Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4331513 | Brain Research | 2007 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Progesterone has been proposed to be protective to the central nervous system following injury. This study assessed progesterone supplementation in the setting of contusional spinal cord injury in male and female rats. Short-term (5Â days of either 4 or 8Â mg/kg progesterone) and long-term (14Â days of either 8 or 16Â mg/kg progesterone) therapy failed to show any significant alteration in locomotor functioning and injury morphometrics after 21Â days. This study does not support progesterone as a potential therapeutic agent in spinal cord injury.
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Authors
Dominic B. Fee, Karin R. Swartz, Kelly M. Joy, Kelly N. Roberts, Nicole N. Scheff, Stephen W. Scheff,