Hemiparesis, unilateral weakness or partial paralysis, is a common outcome following hemispherectomy in humans. We use the non-human primate as an invaluable translational model for our understanding of developmental plasticity in response to hemispherectomy. Three infant vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus sabeus) underwent hemispherectomy at a median age of 9 weeks and two additional monkeys at 48 months. Gross motor assessment was conducted in a large open field that contained a horizontal bar spanning the width of the cage. Subjects were assessed yearly following surgery in infantile lesions for a period of 3 years. Adult-lesioned subjects were assessed 40 months following surgery. Shortly after surgery both infant and adult-lesioned subjects were unable to move the contralateral side of their body, but all subjects were able to walk within 6 months following surgery. At each time point the lower limb gait was normal in infant-lesioned subjects with no apparent limp or dragging, however the upper limb demonstrated significant impairment. Horizontal bar crossing was significantly impaired during the first 24 months following surgery. Adult-lesioned subjects also displayed upper limb movement impairments similar to infant-lesioned subjects. In addition the adult-lesioned subjects displayed a noticeable lower limb limp, which was not observed in the infant-lesioned group. Both groups at each time point showed a propensity for ipsiversive turning. The upper limb gait impairment and horizontal bar crossing of lesioned subjects are reminiscent of hemiparesis seen in hemisperectomized humans with the young-lesioned subjects showing a greater propensity for recovery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2009.12.004 | DOI Listing |
Neurosci Lett
January 2010
School of Optometry, University of Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Hemiparesis, unilateral weakness or partial paralysis, is a common outcome following hemispherectomy in humans. We use the non-human primate as an invaluable translational model for our understanding of developmental plasticity in response to hemispherectomy. Three infant vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus sabeus) underwent hemispherectomy at a median age of 9 weeks and two additional monkeys at 48 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Retin Eye Res
July 2003
Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, Hoppe-Seyler Strasse 3, Tübingen D-72076, Germany.
The retina is an easily accessible part of the CNS with a well-defined cytological architecture. It allows for detailed study of the regulation of neurogenesis, determinants of cell fate specification, and signals for cell survival versus programmed cellular death during development. Within the retina, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are the only neurons connecting to the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Neurosci
November 1999
Department of Neuroscience, New York College of Osteopathic Medicine, Old Westbury, NY 11568-8000, USA.
This study investigated age-dependent changes in regional neocortical thickness after hemineodecortication in cats and compared the results to previously reported volumetric and cross-sectional data. Subjects sustained hemineodecortication on postnatal days (P) P10, P30, P60 or in adulthood. Neocortical thickness was quantified at 115 sites along 20 stereotaxic coronal anterior-posterior (AP) planes using defined sites of the main cerebral sulci for the measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
February 1998
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA School of Medicine, CA 90024, USA.
Groups of young adult cats with a left hemineodecortication at postnatal (P) ages (in days) 5-15 (P10), 30 (P30) 60 (P60), 90 (P90), 120 (P120) and in adulthood, were used to measure the volume of the thalamus, bilaterally, and of the remaining neocortex (right hemisphere). The same subjects were employed for the behavioral studies reported in the preceding paper. There was a bilateral, age-dependent, thalamic volume decrease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
June 1988
Department of Psychiatry, UCLA Medical School 90024.
We studied remodeling of the remaining corticorubral projections in adult cats sustaining a left cerebral hemispherectomy in adulthood or neonatally using cortical injections of [3H]leucine-proline. Injection sites and terminal fields were reconstructed from autoradiography-processed tissue. In all cats, the label filled similar extents of ares 4 gamma and 3a of the right frontal cortex.
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