World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
43
Citations
12672
World Ranking
7293
National Ranking
3147

Overview

Lyn B. Jakeman is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. The primary field of study in their research is Medicine, with particular focus in several subfields including Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Urology, Rheumatology, Surgery, and Information Systems and Management.

Their work covers a range of topics reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of their research, including:

  • Urinary Bladder and Prostate Research
  • Pelvic floor disorders treatments
  • Hernia repair and management
  • Scientific Computing and Data Management
  • Research Data Management Practices
  • Ethics in Clinical Research
  • Health and Medical Research Impacts

Jakeman has contributed to several notable publications spanning multiple venues. Significant papers include:

  • Recommendations for evaluation of neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction after spinal cord injury and/or disease, 2020, Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine
  • Promoting FAIR Data Through Community-driven Agile Design: the Open Data Commons for Spinal Cord Injury (odc-sci.org), 2021, Neuroinformatics
  • Translational Stroke Research: Vision and Opportunities, 2020, UNC Libraries
  • Mapping the developmental path for Parkinson's disease therapeutics, 2025, npj Parkinson s Disease

The venues where Jakeman has frequently published include:

  • Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine
  • Neuroinformatics
  • UNC Libraries
  • npj Parkinson s Disease

Jakeman collaborates with a diverse group of researchers, with frequent co-authors being:

  • Adam R. Ferguson
  • Denise G. Tate
  • Tracey Wheeler
  • Giulia I. Lane
  • Martin Forchheimer

Best Publications

  • Basso Mouse Scale for locomotion detects differences in recovery after spinal cord injury in five common mouse strains.

    D. Michele Basso;Lesley C. Fisher;Aileen J. Anderson;Lyn B. Jakeman

  • Structure and Function of a Novel Voltage-gated, Tetrodotoxin-resistant Sodium Channel Specific to Sensory Neurons (∗)

    Lakshmi Sangameswaran;Stephen G. Delgado;Linda M. Fish;Bruce D. Koch

  • Bone marrow transplants provide tissue protection and directional guidance for axons after contusive spinal cord injury in rats.

    Daniel P. Ankeny;Dana M. McTigue;Lyn B. Jakeman

  • Characterization and distribution of putative 5-ht7 receptors in guinea-pig brain.

    Z.P. To;D.W. Bonhaus;R.M. Eglen;L.B. Jakeman

  • A Novel Tetrodotoxin-sensitive, Voltage-gated Sodium Channel Expressed in Rat and Human Dorsal Root Ganglia

    Lakshmi Sangameswaran;Linda M. Fish;Bruce D. Koch;Douglas K. Rabert

  • Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Stimulates Hindlimb Stepping and Sprouting of Cholinergic Fibers after Spinal Cord Injury

    Lyn B. Jakeman;Ping Wei;Zhen Guan;Bradford T. Stokes

  • Behavioral and histological outcomes following graded spinal cord contusion injury in the C57Bl/6 mouse.

    M Ma;D M Basso;P Walters;B T Stokes

  • Cloning and Expression of a 5‐Hydroxytryptamine7 Receptor Positively Coupled to Adenylyl Cyclase

    Ann-ping Tsou;Alan Kosaka;Chinh Bach;Patti Zuppan

  • Traumatic spinal cord injury produced by controlled contusion in mouse.

    Lyn B. Jakeman;Zhen Guan;Ping Wei;Ravi Ponnappan

  • The interaction of RS 25259-197, a potent and selective antagonist, with 5-HT3 receptors, in vitro.

    E.H.F. Wong;R. Clark;E. Leung;D. Loury

  • Axonal projections between fetal spinal cord transplants and the adult rat spinal cord: a neuroanatomical tracing study of local interactions.

    Lyn B. Jakeman;Paul J. Reier

  • Translational Stroke Research: Vision and Opportunities

    Francesca Bosetti;James I. Koenig;Cenk Ayata;Stephen A. Back

  • Don't fence me in: Harnessing the beneficial roles of astrocytes for spinal cord repair

    Robin E. White;Lyn B. Jakeman

  • Monocyte recruitment and myelin removal are delayed following spinal cord injury in mice with CCR2 chemokine receptor deletion

    Manhong Ma;Tao Wei;Landin Boring;Israel F. Charo

  • Operant conditioning of H-reflex can correct a locomotor abnormality after spinal cord injury in rats.

    Yi Chen;Xiang Yang Chen;Lyn B. Jakeman;Lu Chen

  • Operant conditioning of H-reflex in spinal cord-injured rats.

    Xiang Yang Chen;Jonathan R. Wolpaw;Lyn B. Jakeman;Bradford T. Stokes

  • Alterations in chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan expression occur both at and far from the site of spinal contusion injury.

    Ellen M. Andrews;Rebekah J. Richards;Feng Q. Yin;Mariano S. Viapiano

  • Peroxynitrite production and activation of poly (adenosine diphosphate-ribose) synthetase in spinal cord injury.

    G. S. Scott;L. B. Jakeman;B. T. Stokes;Csaba Szabo

  • Quantitative autoradiography of 5-HT4 receptors in brains of three species using two structurally distinct radioligands, [3H]GR113808 and [3H]BIMU-1.

    L.B. Jakeman;Z.P. To;R.M. Eglen;E.H.F. Wong

  • Large animal and primate models of spinal cord injury for the testing of novel therapies

    Brian K. Kwon;Femke Streijger;Caitlin E. Hill;Aileen J. Anderson

  • Common data elements for spinal cord injury clinical research: a National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke project.

    Fin Biering-Sørensen;Sherita Alai;Kim Anderson;Susan Charlifue

  • Experimental modelling of human spinal cord injury: a model that crosses the species barrier and mimics the spectrum of human cytopathology.

    BT Stokes;LB Jakeman

  • Pegylated brain-derived neurotrophic factor shows improved distribution into the spinal cord and stimulates locomotor activity and morphological changes after injury.

    Daniel P. Ankeny;Dana M. McTigue;Zhen Guan;Qiao Yan

  • Regional heterogeneity in astrocyte responses following contusive spinal cord injury in mice.

    Robin E. White;Dana M. McTigue;Lyn B. Jakeman

  • Enhanced axonal growth into a spinal cord contusion injury site in a strain of mouse (129X1/SvJ) with a diminished inflammatory response.

    Manhong Ma;Ping Wei;Tao Wei;Richard M. Ransohoff

  • The Interaction of a New Motor Skill and an Old One: H-Reflex Conditioning and Locomotion in Rats

    Yi Chen;Xiang Yang Chen;Lyn B Jakeman;Gerwin Schalk

Frequent Co-Authors

Bradford T. Stokes
Bradford T. Stokes The Ohio State University
Dana M. McTigue
Dana M. McTigue The Ohio State University
Phillip G. Popovich
Phillip G. Popovich The Ohio State University
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
Jonathan R. Wolpaw National Center for Adaptive Neurotechnologies
Adam R. Ferguson
Adam R. Ferguson University of California, San Francisco
Paul J. Reier
Paul J. Reier University of Florida
Alan Tessler
Alan Tessler Drexel University
Michael S. Beattie
Michael S. Beattie University of California, San Francisco
Haruo Sugiyama
Haruo Sugiyama Osaka University
David S. Tulsky
David S. Tulsky University of Delaware

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