2013 - Member of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM)
Mary Bartlett Bunge mostly deals with Schwann cell, Anatomy, Spinal cord, Spinal cord injury and Transplantation. His Schwann cell study is associated with Cell biology. He is interested in Axon, which is a field of Anatomy.
He has researched Spinal cord in several fields, including Cord, Internal medicine, Retrograde tracing and Endocrinology. Mary Bartlett Bunge focuses mostly in the field of Spinal cord injury, narrowing it down to matters related to Brainstem and, in some cases, Tropomyosin receptor kinase B. His Transplantation study combines topics in areas such as Olfactory ensheathing glia and Connective tissue, Pathology.
Mary Bartlett Bunge mainly focuses on Schwann cell, Spinal cord, Spinal cord injury, Cell biology and Anatomy. His Schwann cell study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Basal lamina, Myelin, Axon, Regeneration and Extracellular matrix. His research in Spinal cord intersects with topics in Lesion, Cord, Central nervous system and Transplantation.
His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Brainstem, Olfactory ensheathing glia and Glial scar. His study in Spinal cord injury is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Anesthesia, Surgery, Neuroprotection and Necrosis, Pathology. The study incorporates disciplines such as Neuroglia, Neurite, Neuron and Dorsal root ganglion in addition to Cell biology.
His main research concerns Axon, Spinal cord injury, Schwann cell, Transplantation and Spinal cord. His Axon study is concerned with the larger field of Neuroscience. The Spinal cord injury study combines topics in areas such as Lesion, Endocrinology, Internal medicine, Rat model and Anatomy.
Schwann cell is a subfield of Cell biology that Mary Bartlett Bunge studies. In the subject of general Transplantation, his work in Cell transplantation is often linked to Glial fibrillary acidic protein, Pvdf trfe and Food and drug administration, thereby combining diverse domains of study. His Spinal cord research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Surgery, Astrocyte and Basement membrane.
Mary Bartlett Bunge mainly investigates Schwann cell, Transplantation, Neuroscience, Spinal cord and Axon. His work in Schwann cell is not limited to one particular discipline; it also encompasses Neurotrophin. His Transplantation research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Spinal Cord Regeneration, Spinal cord injury and Olfactory ensheathing glia.
Mary Bartlett Bunge usually deals with Spinal cord injury and limits it to topics linked to Regeneration and Anatomy, Inhibitory postsynaptic potential and Systemic administration. His research integrates issues of Lesion and Internal medicine in his study of Spinal cord. Axon is a subfield of Cell biology that Mary Bartlett Bunge investigates.
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cAMP and Schwann cells promote axonal growth and functional recovery after spinal cord injury
Damien P. Pearse;Francisco Carlos Pereira;Alexander E. Marcillo;Margaret L. Bates.
Nature Medicine (2004)
Long-Distance Axonal Regeneration in the Transected Adult Rat Spinal Cord Is Promoted by Olfactory Ensheathing Glia Transplants
Almudena Ramón-Cueto;Giles W. Plant;Jesus Avila;Mary Bartlett Bunge;Mary Bartlett Bunge.
The Journal of Neuroscience (1998)
Axonal regeneration into Schwann cell‐seeded guidance channels grafted into transected adult rat spinal cord
Xiao Ming Xu;Véronique Guénard;Naomi Kleitman;Mary Bartlett Bunge.
The Journal of Comparative Neurology (1995)
Schwann Cell But Not Olfactory Ensheathing Glia Transplants Improve Hindlimb Locomotor Performance in the Moderately Contused Adult Rat Thoracic Spinal Cord
Toshihiro Takami;Martin Oudega;Margaret L. Bates;Patrick M. Wood.
The Journal of Neuroscience (2002)
Fine structure of nerve fibers and growth cones of isolated sympathetic neurons in culture.
Mary Bartlett Bunge.
Journal of Cell Biology (1973)
A combination of BDNF and NT-3 promotes supraspinal axonal regeneration into Schwann cell grafts in adult rat thoracic spinal cord.
Xiao Ming Xu;Véronique Guénard;Naomi Kleitman;Patrick Aebischer.
Experimental Neurology (1995)
Differentiation of axon-related Schwann cells in vitro. I. Ascorbic acid regulates basal lamina assembly and myelin formation
C F Eldridge;M B Bunge;R P Bunge;P M Wood.
Journal of Cell Biology (1987)
Bridging Schwann cell transplants promote axonal regeneration from both the rostral and caudal stumps of transected adult rat spinal cord
Xiao Ming Xu;Aqing Chen;Veronique Guenard;Naomi Kleitman.
Journal of Neurocytology (1997)
Can experiments in nonhuman primates expedite the translation of treatments for spinal cord injury in humans
Grégoire Courtine;Mary Bartlett Bunge;James W Fawcett;Robert G Grossman.
Nature Medicine (2007)
Schwann cells genetically modified to secrete human BDNF promote enhanced axonal regrowth across transected adult rat spinal cord
Philippe Menei;Claudia Montero‐Menei;Scott R. Whittemore;Richard P. Bunge.
European Journal of Neuroscience (1998)
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