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1. Traumatic brain injury: from the ball field to the battlefield
- Prof. Alan Faden
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2. Avoiding missed diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury
- Dr. John Bedolla
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3. Basic mechanisms of spinal cord injury (SCI)
- Prof. Edward D. Hall
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4. Neuroinflammation and spinal cord injury
- Prof. Phillip Popovich
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6. Experimental approaches to developing and evaluating novel treatments for TBI and SCI
- Prof. W. Dalton Dietrich
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7. The treatment of spinal cord injury: past, present and future
- Prof. James Fawcett
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9. Promoting neuroplasticity for functional restoration after SCI
- Prof. Edelle Field-Fote
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10. Physical rehabilitation after spinal cord injury: maximizing function
- Prof. Jennifer Hastings
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11. Therapies for spinal cord injury: perspective from industry
- Dr. Andrew Blight
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12. Spinal cord injury: some reflections on living with tetraplegia
- Prof. Jonathan Cole
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13. Coping beyond adversity: living with a spinal cord injury
- Mr. Gary Allsop
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14. Identifying the trauma footprint of acquired brain injury
- Dr. Christine Durham
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15. Acquiring better insight into what it's like to have acquired brain injury
- Dr. Christine Durham
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16. Molecular imaging in epilepsy
- Prof. Matthias Koepp
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18. Rehabilitation of military related neurotrauma
- Dr. Michael Yochelson
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19. Spinal cord injury in natural disasters
- Prof. Colleen O'Connell
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Overview
- Spinal cord injury (1)
- Causes of spinal cord injury
- Intraspinal bleeding and inflammation
- Platelets and SCI: hemostasis and inflammation
- Inflammatory signaling and cellular response
- Inflammatory signaling: chemokines and cytokines
- Neurons participate in inflammation onset
- Summary to this point
- Spinal cord injury (2)
- Suppressing or enhancing inflammation
- Inflammation: a historical definition
- Inflammation
- Injured tissue regeneration throughout evolution
- What inflammation can be associated with
- Macrophages co-localize with axons post SCI
- Implications of inflammation after SCI
- Inhibiting recruitment of WBCs is neuroprotective
- Neutrophils and spinal cord injury
- Macrophages and spinal cord injury
- Macrophages dominate the site of SCI
- Macrophages have injurious and reparative effects
- Defining injurious or reparative macrophages
- Macrophage diversity in the injured spinal cord
- Molecular signature for intraspinal macrophages
- SCI triggers a robust, sustained M1 response
- M1 macrophages are toxic to cortical neurons
- M1 and M2 macrophages: sprouting vs. elongation
- Macrophage phenotype & function after SCI (1)
- Macrophage phenotype & function after SCI (2)
- Lymphocytes and spinal cord injury
- Immune-mediated CNS injury or repair? (1)
- Immune-mediated CNS injury or repair? (2)
- Lymphocytes and spinal cord injury - references
- Spinal cord injury and T cells
- Impaired functional recovery in MBP TCR mice
- Secondary injury exacerbated in MBP TCR mice
- Rostro-caudal axon loss and demyelination
- SCI activates B cells in spleen and bone marrow
- Absence of B cells improves recovery after SCI
- The CNS is "hard-wired" into the immune system
- Collaborators
Topics Covered
- The conflicting effects of Inflammation in the injured spinal cord
- Progression of intraspinal bleeding
- The cellular and molecular components of acute and chronic inflammation
- The injurious and reparative effects on neurons and glia
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Popovich, P. (2012, September 13). Neuroinflammation and spinal cord injury [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/CUYF1433.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Phillip Popovich has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.