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The reactivation of somatosensory cortex and behavioral recovery after sensory loss in mature primates.

TLDR
It is concluded that preserved dorsal column afferents after nearly complete lesions contribute to the reactivation of cortex and the recovery of the behavior, but second-order sensory pathways in the spinal cord may also play an important role.
Abstract
In our experiments, we removed a major source of activation of somatosensory cortex in mature monkeys by unilaterally sectioning the sensory afferents in the dorsal columns of the spinal cord at a high cervical level. At this level, the ascending branches of tactile afferents from the hand are cut, while other branches of these afferents remain intact to terminate on neurons in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Immediately after such a lesion, the monkeys seem relatively unimpaired in locomotion and often use the forelimb, but further inspection reveals that they prefer to use the unaffected hand in reaching for food. In addition, systematic testing indicates that they make more errors in retrieving pieces of food, and start using visual inspection of the rotated hand to confirm the success of the grasping of the food. Such difficulties are not surprising as a complete dorsal column lesion totally deactivates the contralateral hand representation in primary somatosensory cortex (area 3b). However, hand use rapidly improves over the first post-lesion weeks, and much of the hand representational territory in contralateral area 3b is reactivated by inputs from the hand in roughly a normal somatotopic pattern. Quantitative measures of single neuron response properties reveal that reactivated neurons respond to tactile stimulation on the hand with high firing rates and only slightly longer latencies. We conclude that preserved dorsal column afferents after nearly complete lesions contribute to the reactivation of cortex and the recovery of the behavior, but second-order sensory pathways in the spinal cord may also play an important role. Our microelectrode recordings indicate that these preserved first-order, and second-order pathways are initially weak and largely ineffective in activating cortex, but they are potentiated during the recovery process. Therapies that would promote this potentiation could usefully enhance recovery after spinal cord injury.

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Visual system plasticity in mammals: the story of monocular enucleation-induced vision loss.

TL;DR: This review will present current knowledge about the specific application of ME as an experimental tool to study visual and cross-modal brain plasticity and compare early postnatal stages up into adulthood and the structural and physiological consequences of this type of extensive sensory loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Principles of Organization of the Ventrobasal Complex in Mammals; pp. 270–286

TL;DR: Using more than 400 references, 18 principles of structural and functional organization referable to the ventrobasal complex are presented and views concerning ways and means of improving the understanding of the circuits in which the vents are involved are directed.
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Development of an optogenetic toolkit for neural circuit dissection in squirrel monkeys.

TL;DR: The first validation of eight optogenetic constructs driven by recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors and a WGA-Cre based dual injection strategy for projection targeting in a widely-used New World primate model, the common squirrel monkey Saimiri sciureus, suggests that optogenetics tools can be readily applied in squirrel monkeys.
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Biophysical and neural basis of resting state functional connectivity: Evidence from non-human primates

TL;DR: Recent studies of rsFC within mesoscopic scale cortical networks within a well defined functional region of primary somatosensory cortex, as well as spinal cord and brain white matter in non-human primates, are summarized, demonstrating the valuable role of high field MRI and invasive measurements in an animal model to inform the interpretation of human imaging studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracortical connections are altered after long-standing deprivation of dorsal column inputs in the hand region of area 3b in squirrel monkeys.

TL;DR: Unexpectedly, the intrinsic connections within area 3b hand cortex were more widespread after incomplete dorsal column lesions (DCLs) than after a complete DCL, and these changes in connections may contribute to the reactivation process after injuries.
References
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Book

The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analyses of the determinants of earthquake-triggered landsliding in the Czech Republic over a period of 18 months in order to establish a probabilistic framework for estimating the intensity of the earthquake.
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The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates, George Paxinos, Charles Watson (Eds.). Academic Press, San Diego, CA (1982), vii + 153, $35.00, ISBN: 0 125 47620 5

TL;DR: It is shown here how the response of the immune system to repeated exposure to high-energy radiation affects its ability to discriminate between healthy and diseased tissue.
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Chondroitinase ABC promotes functional recovery after spinal cord injury

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that CSPGs are important inhibitory molecules in vivo and suggested that their manipulation will be useful for treatment of human spinal injuries.
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CORTICAL PLASTICITY: From Synapses to Maps

TL;DR: The goal of the current paper is to review the fields of both synaptic and cortical map plasticity with an emphasis on the work that attempts to unite both fields, to highlight the gaps in the understanding of synaptic and cellular mechanisms underlying cortical representational plasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phantom-limb pain as a perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization following arm amputation

TL;DR: A very strong direct relationship is reported between the amount of cortical reorganization and the magnitude of phantom limb pain (but not non-painful phantom phenomena) experienced after arm amputation, indicating that phantom-limb pain is related to, and may be a consequence of, plastic changes in primary somatosensory cortex.
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