Publications by authors named "Mary Fossey"

Spinal cord injury chronically alters cardiac structure and function and is associated with increased odds for cardiovascular disease. Here, we investigate the cardiac consequences of spinal cord injury on the acute-to-chronic continuum, and the contribution of altered bulbospinal sympathetic control to the decline in cardiac function following spinal cord injury. By combining experimental rat models of spinal cord injury with prospective clinical studies, we demonstrate that spinal cord injury causes a rapid and sustained reduction in left ventricular contractile function that precedes structural changes.

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) impairs the cardiovascular responses to postural challenge, leading to the development of orthostatic hypotension (OH). Here, we apply lower body negative pressure (LBNP) to rodents with high-level SCI to demonstrate the usefulness of LBNP as a model for experimental OH studies, and to explore the effect of simulated OH on cardiovascular and cerebrovascular function following SCI. Male Wistar rats ( = 34) were subjected to a sham or T3-SCI surgery and survived into the chronic period postinjury (i.

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes autonomic dysfunction, altered neurohumoral control, profound hemodynamic changes, and an increased risk of heart disease. In this prospective study, we investigated the cardiac consequences of chronic experimental SCI in rats by combining cutting edge in vivo techniques (magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] and left-ventricular [LV] pressure-volume catheterization) with histological and molecular assessments. Twelve weeks post-SCI, MRI-derived structural indices and in vivo LV catheterization-derived functional indices indicated the presence of LV atrophy (LV mass in Control vs.

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While 2/3 of patients with ATRT are less than 3 years at diagnosis, the literature suggests younger children present with more aggressive disease and poorer outcome. However, little data exist on characteristics and outcome of patients diagnosed with ATRT in the first year of life. In particular, it is unclear whether they access similar treatments as do older children.

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