1 results match your criteria: "Canadian Institute for Health Research Group in Sensory-Motor Integration[Affiliation]"

Spinal interneuron axons spontaneously regenerate after spinal cord injury in the adult feline.

J Neurosci

September 2009

Department of Physiology, Center for Neuroscience, Queen's University, Canadian Institute for Health Research Group in Sensory-Motor Integration, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

It is well established that long, descending axons of the adult mammalian spinal cord do not regenerate after a spinal cord injury (SCI). These axons do not regenerate because they do not mount an adequate regenerative response and growth is inhibited at the injury site by growth cone collapsing molecules, such as chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs). However, whether axons of axotomized spinal interneurons regenerate through the inhibitory environment of an SCI site remains unknown.

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