Melissa K. Strong, Pd.D.

Affiliations: 
Otolaryngology University of Washington, Seattle, Seattle, WA 
Area:
Excitotoxicity, critical period, spinal cord injury
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Parents

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Oswald Steward grad student 2006-2012 UC Irvine
 (Resistance to excitotoxic cell death in mouse models of Huntington's disease: Importance of strain background.)
Edwin W. Rubel post-doc 2012- University of Washington
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Publications

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Tong L, Strong MK, Kaur T, et al. (2015) Selective deletion of cochlear hair cells causes rapid age-dependent changes in spiral ganglion and cochlear nucleus neurons. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 35: 7878-91
Strong MK, Southwell AL, Yonan JM, et al. (2012) Age-Dependent Resistance to Excitotoxicity in Htt CAG140 Mice and the Effect of Strain Background. Journal of Huntington's Disease. 1: 221-41
Nielson JL, Strong MK, Steward O. (2011) A reassessment of whether cortical motor neurons die following spinal cord injury. The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 519: 2852-69
Nielson JL, Sears-Kraxberger I, Strong MK, et al. (2010) Unexpected survival of neurons of origin of the pyramidal tract after spinal cord injury. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 30: 11516-28
Strong MK, Blanco JE, Anderson KD, et al. (2009) An investigation of the cortical control of forepaw gripping after cervical hemisection injuries in rats. Experimental Neurology. 217: 96-107
Strong MK, Blanco JE, Anderson KD, et al. (2009) Erratum to “An investigation of the cortical control of forepaw gripping after cervical hemisection injuries in rats” [Exp. Neurol. 217/1 (2009) 96–107] Experimental Neurology. 219: 595
Sgroi D, Cohen RN, Lingenheld EG, et al. (1986) T cell lines derived from the spinal cords of mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis are self reactive. Journal of Immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950). 137: 1850-4
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