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Untitled Eckardt Thesis by A. Sidwell

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and disability in persons under 35 years of age. In nonfatal moderate to severe TBI, secondary cellular edema causes long-lasting brain damage. Vasopressin mediates the expression of aquaporin 4 after injury, a protein that regulates water uptake into cells and thus contributes to brain swelling. I examined the role of vasopressin in aquaporin 4 upregulation in chemical and mechanical models of TBI. Vasopressin was used to simulate TBI conditions in culture and upregulated aquaporin 4 following injury condition. A blast device was created to simulate blast injury conditions in vitro. Future experiments are needed to refine device parameters and its potential use as a high throughput screening mechanism for drugs that can potentially treat TBI.
Full Title
Untitled Eckardt Thesis by A. Sidwell
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Publisher
Lehigh University
Date Issued
2017-05-22
Language
English
Type
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Form
electronic documents
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Date Other
2017
Sidwell, . A. (2017). Untitled Eckardt Thesis by A. Sidwell (1–). https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/undergraduate-publications/eckardt-scholars/untitled-eckardt-thesis-sidwell
Sidwell, Amanda. 2017. “Untitled Eckardt Thesis by A. Sidwell”. https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/undergraduate-publications/eckardt-scholars/untitled-eckardt-thesis-sidwell.
Sidwell, Amanda. Untitled Eckardt Thesis by A. Sidwell. 22 May 2017, https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/undergraduate-publications/eckardt-scholars/untitled-eckardt-thesis-sidwell.