  • A 37-year-old woman with spinal cord infarction experienced improved motor, sensory, and autonomic functions after undergoing transcutaneous spinal cord electrical stimulation (tSCS) for 20 months.
  • Over the duration of the treatment, her motor and sensory scores increased significantly, and autonomic function related to bladder control showed notable improvement.
  • The study also demonstrated partial recovery of muscle activity during voluntary movements, highlighting the potential of tSCS in spinal cord injury cases, suggesting the need for further research.
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Article Synopsis
  • Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is an FDA-approved treatment for chronic pain, and researchers are using swine to enhance understanding and effectiveness of this treatment by studying the porcine spinal cord's morphology.
  • The study involved high-resolution imaging of the spinal cord from Yorkshire/Landrace crossbred swine to create detailed 3D visualizations and compare their anatomy to previous research on human spinal cords.
  • Results showed significant anatomical differences between porcine and human spinal cords, such as variations in rootlet counts and angles, suggesting caution when applying findings from swine models to human SCS treatment.
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Article Synopsis
  • Evoked compound action potentials (ECAPs) during spinal cord stimulation (SCS) are useful for understanding pain treatment and improving SCS control, but they are affected by various artifacts like capacitive noise, EMG bleed-through, and motion artifacts.
  • A study using a swine model identified these artifacts and demonstrated that they can distort ECAP recordings, making it challenging to differentiate legitimate neural signals from interference.
  • The research emphasizes the need for specific controls and procedures to accurately interpret ECAP data, which is crucial for advancing closed-loop SCS technologies.
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Spinal cord epidural electrical stimulation (EES) has been successfully employed to treat chronic pain and to restore lost functions after spinal cord injury. Yet, the efficacy of this approach is largely challenged by the suboptimal spatial distribution of the electrode contacts across anatomical targets, limiting the spatial selectivity of stimulation. In this study, we exploited different ESS paradigms, designed as either Spatial-Selective Stimulation (SSES) or Orientation-Selective Epidural Stimulation (OSES), and compared them to Conventional Monopolar Epidural Stimulation (CMES).

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Article Synopsis
  • Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) shows promise for treating chronic pain and sensorimotor disorders, but the mechanisms and electrode placement effects on spinal recordings are not fully understood.
  • This study involved implanting electrode arrays in swine and used imaging techniques to analyze how electrode placement correlates with spinal anatomy and recording responses.
  • The findings revealed significant differences in the spatial relationship between electrode contacts and spinal nerve rootlets, indicating that electrode placement is critical for effective stimulation and recording in the spinal cord.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study challenges the idea that brain injury affects the opposite side of the body solely through crossed neural pathways by introducing a new system called the topographic neuroendocrine system (T-NES), which uses hormonal signals instead.
  • - In experiments with rats, researchers found that damage to the left or right sides of the brain leads to different hormonal responses and neurological deficits, indicating that T-NES functions differently on each side.
  • - Analysis of gene patterns showed that the left- and right-side-specific hormone signaling networks are disrupted by brain injuries, suggesting that T-NES is split into two distinct systems that regulate nerve and molecular activities on either side of the body.
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Objective: To evaluate the effect of transcutaneous (tSCS) and epidural electrical spinal cord stimulation (EES) in facilitating volitional movements, balance, and nonmotor functions, in this observational study, tSCS and EES were consecutively tested in 2 participants with motor complete spinal cord injury (SCI).

Participants And Methods: Two participants (a 48-year-old woman and a 28-year-old man), both classified as motor complete spinal injury, were enrolled in the study. Both participants went through a unified protocol, such as an initial electrophysiological assessment of neural connectivity, consecutive tSCS and EES combined with 8 wks of motor training with electromyography (EMG) and kinematic evaluation.

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The effect of transtraumatic epidural electrostimulation (TEES) above (T5) and below (L2) spinal cord injury in the lower thoracic region (T8-T9) in combination with treadmill exercise in pigs was evaluated using electrophysiological examination methods and behavioral tests. Two weeks after spinal cord injury, motor evoked potentials of m. soleus were recorded during electrostimulation at the level of T5 and L2 segments, which indicated activation of spinal cord structures above and below the focus of injury.

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Background: Pathological changes associated with spinal cord injury (SCI) can be observed distant, rostral, or caudal to the epicenter of injury. These remote areas represent important therapeutic targets for post-traumatic spinal cord repair. The present study aimed to investigate the following in relation to SCI: distant changes in the spinal cord, peripheral nerve, and muscles.

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The effect of inhibitory management is usually underestimated in artificial control systems, using biological analogy. According to our hypothesis, the muscle hypertonus could be effectively compensated stimulation by bio-plausible patterns. We proposed an approach for the compensatory stimulation device as implementation of previously presented architecture of the neurointerface, where (1) the neuroport is implemented as a DAC and stimulator, (2) neuroterminal is used for neurosimulation of a set of oscillator motifs on one-board computer.

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Existing methods of neurorehabilitation include invasive or non-invasive stimulators that are usually simple digital generators with manually set parameters like pulse width, period, burst duration, and frequency of stimulation series. An obvious lack of adaptation capability of stimulators, as well as poor biocompatibility and high power consumption of prosthetic devices, highlights the need for medical usage of neuromorphic systems including memristive devices. The latter are electrical devices providing a wide range of complex synaptic functionality within a single element.

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Background: Epidural electrical stimulation (EES) of the spinal cord has been FDA approved and used therapeutically for decades. However, there is still not a clear understanding of the local neural substrates and consequently the mechanism of action responsible for the therapeutic effects.

Method: Epidural spinal recordings (ESR) are collected from the electrodes placed in the epidural space.

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Synthetic hydrogels provide a promising platform to produce neural tissue analogs with improved control over structural, physical, and chemical properties. In this study, oligo (poly (ethylene glycol) fumarate) (OPF)-based macroporous cryogels were developed as a potential next-generation alternative to a non-porous OPF hydrogel previously proposed as an advanced biodegradable scaffold for spinal cord repair. A series of OPF cryogel conduits in combination with PEG diacrylate and 2-(methacryloyloxy) ethyl-trimethylammonium chloride (MAETAC) cationic monomers were synthesized and characterized.

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Introduction: Patients with high cervical Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) usually require mechanical ventilation support. Phrenic Nerve Stimulation (PNS) both direct and indirect is the main alternative for these patients to wean off ventilator although PNS has several limitations and phrenic nerve could be also damaged after cervical spinal cord injury.

Objective: In this study, we assessed if the spinal cord Epidural Electrical Stimulation (EES) at the segments T2-T5, related to intercostal muscles, can facilitate respiratory function and particularly inspired tidal volume during mechanic ventilation.

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating condition that impacts multiple organ systems. Neurogenic bowel dysfunction (NBD) frequently occurs after a SCI leading to reduced sensation of bowel fullness and bowel movement often leading to constipation or fecal incontinence. Spinal Neuromodulation has been proven to be a successful modality to improve sensorimotor and autonomic function in patients with spinal cord injuries.

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The contemporary strategy for spinal cord injury (SCI) therapy aims to combine multiple approaches to control pathogenic mechanisms of neurodegeneration and stimulate neuroregeneration. In this study, a novel regenerative approach using an autologous leucoconcentrate enriched with transgenes encoding vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), and neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) combined with supra- and sub-lesional epidural electrical stimulation (EES) was tested on mini-pigs similar in morpho-physiological scale to humans. The complex analysis of the spinal cord recovery after a moderate contusion injury in treated mini-pigs compared to control animals revealed: better performance in behavioural and joint kinematics, restoration of electromyography characteristics, and improvement in selected immunohistology features related to cell survivability, synaptic protein expression, and glial reorganization above and below the injury.

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Transcutaneous (TSS) and epidural spinal stimulation (ESS) are electrophysiological techniques that have been used to investigate the interactions between exogenous electrical stimuli and spinal sensorimotor networks that integrate descending motor signals with afferent inputs from the periphery during motor tasks such as standing and stepping. Recently, pilot-phase clinical trials using ESS and TSS have demonstrated restoration of motor functions that were previously lost due to spinal cord injury (SCI). However, the spinal network interactions that occur in response to TSS or ESS pulses with spared descending connections across the site of SCI have yet to be characterized.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how newly regenerated axons using scaffolds and epidural electrical stimulation (EES) can improve spinal cord circuitry and motor functions after spinal cord injury (SCI).
  • - Over 7 weeks, treatments combining scaffolds with neurotrophin-producing Schwann cells and EES led to significant motor function recovery compared to using scaffolds or EES alone, even though the number of regenerated axons was similar across groups.
  • - When researchers re-transected the spinal cord at week 6, motor performance still exceeded that of other groups, indicating that the combined therapies promote synaptic reorganization and enhanced motor recovery after SCI.
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