Publications by authors named "Magnuson D"

Early activity-based therapy (E-ABT) has the potential to decrease complications and radically improve neurofunctional recovery following traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI). Unfortunately, E-ABT after TSCI has never been attempted in humans due to practical obstacles and potential safety concerns. This study aims to report on the safety and feasibility outcomes of the Protocol for Rapid Onset of Mobilization in Patients with Traumatic SCI (PROMPT-SCI) trial: the first-ever trial of E-ABT in critically ill patients who suffered a severe TSCI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Motorized cycling (MC) serves as an alternative exercise method for individuals with limited movement after spinal cord injuries, though outcomes differ between animal studies and clinical practices.
  • This research explored pedal reaction forces and muscle activity in rats during MC, revealing that higher cycling cadences (≥30 RPM) lead to increased muscle engagement and force production, especially in those with contusion injuries.
  • The study developed a method to distinguish between rhythmic and nonrhythmic muscle forces, finding that rhythmic forces, which rely on the stretch reflex, increased with faster cadences, providing insights that may improve the application of MC in human rehabilitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Study Design: Preclinical pilot study.

Objectives: To explore peripheral and central nociceptive mechanisms that contribute to muscle stretch-induced locomotor deficits following spinal cord injury.

Setting: Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, Louisville, KY, USA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To monitor the use of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) and related medicines for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as HIV prevention using commercial pharmacy data, it is necessary to determine whether TDF/FTC prescriptions are used for PrEP or for some other clinical indication.

Objective: This study aimed to validate an algorithm to distinguish the use of TDF/FTC for HIV prevention or infectious disease treatment.

Methods: An algorithm was developed to identify whether TDF/FTC prescriptions were for PrEP or for other indications from large-scale administrative databases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper provides an overview of the history, composition, organization, responsibilities, and regulatory requirements of Data Safety Monitoring Boards (DSMB), with particular reference to the context of clinical trials in spinal cord injury. It is intended to help potential members of such boards and those undertaking the design of new clinical trials to understand the important role of the DSMB in safeguarding the integrity of complex trials, promoting safety, and countering potential bias. An independent DSMB helps to protect research subjects by providing study oversight and serves as an additional step to assure that clinical trials are performed to existing and appropriate standards.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: To understand the family's role in adolescents' mental health development and the connection to neurodevelopmental disorders related to experienced parental physical abuse, we first explored resilience pathways longitudinally and secondly, connected the identified patterns to adolescents' hair cortisol levels that are rooted in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis as the main stress response system and connected brain structure alterations.

Methods: We analyzed longitudinal online questionnaire data for three consecutive high school years (from seventh to ninth grade) and four survey waves from a representative sample of = 1609 high school students in Switzerland on violence-resilience pathways. Furthermore, we collected students' hair samples from a subsample of = 229 at survey wave 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Romantic relationships are an important part of our social identities and well-being. In this paper, we report on qualitative findings with thirty Canadian couples, interviewed together, where it was known that one or both partners sell sexual services for a living. We asked a series of open-ended questions related to the background of the couple's relationship, their day-to-day interactions and work-related stressors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal locomotor circuitry is comprised of rhythm generating centers, one for each limb, that are interconnected by local and long-distance propriospinal neurons thought to carry temporal information necessary for interlimb coordination and gait control. We showed previously that conditional silencing of the long ascending propriospinal neurons (LAPNs) that project from the lumbar to the cervical rhythmogenic centers (L1/L2 to C6), disrupts right-left alternation of both the forelimbs and hindlimbs without significantly disrupting other fundamental aspects of interlimb and speed-dependent coordination (Pocratsky et al., 2020).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long ascending propriospinal neurons (LAPNs) are a subset of spinal interneurons that provide direct connectivity between distant spinal segments. Here, we focus specifically on an anatomically defined population of "inter-enlargement" LAPNs with cell bodies at L2/3 and terminals at C5/6. Previous studies showed that silencing LAPNs in awake and freely moving animals disrupted interlimb coordination of the hindlimbs, forelimbs, and heterolateral limb pairs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The U.S. Census has grappled with public concerns about privacy since the first enumeration in 1790.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a debilitating condition with an estimated 18,000 new cases annually in the United States. The field has accepted and adopted standardized databases such as the Open Data Commons for Spinal Cord Injury (ODC-SCI) to aid in broader analyses, but these currently lack high-throughput data despite the availability of nearly 6000 samples from over 90 studies available in the Sequence Read Archive. This limits the potential for large datasets to enhance our understanding of SCI-related mechanisms at the molecular and cellular level.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Early activity-based therapy (ABT) initiated within 48 hours post-trauma could prevent complications and improve outcomes for patients with spinal cord injuries, although this has not been previously tested in humans due to safety concerns.
  • The PROMPT-SCI trial enrolled 15 adults with severe spinal cord injuries and involved 30-minute motor-assisted in-bed cycling sessions starting soon after early spinal surgery, assessing safety through vital sign monitoring.
  • Results showed 66.6% of participants successfully completed a full session within 48 hours without adverse neurological effects, indicating that early ABT is both safe and feasible for these patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Thoracic spinal cord injury affects long propriospinal neurons that interconnect the cervical and lumbar enlargements. These neurons are crucial for coordinating forelimb and hindlimb locomotor movements in a speed-dependent manner. However, recovery from spinal cord injury is usually studied over a very limited range of speeds that may not fully expose circuitry dysfunction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When it was launched in 1991, the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS) project faced a challenging environment and limited resources. Few datasets were interoperable and much data collected at great public expense was inaccessible to most researchers. Documentation of datasets was nonstandardized, incomplete, and inadequate for automated processing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Thoracic spinal cord injury disrupts long propriospinal neurons that are essential for coordinating front and back limb movements during walking and running.
  • Traditional recovery studies often focus on limited speeds, but this research explored overground locomotion in rats over a wider range of speeds before and after spinal cord injuries.
  • Results showed that after injury, rats could still move at various speeds but lost high-speed gaits and exhibited altered limb coordination, underscoring the importance of speed diversity in understanding locomotor control and recovery post-injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a debilitating disease resulting in an estimated 18,000 new cases in the United States on an annual basis. Significant behavioral research on animal models has led to a large amount of data, some of which has been catalogued in the Open Data Commons for Spinal Cord Injury (ODC-SCI). More recently, high throughput sequencing experiments have been utilized to understand molecular mechanisms associated with SCI, with nearly 6,000 samples from over 90 studies available in the Sequence Read Archive.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is well established that both positive and negative housing conditions of laboratory animals can affect behavioral, biochemical, and physiological responses. Housing enhancements have been shown to have beneficial effects on locomotor outcomes in rodents with spinal cord injury (SCI). Subsequent to an unplanned housing enhancement of the addition of a balcony to home cages by animal care personnel at a research facility, a retrospective analysis of multiple SCI studies was performed to determine whether outcomes differed before (four studies,  = 28) and after (four studies,  = 23) the addition of the balcony.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neuronal ryanodine receptors (RyR) release calcium from internal stores and play a key role in synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory. Dysregulation of RyR function contributes to neurodegeneration and negatively impacts neurological recovery after spinal cord injury (SCI). However, the individual role of RyR isoforms and the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sex workers' noncommercial intimate partnerships are marginalized on two counts - they are non-monogamous and at least one partner is in sex work, an occupation with much stigma. We asked a heterogeneous sample of Canadian sex workers (N = 218) about their decisions to reveal/not reveal their sex work to intimate partners, and the resulting challenges and benefits. A minority (58/183) of participants who had been or were currently involved in an intimate relationship kept their work secret from at least one partner or disclosed limited information, shielding them from stigma but resulting in a burden of secrecy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is measured as an indicator of bone or liver disease. Bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (B-ALP) is an isoform of ALP found in the bone tissue which can predict fractures and heterotopic ossification.

Objective: The aim of this scoping review was to explore the current use of ALP and B-ALP in studies using humans or animal models of SCI, and to identify ways to advance future research using ALP and B-ALP as a bone marker after SCI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long ascending propriospinal neurons (LAPNs) are a subpopulation of spinal cord interneurons that directly connect the lumbar and cervical enlargements. Previously we showed, in uninjured animals, that conditionally silencing LAPNs disrupted left-right coordination of the hindlimbs and forelimbs in a context-dependent manner, demonstrating that LAPNs secure alternation of the fore- and hindlimb pairs during overground stepping. Given the ventrolateral location of LAPN axons in the spinal cord white matter, many likely remain intact following incomplete, contusive, thoracic spinal cord injury (SCI), suggesting a potential role in the recovery of stepping.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Activity-based therapy (ABT) is an important aspect of rehabilitation following traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). Unfortunately, it has never been adapted to acute care despite compelling preclinical evidence showing that it is safe and effective for promoting neurological recovery when started within days after SCI. This article provides the protocol for a study that will determine the feasibility and explore potential benefits of early ABT in the form of in-bed leg cycling initiated within 48 hours after the end of spinal surgery for SCI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A preclinical pilot study at the Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center examined how spinal opioidergic circuitry affects locomotor deficits in rats after muscle stretching.
  • Rats were divided into two groups, receiving either naltrexone (an opioid antagonist) or saline, while undergoing a stretching protocol; both groups experienced reduced locomotor function, with the naltrexone group showing earlier decline.
  • The study concludes that the endogenous opioid system may help protect spinal cord motor circuits during stretch, suggesting that drugs affecting this system could have unintended negative effects post-spinal cord injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF