Johns Hopkins University, Department of Neuroscience

Lawrence Schramm - Recent Papers

Miller, C.O., D.G. Johns, and L.P. Schramm. Spinal interneurons play a minor role in generating ongoing renal sympathetic nerve activity in spinally intact rats. Brain Research 918: 101-106, 2001. [PDF]

Krassioukov, A.V., D.G. Johns, and L.P. Schramm. Sensitivity of sympathetically correlated spinal interneurons, renal sympathetic nerve activity, and arterial pressure to somatic and visceral stimuli after chronic spinal injury. Journal of Neurotrauma. J. Neurotrauma 19: 1521-1529, (2002). [PDF]

Tang, X., N. D. Neckel, L. P. Schramm. The locations and morphologies of sympathetically correlated neurons in the T10 spinal segment of the rat. Brain Research 976: 185 - 193, 2003. [PDF]

Tang, X., A.R. Chander, L. P. Schramm. Sympathetic activity and the underlying action potentials in sympathetic nerves: A simulation. Am. J. Physiol. 285: 1504-1513, 2003. [PDF]

Tang, X, N. Neckel, L.P. Schramm. Spinal interneurons infected by renal injection of pseudorabies virus in the rat. Brain Research 1004: 1-7, 2004. [PDF]

Pan Baohan, Kim Esther J., Schramm Lawrence.  Increased Close Appositions between Corticospinal Tract Axons and Spinal Sympathetic Neurons after Spinal Chord Injury in Rats.  Journal of Neurotrauma, 22:1399-1410, 2005. [PDF]

Pan, B., Zahner, MR., Kulikowicz, E., Schramm, LP., The effects of corticospinal tract stimulation on renal sympathetic nerve activity in rats with intact and chronically lesioned spinal cords.  Am. J. Physiology., Regul. Integr. Comp. Physiol. 293: R178-R184, 2007.  [PDF]


 

 

 

 

 

 

 
© 2005 Department of Neuroscience, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine