Malmbergrooney7615
Magnetic field (MF) stimulation has the potential to reduce secondary damage and promote functional recovery after neural tissue injury. The study aimed to observe the effect of very low intensity (17.96µT) MF on general body condition, secondary damage, pain status, and locomotion.
We exposed rats to MF (2 h/day × 3 weeks) after 6.25 mm contusion spinal injury. Locomotor behavior was evaluated by BBB score, pain assessment was done by recording threshold for tail flick, expression of voltage-gated calcium channels and extent of secondary damage in the spinal cord was assessed by immunofluorescence and Cresyl violet staining, respectively.
A significant (
≤ .001) improvement in bladder function as well as BBB score was observed after MF exposure in comparison with sham and SCI over the observation period of 3 weeks. SCI group showed an increase in the threshold for vocalization after discharge, which decreased following MF exposure. Cresyl violet staining showed significantly higher tissue sparing (73%) at the epicenter after MF exposure when compared to SCI group. This was accompanied with a significant decrease in calcium channel expression in MF group as compared to SCI.
The results suggest facilitation of sensory-motor recovery after MF exposure, which could be due to attenuation of secondary damage and calcium-mediated excitotoxicity in a mild contusion rat model of SCI.
The results suggest facilitation of sensory-motor recovery after MF exposure, which could be due to attenuation of secondary damage and calcium-mediated excitotoxicity in a mild contusion rat model of SCI.One of the major unresolved questions in the study of vulnerability to climate change is how human migration will respond in low and middle-income countries. The present study directly addresses this lacuna by using census data on migration from 4 million individuals from three middle-income African countries over a 22-year period. We link these individuals to climate exposures in their origins and estimate climatic effects on migration using a fixed-effects regression model. We show that climate anomalies affect mobility in all three countries. Specifically, mobility declines by 19% with a 1-standard deviation increase in temperature in Botswana. Equivalent changes in precipitation cause declines in migration in Botswana (11%) and Kenya (10%), and increases in migration in Zambia (24%). The mechanisms underlying these effects appear to differ by country. Negative associations between precipitation anomalies, unemployment, and inactivity suggest migration declines may be due to an increased local demand for workers to offset production risk, while migration increases may be indicative of new opportunities in destinations. These country-specific findings highlight the contextually-specific nature of climate-migration relationships, and do not support claims that climate change is widely contributing to urbanization across Africa.Microbial fuel cell (MFC) power performance strongly depends on the biofilm growth, which in turn is affected by the feed flow rate. In this work, an artificial neural network (ANN) approach has been used to simulate the effect of the flow rate on the power output by ceramic MFCs fed with neat human urine. IBMX in vivo To this aim, three different second-order algorithms were used to train our network and then compared in terms of prediction accuracy and convergence time Quasi-Newton, Levenberg-Marquardt, and Conjugate Gradient. The results showed that the three training algorithms were able to accurately simulate power production. Amongst all of them, the Levenberg-Marquardt was the one that presented the highest accuracy (R = 95%) and the fastest convergence (7.8 s). These results show that ANNs are useful and reliable tools for predicting energy harvesting from ceramic-MFCs under changeable flow rate conditions, which will facilitate the practical deployment of this technology.The 42nd meeting of the Upper Midwest Neuro-Ophthalmology Group (UMNOG) took place on 24 July 2020 in an inaugural virtual format due to COVID-19 precautions. Eighty-seven people attended virtually, including 25 trainees, which marked the highest UMNOG meeting attendance on record. We present a synopsis of the meeting presentations.A 16-year-old male presented with a three year history of right proptosis. All other ocular findings were normal. Imaging demonstrated a large, calcified, contrast-enhancing mass in the apical orbit. The tumour had high gallium-68-DOTATATE uptake and low 18F-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake. An incisional biopsy revealed a diagnosis of psammomatous optic nerve sheath meningioma (ONSM). One year later stereotactic radiotherapy was performed due to tumour growth. Tumour size and visual acuity remained stable in the six months after treatment. This case differs from previously reported paediatric ONSMs by its histo-clinical characteristics (exophytic-calcified mass, visual preservation, psammomatous histology).The classically affected cranial nerve from intracranial hypertension is the sixth nerve. Carcinomatous meningitis can cause persistent or progressive cranial nerve palsies by infiltrating them in the subarachnoid space. Here we present a rare case of episodic, short-lasting, and unilateral oculomotor nerve palsy associated with carcinomatous meningitis and intracranial hypertension in a 44-year-old woman diagnosed with metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. As the survival rates enhance for metastatic cancers, neurologists should expect more perplexing neurologic presentations and consider leptomeningeal metastasis and intracranial hypertension in patients who have cancer and present with short episodes of diplopia and unilateral third nerve palsy.Optic nerve choristomas are very rare lesions. They are characterised by the presence of fat cells, mesodermal collection of fibrous tissue and smooth muscle, and atrophic optic nerve tissue. Although the condition can be diagnosed on histology, it is not always possible to carry out surgical exploration for tissue diagnosis in view of the apical location of the lesion and the inherent risk to vision from surgery. Detailed neuro-imaging becomes vital in these cases for diagnosis. We report a case of a patient with an optic nerve choristoma diagnosed on neuroimaging, review the current literature related to this condition, and discuss the key clinico-radiological features of optic nerve choristomas.