Person

Julie Kreider

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Related publications (3)

Please note that this is not a complete list of this person’s publications. It includes only semantically relevant works. For a full list, please refer to Infoscience.

Cortico–reticulo–spinal circuit reorganization enables functional recovery after severe spinal cord contusion

Grégoire Courtine, Bernard Schneider, Quentin Barraud, Léonie Asboth, Mark Andrew Anderson, Lucia Florinda Friedli Wittler, Laetitia Danielle Philippine Baud, Polina Shkorbatova, Janine Beauparlant, Galyna Pidpruzhnykova, Selin Anil, Julie Kreider, Cristina Martinez Gonzalez, Elodie Rey

Severe spinal cord contusions interrupt nearly all brain projections to lumbar circuits producing leg movement. Failure of these projections to reorganize leads to permanent paralysis. Here we modeled these injuries in rodents. A severe contusion abolished ...
2018

Engagement of the Rat Hindlimb Motor Cortex across Natural Locomotor Behaviors

Silvestro Micera, Grégoire Courtine, Rubia van den Brand, Jacopo Rigosa, Lucia Florinda Friedli Wittler, Janine Beauparlant, Simone Ellen Joze Duis, Julie Kreider

Contrary to cats and primates, cortical contribution to hindlimb locomotor movements is not critical in rats. However, the importance of the motor cortex to regain locomotion after neurological disorders in rats suggests that cortical engagement in hindlim ...
Soc Neuroscience2016

Spatiotemporal neuromodulation therapies engaging muscle synergies improve motor control after spinal cord injury

Silvestro Micera, Stéphanie Lacour, Grégoire Courtine, Jocelyne Bloch, Eduardo Martin Moraud, Quentin Barraud, Léonie Asboth, Marco Capogrosso, Pavel Musienko, Rubia van den Brand, Ivan Rusev Minev, Nikolaus Wenger, Jérôme Gandar, Arthur Edouard Hirsch, Laetitia Danielle Philippine Baud, Natalia Pavlova, Simone Ellen Joze Duis, Julie Kreider, Andrea Mortera

Electrical neuromodulation of lumbar segments improves motor control after spinal cord injury in animal models and humans. However, the physiological principles underlying the effect of this intervention remain poorly understood, which has limited the ther ...
Nature Publishing Group2016

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