Traditionally, the brainstem has been seen as hardwired and poorly capable of plastic adaptations following spinal cord injury (SCI). Data acquired over the past decades, however, suggest differently: following SCI in various animal models (lamprey, chick, rodents, nonhuman primates), different forms of spontaneous anatomic plasticity of reticulospinal projections, many of them originating from the gigantocellular reticular nucleus (NRG), have been observed. In line with these anatomic observations, animals and humans with incomplete SCI often show various degrees of spontaneous motor recovery of hindlimb/leg function. Here, we investigated the functional relevance of two different modes of reticulospinal fiber growth after cervical hemisec...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...
This study was performed to clarify the neural mechanisms responsible for func- tional recovery of h...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...
Anatomical plasticity such as fibre growth and the formation of new connections in the cortex and sp...
After a spinal cord injury (SCI), only half of affected individuals regain voluntary control of leg ...
Anatomically incomplete spinal cord injuries are often followed by considerable functional recovery ...
Spinal cord injury (SCI) usually results in permanent functional impairment and is considered a worl...
Severe spinal cord contusions interrupt nearly all brain projections to lumbar circuits producing le...
Severe spinal cord contusions interrupt nearly all brain projections to lumbar circuits producing le...
Abstract only availableIn vertebrates, reticulospinal (RS) neurons in the brain activate spinal moto...
While axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied by e...
Axonal regeneration and fiber regrowth is limited in the adult central nervous system, but research ...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...
This study was performed to clarify the neural mechanisms responsible for func- tional recovery of h...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...
Anatomical plasticity such as fibre growth and the formation of new connections in the cortex and sp...
After a spinal cord injury (SCI), only half of affected individuals regain voluntary control of leg ...
Anatomically incomplete spinal cord injuries are often followed by considerable functional recovery ...
Spinal cord injury (SCI) usually results in permanent functional impairment and is considered a worl...
Severe spinal cord contusions interrupt nearly all brain projections to lumbar circuits producing le...
Severe spinal cord contusions interrupt nearly all brain projections to lumbar circuits producing le...
Abstract only availableIn vertebrates, reticulospinal (RS) neurons in the brain activate spinal moto...
While axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied by e...
Axonal regeneration and fiber regrowth is limited in the adult central nervous system, but research ...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Although axonal regeneration after CNS injury is limited, partial injury is frequently accompanied b...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...
This study was performed to clarify the neural mechanisms responsible for func- tional recovery of h...
Severe spinal cord injury in humans leads to a progressive neuronal dysfunction in the chronic stage...