Background: Schatzker type-4 to 6 tibial plateau fractures most commonly occur when the distal femur is driven through the proximal tibial articular surface. This mechanism of injury can be equivalent to a knee dislocation and carries an increased risk of vascular injury. Our institution screens all Schatzker type-4 to 6 tibial plateau fractures with symmetric pulses for a vascular injury by measuring the ankle-brachial index (ABI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To compare outcomes after ankle fracture fixation between those receiving formal physical therapy (PT) vs. no formal PT and those with high vs. low PROMIS anxiety score (AS), and to evaluate the effect of PT in the setting of PROMIS AS scores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJBJS Essent Surg Tech
September 2024
Wide-range thermoreceptive neurons (WRT-EN) in monkey cortical area 7b that encoded innocuous and nocuous cutaneous thermal and threatening visuosensory stimulation with high fidelity were studied to identify their multisensory integrative response properties. Emphasis was given to characterizing the spatial and temporal effects of threatening visuosensory input on the thermal stimulus-response properties of these multisensory nociceptive neurons. Threatening visuosensory stimulation was most efficacious in modulating thermal evoked responses when presented as a downward ("looming"), spatially congruent, approaching and closely proximal target in relation to the somatosensory receptive field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To assess trends in Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information Systems (PROMIS) Physical Function (PF) and Pain Interference (PI) in surgically treated tibial shaft fracture patients progressing to union versus nonunion.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Level 1 trauma center.
Objectives: To determine the postoperative trajectory and recovery of patients who undergo Lisfranc open reduction and internal fixation using Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) physical function (PF) and pain interference (PI).
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Level 1 trauma center.
Purpose Of Review: The purpose of this review paper is to summarize current weight-bearing guidelines for common geriatric fractures, around weight-bearing joints, of the upper and lower extremities.
Recent Findings: There is an increasing amount of literature investigating the safety and efficacy of early weight-bearing in geriatric fractures, particularly of the lower extremity. Many recent studies, although limited, suggest that early weight-bearing may be safe for geriatric distal femur and ankle fractures.
Purpose: Patient-reported minimal clinically important differences (MCID) provide a standard to compare clinical outcomes. The purpose of this study was to calculate the MCID of PROMIS Physical Function (PF), Pain Interference (PI), Anxiety (AX), and Depression (DEP) scores in patients with pelvis and/or acetabular fractures.
Methods: All patients with operatively treated pelvic and/or acetabular fractures were identified.
Background: Disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is associated with significant biomechanical and neuromuscular changes including deficits in joint proprioception. While previous studies have assessed joint position sense (JPS) in ACL deficient knees, methods have varied and few have done so with prospective study designs. The specific aim of this investigation was to determine the effect(s) of ACL reconstruction and recovery time may have on JPS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Oral Biol
July 2022
Objective: Vibrations applied to human teeth have been shown to induce vibrotactile sensations although the location of the mechanoreceptors responsible for encoding vibrations is unclear. The aim of this study is to test the hypothesis that vibrotactile tooth sensations depend on afferent input from intradental mechanoreceptors.
Design: Vibration perception thresholds were determined for a vital (control) and a contralateral nonvital (endodontically treated) maxillary incisor in 11 healthy human participants using an adaptive psychophysical procedure.
Objective: Calcification of atherosclerotic plaque is traditionally associated with increased cardiovascular event risk; however, recent studies have found increased calcium density to be associated with more stable disease. 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzymeA reductase inhibitors or statins reduce cardiovascular events. Invasive clinical studies have found that statins alter both the lipid and calcium composition of plaque but the molecular mechanisms of statin-mediated effects on plaque calcium composition remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNotch proteins drive oncogenesis of many cancers, most prominently T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Because geranylgeranylated Rab proteins regulate Notch processing, we hypothesized that inhibition of geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGDPS) would impair Notch processing and reduce viability of T-ALL cells that express Notch. Here, we show that GGDPS inhibition reduces Notch1 expression and impairs the proliferation of T-ALL cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe long-term effects of binge-like postnatal alcohol exposure on cell proliferation and differentiation in the adolescent rat neocortex were examined. Unlike the hippocampal dentate gyrus, where proliferation of progenitors results primarily in addition of granule cells in adulthood, the vast majority of newly generated cells in the intact mature rodent neocortex appear to be glial cells. The current study examined cytogenesis in the motor cortex of adolescent and adult rats that were exposed to 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Prenatal alcohol exposure can cause damage to the developing fetus with outcomes including growth deficiency, facial dysmorphology, brain damage, and cognitive and behavioral deficits. Smaller brains in children with FASD have been linked both with reduced cell proliferation in the developing CNS and with apoptotic cell loss of postmitotic neurons. Prenatal alcohol exposure in rodents during the period of brain development comparable to that of the first and second trimesters of human pregnancy persistently alters adult neurogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), the lack of which causes fragile X syndrome, is an RNA-binding protein encoded by the FMR1 gene. FMRP accompanies mRNAs from the nucleus to dendritic regions and is thought to regulate their translation at synapses. It has been shown that FMRP moves into nontranslating stress granules (SGs) during heat stress of cultured fibroblasts (Mazroui et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnvironmental enrichment for laboratory animals has come to be viewed as a potential method for improving animal well-being in addition to its original sense as a paradigm for learning how experience molds the brain. It is suggested that the term housing supplementation better describes the wide range of alterations to laboratory animal housing that has been proposed or investigated. Changes in the environments of animals have important effects on brain structure, physiology, and behavior--including recovery from illness and injury--and on which genes are expressed in various organs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci
September 2004
In the current article, we provide a critical review of the extant literature that has focused on environmental influences on cognitive and brain plasticity over the adult life span. The review includes both human epidemiological, and human and nonhuman cross-sectional and longitudinal research. We review a number of factors that have been suggested to reduce age-related cognitive decline including both formal and informal education, leisure pursuits, intellectual engagement, and expertise in different skill domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMent Retard Dev Disabil Res Rev
February 2005
Neuronal and nonneuronal plasticity are both affected by environmental and experiential factors. Remodeling of existing neurons induced by such factors has been observed throughout the brain, and includes alterations in dendritic field dimensions, synaptogenesis, and synaptic morphology. The brain loci affected by these plastic neuronal changes are dependent on the type of experience and learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe involvement of the basal ganglia in motor functions has been well studied. Recent neurophysiological, clinical and behavioral experiments indicate that the basal ganglia also process non-noxious and noxious somatosensory information. However, the functional significance of somatosensory information processing within the basal ganglia is not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious studies have shown that the thalamic nucleus submedius (SM) contains nociceptive neurons and is interconnected with spinal, brain-stem and cortical regions associated with nociception. The present study was performed to examine the role of the SM in nociceptive-related behaviors. The effect of SM lesions on nociceptive responding in rats was assessed using both the radiant-heat tail-flick (TF) and the tail-shock 'pain-induced' vocalization (PIV) tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFD-Phenylalanine, along with morphine, acetylsalicylic acid and zomepirac sodium were evaluated for their antinociceptive actions in monkeys (M. fascicularis) trained to autoregulate nociceptive stimulation using a discrete-trials, aversive-threshold paradigm. Morphine sulfate produced dose-related increases in aversive threshold which were reversible after administration of naloxone (12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe distribution of tooth pulp-evoked potentials (TPEPs) was characterized in the primary motor (MI), primary somatosensory (SI) and secondary somatosensory (SII) cortices of the monkey. Bipolar electrical tooth pulp stimulation elicited TPEP components P23 and N44 over SI, P26 and N72 over MI, and P72, N161, P280, N420, P561 and N662 over SII. Muscular artifacts and extradental input did not affect the TPEP as demonstrated by experiments using a neuromuscular blocking agent and removal of the pulp, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA rat pain model was investigated by examining the correlation of autotomy (self-mutilation) score with motor behavior and body weight change after sciatic nerve transection, encapsulation and neuroma formation. Observations of motor behavior and body weight changes (e.g.
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