66 resultados para sensory decline


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Balance maintenance relies on a complex interplay between many different sensory modalities. Although optimal multisensory processing is thought to decline with ageing, inefficient integration is particularly associated with falls in older adults. We investigated whether improved balance control, following a novel balance training intervention, was associated with more efficient multisensory integration in older adults, particularly those who have fallen in the past. Specifically, 76 healthy and fall-prone older adults were allocated to either a balance training programme conducted over 5 weeks or to a passive control condition. Balance training involved a VR display in which the on-screen position of a target object was controlled by shifts in postural balance on a Wii balance board. Susceptibility to the sound-induced flash illusion, before and after the intervention (or control condition), was used as a measure of multisensory function. Whilst balance and postural control improved for all participants assigned to the Intervention group, improved functional balance was correlated with more efficient multisensory processing in the fall-prone older adults only. Our findings add to growing evidence suggesting important links between balance control and multisensory interactions in the ageing brain and have implications for the development of interventions designed to reduce the risk of falls.

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We investigated the nature of sensory integration deficits in postural control of young adults with ASD. Postural control was assessed in a fixed environment, and in three environments in which sensory information about body sway from visual, proprioceptive or both channels was inaccurate. Furthermore, two levels of inaccurate information were used within each channel (gain 1 and 1.6). ASD participants showed greater postural sway when information from proprioceptive and both channels were inaccurate. In addition, control participants' ellipse area at gain 1.6 was identical to ASD participants' at gain 1, reflecting hyper-reactivity in ASD. Our results provide evidence for hyper-reactivity in posture-related sensory information, which reflects a general, rather than channel-specific sensory integration impairment in ASD.

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Background: Sensory neurones from the trigeminal nerve innervate the oro-facial region and teeth. Transient receptor potential channels (TRPs) expressed by these neurones are responsible for relaying sensory information such as changes in ambient temperature, mechanical sensations and pain. Study of TRP channel expression and regulation in human sensory neurones therefore merits investigation to improve our understanding of allodynia and hyperalgesia. Objective: The objective of this study was to differentiate human dental pulp stem cells (hDPSCs) towards a neuronal phenotype (peripheral neuronal equivalents; PNEs) and employ this model to study TRP channel sensitisation. Method: hDPSCs were enriched by preferential adhesion to fibronectin, plated on coverslips (thickness 0) coated with poly-l-ornithine and laminin and then differentiated for 7 days in neurobasal A medium with additional supplementation. A whole cell patch clamp technique was used to investigate whether TRP channels on PNE membranes were modulated in the presence of nerve growth factor (NGF). PNEs were treated with NGF for 20 minutes immediately before experimentation and then stimulated for TRPA1 activity using cinnamaldehyde. Peak currents were read at 80 mV and -80 mV and compared to peak currents recorded in untreated PNEs. Data were analysed and plotted using Clampfit9 software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, California, USA). Result: Results showed for the first time that pre-treatment of PNEs by NGF produced significantly larger inward and outward currents demonstrating that TRPA1 channels on PNE membranes were capable of becoming sensitised following treatment with NGF. Conclusion: Sensitisation of TRPA1 by NGF provides evidence of a mechanism for rapid neuronal sensitisation that is independent of TRPA1 gene expression