7 results match your criteria: "SUNY School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences[Affiliation]"

Development of neuropathic pain occurs in a major portion of traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) patients, resulting in debilitating and often long-term physical and psychological burdens. Following SCI, chronic dysregulation of extracellular glutamate homeostasis has been shown to play a key role in persistent central hyperexcitability of superficial dorsal horn neurons that mediate pain neurotransmission, leading to various forms of neuropathic pain. Astrocytes express the major CNS glutamate transporter, GLT1, which is responsible for the vast majority of functional glutamate uptake, particularly in the spinal cord.

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The neuroprotective potential of low-dose methamphetamine in preclinical models of stroke and traumatic brain injury.

Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry

January 2016

Neurosurgery Dept., University at Buffalo, SUNY-School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo, NY, United States. Electronic address:

Methamphetamine is a psychostimulant that was initially synthesized in 1920. Since then it has been used to treat attention deficit hyperactive disorder (ADHD), obesity and narcolepsy. However, methamphetamine has also become a major drug of abuse worldwide.

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Vaccinia virus early gene transcription requires the vaccinia termination factor, VTF, nucleoside triphosphate phosphohydrolase I, NPH I, ATP, the virion RNA polymerase, and the motif, UUUUUNU, in the nascent RNA, found within 30 to 50 bases from the poly A addition site, in vivo. In this study, the relationships among the vaccinia early gene transcription termination efficiency, termination motif specificity, and the elongation rate were investigated. A low transcription elongation rate maximizes termination efficiency and minimizes specificity for the UUUUUNU motif.

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Central nervous system atrophy and clinical status in multiple sclerosis.

J Neuroimaging

July 2004

Department of Neurology, University at Buffalo, SUNY School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, The Jacobs Neurological Institute, 100 High Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, USA.

In this review, the authors focus on clinical aspects of central nervous system (CNS) atrophy in multiple sclerosis (MS), including the relationship between atrophy and disability, disease course, disease duration, quality of life, and fatigue. Cross-sectional studies have demonstrated a moderate but significant correlation between brain or spinal cord atrophy and physical disability in patients with MS. Longitudinal studies (>/= 5 years) have shown that CNS atrophy is a significant predictor of subsequent long-term neurologic deterioration.

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Brain MRI lesions and atrophy are related to depression in multiple sclerosis.

Neuroreport

April 2000

Department of Neurology, University at Buffalo (SUNY) School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo General Hospital, NY 14203, USA.

It is unclear whether brain MRI lesions are associated with depression in multiple sclerosis (MS). Neurological dysfunction in depressed (n= 19) and non-depressed (n = 29) MS patients was rated by expanded disability status scale (EDSS). EDSS was weakly predictive of the presence of (p = 0.

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Intracranial hypotension (IH) is a treatable cause of persistent headaches. Persistent cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak at a lumbar puncture (LP) site may cause IH. We present postcontrast MRI of a patient with post-lumbar-puncture headache (LPHA) showing abnormal, intense, diffuse, symmetric, contiguous dural-meningeal (pachymeningeal) enhancement of the supratentorial and infratentorial intracranial dura, including convexities, interhemispheric fissure, tentorium, and falx.

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Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura: brain CT and MRI findings in 12 patients.

Neurology

April 1999

Department of Neurology, University at Buffalo (SUNY) School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Dent Neurologic Institute and Millard Fillmore Hospital, NY, USA.

Clinical-neuroimaging analysis of 12 thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) patients revealed a variety of brain lesions. These included reversible cerebral edema lesions with MRI features of reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS). Most of the RPLS patients had hypertension and renal dysfunction, suggesting RPLS due to hypertensive encephalopathy.

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