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Ann M. Stowe
Researcher at University of Kentucky
Publications - 100
Citations - 3259
Ann M. Stowe is an academic researcher from University of Kentucky. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 80 publications receiving 2537 citations. Previous affiliations of Ann M. Stowe include University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center & University of Kansas.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Extensive cortical rewiring after brain injury.
Numa Dancause,Scott Barbay,Shawn B. Frost,Erik J. Plautz,Daofen Chen,Elena V. Zoubina,Ann M. Stowe,Randolph J. Nudo +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that M1 injury results in axonal sprouting near the ischemic injury and the establishment of novel connections within a distant target, and support the hypothesis that, after a cortical injury, such as occurs after stroke, cortical areas distant from the injury undergo major neuroanatomical reorganization.
Journal ArticleDOI
Post-infarct cortical plasticity and behavioral recovery using concurrent cortical stimulation and rehabilitative training: a feasibility study in primates.
Erik J. Plautz,Scott Barbay,Shawn B. Frost,Kathleen M. Friel,Numa Dancause,Elena V. Zoubina,Ann M. Stowe,Barbara M. Quaney,Randolph J. Nudo +8 more
TL;DR: Results support the feasibility of using a therapy approach combining peri-infarct electrical stimulation with rehabilitative training to alleviate chronic motor deficits and promote recovery from cortical ischemic injury.
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Short-Chain Fatty Acids Improve Poststroke Recovery via Immunological Mechanisms
Rebecca Sadler,J. Cramer,Steffanie Heindl,Sarantos Kostidis,Dene M Betz,Kielen R Zuurbier,Bernd H. Northoff,Marieke Heijink,Mark P. Goldberg,Erik J. Plautz,Stefan Roth,Rainer Malik,Martin Dichgans,Lesca M. Holdt,Corinne Benakis,Martin Giera,Ann M. Stowe,Ann M. Stowe,Arthur Liesz +18 more
TL;DR: Short-chain fatty acids, fermentation products of the gut microbiome, are potent and proregenerative modulators of poststroke neuronal plasticity at various structural levels and are identified as a potential therapeutic to improve recovery after stroke.
Journal ArticleDOI
Repetitive hypoxia extends endogenous neurovascular protection for stroke
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the duration of ischemic tolerance could be extended from days to months by repeated intermittent hypoxia of varying magnitude and duration.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neutrophil elastase and neurovascular injury following focal stroke and reperfusion.
Ann M. Stowe,Tracy L. Adair-Kirk,Ernesto R. Gonzales,Ron Perez,Aarti R. Shah,Tae Sung Park,Jeffrey M. Gidday +6 more
TL;DR: The findings confirm the involvement of NE in neurovascular stroke pathology, when reperfusion allows neutrophils access to vulnerable brain, with pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of NE being both neuro- and vasculo-protective in this setting.