A8-06
3:45 PM
Oswald, Duane; The Ohio State University Medical Center
GOLLI-MYELIN BASIC PROTEIN IS REQUIRED FOR MATURA-
TION OF OLIGODENDROCYTE PROGENITORS AND REMYELIN-
ATION OF CONTUSED SPINAL CORDS
A8-07
3:00 PM
Segal, Andrew; UCLA
EXAMINING THE TIME-COURSE OF D-CYCLOSERINE
ADMINISTRATION IN DEVELOPING RATS FOLLOWING LATERAL
FLUID PERCUSSIVE INJURY
A8-08
3:15 PM
Lemmon, Vance; Univ. of Miami
MIASCI ONLINE: AN ANNOTATION TOOL FOR THE MINIMAL
INFORMATION ABOUT A SPINAL CORD INJURY EXPERIMENT
(MIASCI) REPORTING STANDARD
A8-09
3:30 PM
Ho man, Ann; University of California Los Angeles
IMMEDIATE AND PERSISTENT DENDRITIC HYPERTROPHY IN
THE BASOLATERAL AMYGDALA FOLLOWING EXPERIMENTAL
DIFFUSE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
A8-10
3:45 PM
Wu, Ping; University of Texas Medical Branch
INDUCED MOTOR NEURON DIFFERENTIATION FROM
ENDOGENOUS NEURAL STEM CELLS IN MICE AFTER SPINAL
CORD INJURY
A8-11
3:00 PM
Powell, Melissa; Virginia Commonwealth University
INTERACTIVE ROLE OF MATRIX METALLOPROTEINASE 9 AND
OSTEOPONTIN IN OLFACTORY BULB SYNAPTOGENESIS
FOLLOWING TBI
A8-12
3:15 PM
Vascak, Michal; Virginia Commonwealth University
THE EFFECT OF MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (MTBI) ON
THE STRUCTURAL PLASTICITY OF THE AXON INITIAL SEGMENT
(AIS)
POSTER SESSION III
AGING
B1-01
4:00 PM
Kinoshita, Takahiro; Osaka General Medical Center
DECOMPRESSIVE CRANIECTOMY IN CONJUNCTIONWITH
LESION EVACUATION IN GERIATRIC TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY:
A PROPENSITY SCORE ANALYSIS
B1-02
4:15 PM
Mouzon, Benoit; Roskamp Institute
THE ROLE OF TAU AND OTHER PATHOLOGIES IN AN ANIMAL
MODEL OF REPETITIVE MTBI
B1-03
4:30 PM
Lynch, Cillian; Roskamp Institute
CHRONIC IMPAIRMENT OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW IN A
MOUSE MODEL OF REPETITIVE MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN
INJURY
B1-04
4:45 PM
Thompson, Hilaire; The Univ. of Washington
AGING RELATED DIFFERENCES IN PATTERNS OF MEDICATION
USE AT TIME OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
Monday - Poster Sessions
19
B1-05
4:00 PM
Von Leden, Ramona; USUHS
AGING RATS SHOW ALTERATIONS TO GLIAL CELL ACTIVATION
AND FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY
B1-06
4:15 PM
Harris, Janna; Univ. of Kansas Medical Center
1H-MRS SUGGESTS MECHANISMS UNDERLYING POOR
RECOVERY AFTER INJURY TO THE AGED BRAIN
B1-07
4:30 PM
Chou, Austin; University of California - San Francisco
EFFECT OF AGING ON HIPPOCAMPAL-DEPENDENT COGNITION
AND NEUROINFLAMMATORY RESPONSES AFTER TRAUMATIC
BRAIN INJURY
B1-08
4:45 PM
Bachstetter, Adam; University of Kentucky
MW151, A SMALL MOLECULE INHIBITOR OF NEUROINFLAM-
MATION, PREVENTS CLOSED HEAD INJURY INDUCED
COGNITIVE DEFICITS IN APP/PS1 KI MICE
B1-09
4:00 PM
Isokuortti, Harri; University of Tampere
WHO GETS HEAD TRAUMA OR RECRUITED IN MILD
TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY RESEARCH?
NEURODEGENERATION
B2-01
4:15 PM
Glushakova, Olena; Banyan Biomarkers, Inc.
THE ROLE OF APOPTOSIS IN LONG-TERM AXONAL,
MICROVASCULAR AND BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER DAMAGE
AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN RATS
B2-02
4:30 PM
Saber, Maha; Lerner’s Research Institute at Cleveland Clinic
THE ROLE OF TREM2 IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY-INDUCED
NEUROINFLAMMATION AND NEURODEGENERATION
B2-03
4:45 PM
Torch, William; Washoe Sleep Disorders Centers
PROGRESSIVE LIMBIC ANTEROGRADE TRANS-NEURONAL
DEGENERATION (LATND): A NEUROPATHOLOGICAL
BIOMARKER IN TBI-INDUCED CTE & DEMENTIA
B2-04
4:00 PM
Greco, Ti any; UCLA
EMERGING ROLE OF GAPDH IN TBI INDUCED AMYLOIDOSIS
B2-05
4:15 PM
Dore, Sylvain; University of Florida
HIPPOCAMPAL DEGENERATION AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN
INJURY: THE ROLES OF THE PGE2 EP1 RECEPTOR
B2-06
4:30 PM
Dixon, C. Edward; University of Pittsburgh
REGIONAL EXPRESSION OFWILD-TYPE ALPHA-SYNUCLEIN
AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN RATS
B2-07
4:45 PM
Watts, Lora; University of Texas Health Science Center
NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECT OF METHYLENE BLUE IN
MODERATE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
B2-08
4:00 PM
Kayed, Rakez; University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston
TOXIC TAU SEEDS DERIVED FROM TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
MODELS ACCELERATE COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTION IN
TAUOPATHY MICE
B2-09
4:15 PM
Cartagena, Casandra; Walter Reed Army Insitute of Research
ACUTE REGION OF INTEREST CHANGES IN KEY BRAIN INJURY
MARKERS FOLLOWING PENETRATING BALLISTIC-LIKE BRAIN
INJURY
B2-10
4:30 PM
Boutte, Angela; Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
BRAIN CATHEPSIN B IS ELEVATED IN BOTH MILD-CLOSED AND
SEVERE-PENETRATING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY MODELS
B2-11
4:45 PM
Lucke-Wold, Brandon; West Virginia University
MODELING CHRONIC NEURODEGENERATION FOLLOWING
NEUROTRAUMA: A MULTIPLE MODEL EXPERIENCE
AXONAL INJURY
B3-01
4:00 PM
Daphalapurkar, Nitin; Johns Hopkins University
DYNAMIC SHEARING DEFORMATIONS IN LIVING HUMAN
BRAINWITH RELEVANCE TO TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
B3-02
4:15 PM
Volman, Vladislav; L-3 Communications
A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL OFWHITE MATTER AXON FOR
QUANTIFYING ACUTE AND DELAYED INJURY SEQUELAE, WITH
APPLICATION TO REPEATED INJURY
B3-03
4:30 PM
Brizuela, Mariana; University of Tasmania
THE MICROTUBULE-STABILIZING DRUG EPOTHILONE D
INCREASES AXONAL SPROUTING RESPONSE IN AN IN VITRO
MODEL OF TRANSECTION INJURY
B3-04
4:45 PM
McNally, Shannon; National Institutes of Health
DTI CORRELATES OF ATTENTION AND PROCESSING SPEED IN
SUB-ACUTE AND CHRONICTRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
B3-05
4:00 PM
Smith, Caleb; Texas Tech University
THERAPEUTIC EFFECTS OF TAMOXIFEN IN SPINAL CORD
INJURY
B3-06
4:15 PM
Mayer, Andrew; The Mind Research Network
CROSS-SECTIONAL DIFFERENCES IN FRACTIONAL ANISOTRO-
PYWITHOUT LONGITUDINAL EVIDENCE OF RECOVERY BY ONE
MONTH POST-CONCUSSION
B3-07
4:30 PM
Ruven, Carolin; The University of Hong Kong
TRANSPLANTATION OF EMBRYONIC SPINAL CORD DERIVED
CELLS INTO TRANSECTED PERIPHERAL NERVE TO PREVENT
MUSCULAR ATROPHY
B3-08
4:45 PM
Dolle, Jean-Pierre; University of Pennsylvania
STABILIZING MICROTUBULES AFTER TRAUMATIC AXONAL
INJURY MITIGATES ACCUMULATION OF TAU, CALCIUM INFLUX
AND AXONAL DEGENERATION
B3-09
4:00 PM
Jacobs, Kimberle; Virginia Commonwealth University
FUNCTIONAL ALTERATIONS IN INTRINSIC AND SYNAPTIC
PROPERTIES 1 MONTH AFTER MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN
INJURY