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Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a very broad diagnosis. Some TBI patients have minimal complaints for a short period of time. Other TBI patients suffer from drastic life-altering, permanent brain damage. One particularly troubling class of TBI patients arises from people who experience one or more concussions in their youth. Later, as adults, the TBI manifests as multiple learning difficulties or even personality changes. As ophthalmic professionals, we are often the first to see potential TBI patients as they complain of visual disturbances. It is of utmost importance to find ways to help these people, but first we have to find the deficits. This paper will discuss some therapeutic measures given to TBI patients and the examinations that will provide vital information.Much attention in the media has been given to concussion, a mild form of traumatic brain injury (TBI). read more Depending on the severity of the injury, the visual systems of children with TBI are at risk, and diplopia, subnormal acuity and visual processing difficulties often result. These children need careful evaluation and treatment by ophthalmologists and orthoptists. Many will benefit from a multidisciplinary team-based care. In this symposium, the assessment, diagnosis and long-term follow-up of children with TBI will be reviewed.Concussion is a worldwide health concern among children and adolescents. Over the decades concussion has been gradually better recognized as an entity that accounts for a significant disability post head trauma in patients. Patients present with cognitive, somatic and oculo-vestibular symptoms that can be incapacitating. Most concussion symptoms are transient and resolve within 1-2 weeks but can persist for years. Concussion pathophysiology is complex and may not be fully understood but it involves numerous mechanisms including cellular metabolic derangements, cerebral blood inflow, and axonal disruption. With no associated objective biomarkers or visible pathologic brain changes, diagnosis of concussion can be challenging. Many organizations and collaborative groups have suggested numerous definitions and diagnostic criteria for concussion in an attempt to improve the evidence-based clinical assessments and therapies for concussion. Proper assessment and evaluation is crucial starting from counseling of the patient, gradual return to cognitive and physical activity in an individualized treatment plan to ensure a timely return to daily activities and full sport participation. This report provides a grasp over the current state of sport-related concussion knowledge, diagnosis, and clinical evaluation in children and adolescent, with a focus on the ocular symptoms and signs.Concussion is a common injury in childhood with an estimated 1.4 million children sustaining concussions annually in the United States. While many concussions occur in the sports and recreation setting, it is important to recognize that non-sports and recreation activities are also common causes of concussion in childhood. Since neurologic projections associated with the afferent and efferent visual system are widely distributed throughout the brain and thought to comprise over 50% of brain function, it is not surprising that the diffuse sear injury associated with concussion often produces visual dysfunction. This review will concentrate on the efferent visual motor pathways that may be affected in concussion.Here we present a novel application of stage-structured population modelling to explore the properties of neuronal dendrites with spines. Dendritic spines are small protrusions that emanate from the dendritic shaft of several functionally important neurons in the cerebral cortex. They are the postsynaptic sites of over 90% of excitatory synapses in the mammalian brain. Here, we formulate a stage-structured population model of a passive dendrite with activity-dependent spines using a continuum approach. This computational study models three dynamic populations of activity-dependent spine types, corresponding to the anatomical categories of stubby, mushroom, and thin spines. In this stage-structured population model, transitions between spine type populations are driven by calcium levels that depend on local electrical activity. We explore the influence of the changing spine populations and spine types on the development of electrical propagation pathways in response to repetitive synaptic input, and which input frequencies are best for facilitating these pathways.Sir Jagadis Chandra Bose, India's first modern biologist departed boldly from mainstream botany by claiming that plants possess "nerves" and "pulsating cells" that function respectively much like the nerve and heart cells of animals. These ideas were based on highly sensitive measurements he made of various plant functions by means of assorted ingenious instruments of his own design. Despite being the most internationally celebrated plant biologist of the early 20th century, by the end of his life, Bose had become a scientific pariah whose work was expunged from Western histories of plant biology for nearly a century. In the 21st century, Bose's contributions to biology have begun to be appreciated anew, particularly within the plant neurobiology community. The present contribution examines the motivating factors behind the anti-Bose camp in the United States in the 1920s. It is concluded that the opposition to Bose's ideas during this period had less to do with scientific dialectics than with jealousy over Bose's international acclaim and the prevailing racism of the era.Colonization in HIV-infected populations with extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-PE) is particularly worrisome in low-income settings. This study describes the prevalence of ESBL-PE carriage and associated risk factors among newly HIV-diagnosed adults in a community setting in Tanzania. A total of 595 newly diagnosed HIV adults with a median age of 35 years with interquartile range (IQR) 29-42 years and a median CD4 count of 492 cells/μL (IQR 390-666 cells/μL) were recruited. Among these, 194/595 (32.6%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 28.9-36.6) were ESBL-PE carriers. Participants with low CD4 count ( less then 350 cells/μL) had significantly higher prevalence of ESBL-PE carriage compared with those with CD4 count ≥350 cells/μL (26/58, 44.8%, vs. 168/537, 31.3%, p = 0.04). Antibiotic use in last 4 weeks (odds ratio [OR] 1.55, 95% CI 1.08-2.22, p = 0.02) and CD4 count ≥350 cells/μL (OR 1.78, 95% CI 1.03-3.09, p = 0.04) were independent risk factors for fecal carriage of ESBL-PE. In total, 244 isolates of ESBL-PE were isolated from 194 participants.

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