Results 161 to 170 of about 117,981 (192)

Plasticity and its Role in Neurological Diseases of the Adult Nervous System.

open access: yesAdvances in clinical neuroscience & rehabilitation : ACNR
Ce, Cheetham, Gt, Finnerty
openaire   +1 more source

Neurologic Manifestations of Systemic Disease: Peripheral Nervous System

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2020
The impact that systemic disease has on the peripheral nervous system is vast. Polyneuropathies due to these disorders fall into broad categories including metabolic diseases, nutritional deficiencies, rheumatological diseases, infectious diseases, and malignancy-associated disorders.
Christina Graley   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Childhood autoimmune neurologic diseases of the central nervous system [PDF]

open access: possibleNeurologic Clinics, 2003
An autoimmune mechanism for ADEM and MS can be supported by the similar patterns of pathologic changes seen in both diseases with the animal model EAE induced by inoculating animals with nervous tissue and the occurrence of ADEM in patients exposed to nervous tissue during vaccination.
openaire   +2 more sources

Nanomaterial applications for neurological diseases and central nervous system injury

Progress in Neurobiology, 2017
The effectiveness of noninvasive treatment for neurological disease is generally limited by the poor entry of therapeutic agents into the central nervous system (CNS). Most CNS drugs cannot permeate into the brain parenchyma because of the blood-brain barrier thus, overcoming this problem has become one of the most significant challenges in the ...
Lijie Huang   +8 more
openaire   +3 more sources

The Role of Secretory Phospholipase A2 in the Central Nervous System and Neurological Diseases

Molecular Neurobiology, 2013
Secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2s) are small secreted proteins (14-18 kDa) and require submillimolar levels of Ca(2+) for liberating arachidonic acid from cell membrane lipids. In addition to the enzymatic function, sPLA2 can exert various biological responses by binding to specific receptors.
Tatsurou Yagami   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

mTOR

Neurology, 2014
The ability of cells to integrate signals from growth factors, nutrients, intermediate metabolism, and markers of cellular stress is key to cell development, function, and survival. In the nervous system, these signals are also critical for neuronal differentiation and synaptic plasticity.
Nicholas D. Child, Eduardo E. Benarroch
openaire   +3 more sources

Central Nervous System Immunoglobulin Synthesis in Neurological Disease

1983
The status of the central nervous system (CNS) as an immunological organ synthesizing immunoglobulin has been established convincingly in the past two decades. The first observations suggesting that such a process occurs were made in the early 1940s.
Wallace W. Tourtellotte   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

microRNA involvement in developmental and functional aspects of the nervous system and in neurological diseases

Neuroscience Letters, 2009
microRNAs, small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level, are emerging as important regulatory molecules involved in the fine-tuning of gene expression during neuronal development and function. microRNAs have roles during neuronal stem cell commitment and early differentiation as well as in later stages of ...
Christensen, Mette, Schratt, Gerhard M
openaire   +4 more sources

Diseases of the nervous system: A text-book of neurology and psychiatry.

The Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1918
Reviews the book, Diseases of the nervous system: A text-book of neurology and psychiatry, Second Edition, Revised, Rewritten and Enlarged by Smith Ely Jelliffe and William A. White (1917). Improvements have been made in this, the second edition of this excellent text-book, in the chapters on the vegetative nervous system and the endocrinopathies, and ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Circulating autoantibodies against central nervous system (CNS) antigens in neurological diseases

The Italian Journal of Neurological Sciences, 1994
A number of investigators have reported the detection of circulating autoantibodies directed against serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neuronal antigens in certain neurological clinical conditions. Using an immunohistochemical technique, we examined the sera and (when available) the CSF from 120 patients with several neurological disorders and 40 ...
GIOMETTO B   +6 more
openaire   +4 more sources

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