Free online reference management for clinicians and scientists

Sign up now

Recent "Neuroprotection" articles

  • These articles and links have been posted by Connotea users using the tag "Neuroprotection".
  • To add to this collection, or to start your own library:

Learn more

Watch a short video (2m 41s)

EXPORT LIST RSS ?
Bookmarks matching tag Neuroprotection
 
Number of articles per page:
10 | 25 | 50 | 100
 
Lithium delays progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 (6), 2052 (2008)
Posted by wrightli and 1 other to Neuroprotection ALS on Wed Feb 13 2008 at 09:37 UTC | info | related
 
Interleukin-6 Upregulates Neuronal Adenosine A1 Receptors: Implications for Neuromodulation and Neuroprotection
Knut Biber et al.
Neuropsychopharmacology, (07 Nov 2007)
Posted by eDeMoriziMD to Neuroprotection CNS on Sun Nov 25 2007 at 00:33 UTC | info | related
 
STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY OF INSULIN AND IGF1 RECEPTORS: IMPLICATIONS FOR DRUG DESIGN
Pierre De Meyts and Jonathan Whittaker
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 1 (10), 769-83 (Oct 2002)
 
NEUREN - Homepage
www.neurenpharma.com
Posted by kronbach to neuren GPe Neuroprotection on Wed Jun 06 2007 at 16:17 UTC | info | related
 
Killer proteases and little strokes[mdash]how the things that do not kill you make you stronger
Anne O'Duffy, Yvette Bordelon, and Bethann McLaughlin
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab, (09 Aug 2006)
The phenomenon of ischemic preconditioning was initially observed over 20 years ago. The basic tenant is that if stimuli are applied at a subtoxic level, cells upregulate endogenous protective mechanisms to block injury induced by subsequent stress. Since this discovery, many conserved signaling mechanisms that contribute to activation of this potent protective program have been identified in the brain. A clinical correlate of this basic research finding can be found in patients with a history of transient ischemic attack (TIA), who have a decreased morbidity after stroke. In spite of multidisciplinary efforts to design safer, more effective stroke therapies, we have thus far failed to translate our understanding of endogenous protective pathways to treatments for neurodegeneration. This review is designed to provide clinicians and basic scientists with an overview of stress biology after TIA and preconditioning, discuss new therapeutic strategies to target the protein dysfunction that follows ischemic injury, and propose enhanced biochemical profiling to identify individuals at risk of stroke after TIA. We pay particular attention to the unanticipated consequences of overly aggressive intervention after TIA in which we have found that traditional cytotoxic agents such as free radicals and apoptosis associated proteases is essential for neuroprotection and communication in the stressed brain. These data emphasize the importance of understanding the complex interplay between chaperones, apoptotic proteases including caspases, and the proteolytic degradation machinery in adaptation to neurological injury.
 
The evolutionary psychology of left and right: costs and benefits of lateralization.
Giorgio Vallortigara
Developmental psychobiology 48 (6), 418-27 (Sep 2006)
 
Stroke News & Neuroprotection News from Medical News Today
www.medicalnewstoday.com
Medical News Table Contents
Posted by rt22 to Strokes Neuroprotection on Thu Oct 12 2006 at 06:04 UTC | info | related
 
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism - Mechanisms of neuroprotection by acetyl-L-carnitine
www.nature.com
 
My Uconn Years
www.uconn.edu
This is my first postdoctoral years
 
Prophylactic activation of neuroprotective stress response pathways by dietary and behavioral manipulations.
Mark P Mattson et al.
NeuroRx : the journal of the American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics. 1 (1), 111-6 (Jan 2004)

<< Prev 0      Showing entries 1 to 10 of 25 total      Next 10 >>