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RESEARCH
AND EDUCATION

The Center's research is propelled by the dedication and hard work of its staff of established basic and clinical neuroscientists, as well as that of young investigators— MD/PhD students, graduate students, medical students—who choose to obtain training within the Center. Trainees are carefully mentored by senior investigators at the Center to become independent thinkers capable of tackling tough and challenging questions facing the field. Major research projects include:
Transplantation-Based Approaches toward Remyelination
Spinal cord injury can result in necrosis of the spinal cord, but often white matter tracts outside of the necrotic core become demyelinated. In the absence of myelin, these damaged axons are unable to conduct nerve impulses just as if they have been severed. Loss of myelin leading to impaired conduction also occurs in multiple sclerosis, an inflammatory disease of the CNS that alone affects approximately 35,000 US veterans today. Center scientists are investigating transplantation of myelin-forming cells into the site of injury as an approach to induce remyelination of demyelinated axons and thereby restore impulse conduction.
Strategies for Neuroprotection following Brain and Spinal Cord Injury
Secondary degeneration of neural tissue, initially spared but adjacent to irreversibly damaged tissue, can lead to further, and often, irreversible neurological damage after the initial injury to the brain and spinal cord, via a process of secondary injury. We are studying a number of different approaches, both cell-based and pharmacological, that can limit secondary degeneration and preserve neurological function following trauma to the brain and spinal cord.
Neuropathic Pain Syndromes Associated with Nerve and Spinal Cord Injuries
One of the key disabling consequences of nerve and spinal cord injury is an excruciating form of pain called neuropathic pain. It is brought upon by the reprogramming of injured spinal sensory neurons such that they become hyperexcitable, abnormally firing away electrical impulses when they should not be. In over fifty percent of individuals with nerve injuries, neuropathic pain significantly impacts quality of life; existing medications are in many cases ineffective, or are only partially effective. We are investigating neuropathic pain, particularly the role of sodium channels and associated molecules/mechanisms in neuropathic pain, with the goal of identifying effective treatments.
Molecular Basis for Restoration of Impulse Conduction within the Injured CNS
Patients with the relapsing-remitting form of MS experience symptom-free intervals that sometimes range in the order of years, despite the persistence of demyelinated lesions along their axons. Such a recovery of function after injury to the brain and spinal cord, even in the absence of myelin, is called a remission, and it is due to a molecular reorganization within the axons such that transmission of nerve signals is restored. The Center’s goal is to induce remissions in all people with nerve injuries and is therefore investigating the phenomenon of molecular reorganization in MS, particularly the reorganization of sodium channels which serve as molecular batteries in generating and transmitting signals along axons.


    



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© 1999 Yale University School of Medicine, Center For Neuroscience
and Regeneration Research Center. All rights reserved.
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