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Kline, Anthony
Ph.D., University of California
Research InterestsTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious medical problem affecting approximately 1.5 to 2 million people in the United States each year. An estimated 100,000 endure long-term disabilities that require rigorous, lengthy, and costly medical and rehabilitative care. My laboratory utilizes a clinically relevant rodent model of TBI to produce motor and cognitive deficits that are reminiscent of those seen in human patients. Therapeutic strategies such as pharmacotherapy and/or environmental enrichment, which may be considered a relevant experimental analogue of the clinical rehabilitation paradigm, are subsequently provided in an attempt to restore function and/or attenuate TBI-induced deficits. Recent therapeutic approaches in the laboratory include the utilization of moderate hypothermia, antioxidants, as well as DAergic and 5-HT1A receptor agonists. The long-term goals of the laboratory are to develop therapies that facilitate functional recovery after human TBI and to elucidate potential mechanisms for the observed effects. My laboratory is located in the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research (SCRR) where ample collaboration exists between brain experts from the Departments of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Neurological Surgery, and Critical Care Medicine. This wealth of knowledge, which includes, but is not limited to, numerous behavioral assessments as well as a variety of molecular and immunocytochemistry techniques, is available to graduate students whose interests are consistent with the overall goals of the laboratory.
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