injury research
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2022 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-6
Author(s):  
Jennie Ponsford ◽  
Gershon Spitz ◽  
Amelia J Hicks

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tongtong Liu ◽  
Liping Yang ◽  
Huimin Mao ◽  
Fang Ma ◽  
Yuyang Wang ◽  
...  

Background: Podocyte injury has a direct causal relationship with proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis and, on a chronic level, can lead to irreversible disease progression. Podocyte injury plays a critically decisive role in the development of proteinuric kidney disease. In recent years, the research on podocyte injury has developed rapidly all over the world. However, no report has summarized the field of podocyte injury as a whole to date. Using bibliometric analysis, this study aimed to evaluate the current state of worldwide podocyte injury research in the last 30 years and identify important achievements, primary research fields, and emerging trends.Methods: Publications related to podocyte injury were retrieved from Web of Science Core Collection. HistCite, VOSviewer, CiteSpace, and the Bibliometrix Package were used for bibliometric analysis and visualization, including the analysis of the overall distribution of annual outputs, leading countries, active institutions and authors, core journals, co-cited references, and keywords. Total global citation score and total local citation score were used to assess the quality and impact of publications.Results: A total of 2,669 publications related to podocyte injury were identified. Publications related to podocyte injury tended to increase continuously. A total of 10,328 authors from 2,171 institutions in 69 countries published studies related to podocyte injury. China (39.46%) was the most prolific country, and the number of citations of studies in the United States (cited 36,896 times) ranked first. Moin A Saleem, John Cijiang He, and Zhihong Liu were the top three contributing authors, and Journal of the American Society of Nephrology and Kidney International were the most popular journals in the field. “Diabetic nephropathy” is the primary focus area of podocyte injury research, and “autophagy,” “microRNA,” and “inflammation” were the top keywords of emerging research hotspots, and traditional Chinese medicine monomer may be a neglected research gap.Conclusion: Our research found that global publications on podocyte injury have increased dramatically. Diabetic nephropathy is the main research field of podocyte injury, whereas autophagy, microRNA, and inflammation are the top topics getting current attention from scholars and which may become the next focus in podocyte injury research.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Supriya S Wariyar ◽  
Alden D Brown ◽  
Tina Tian ◽  
Tana S Pottorf ◽  
Patricia J. Ward

Enhancing axon regeneration is a major focus of nerve injury research, and the quality of the surgical nerve repair plays a large role in the aggregate success of nerve regeneration. Additionally, exercise is known to promote successful axon regeneration after surgical nerve repair. In this study, we asked how exercise-induced nerve regeneration is affected when a transected nerve is repaired with or without fibrin glue. Fibrin glue repaired nerves exhibited greater vasculature within the tissue bridge compared to nerves that were intrinsically repaired. Fibrin glue repaired nerves also exhibited more robust axon regeneration after exercise compared to nerves that were not repaired with fibrin glue. When angiogenesis of the tissue bridge was prevented, exercise was unable to enhance regeneration despite the presence of fibrin glue. These findings suggest that the biological properties of fibrin glue enhance angiogenesis within the repair site, and a vascularized bridge is required for enhanced axon elongation with exercise. The combination of fibrin glue repair and exercise resulted in notable differences in vascular growth, axon elongation, neuromuscular junction reinnervation, and functional recovery. Fibrin glue should be considered as an adjuvant for nerve repair to enhance the subsequent efficacy of activity- and physical therapy-based treatment interventions.


Author(s):  
Heather L. Gainforth ◽  
Rhyann C. McKay ◽  
Femke Hoekstra ◽  
Jocelyn Maffin ◽  
Kathryn M. Sibley ◽  
...  

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