Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Sara M. Venier investigates the physiological and molecular responses to repeated traumatic brain injury (TBI). Her research has focused on analyzing changes in the brain's transcriptome and proteome, identifying processes such as neurogenesis, inflammation, and cell death following injury. Additionally, her work examines blood-brain barrier breakdown and astrocyte reactivity in the context of TBI, even in the absence of observable behavioral changes.
Venier collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Kartik Balachandran, Jeffrey C. Wolchok, and Celeste Dunn, as well as Syed F. Ali from the National Center for Toxicological Research. Her scholarly output includes two publications with a total of 25 citations and an h-index of 2. She is noted as recently active in her research.
Metrics
- h-index: 2
- Publications: 2
- Citations: 25
Selected Publications
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Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i> (2022)
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Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury (2021)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury
- Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i>
- Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury
- Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i>
- Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury
- Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i>
- Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury
- Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Astrocyte Reactivity Evident in the Absence of Behavioral Changes after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury
- Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i>
- Functional Analysis of the Cortical Transcriptome and Proteome Reveal Neurogenesis, Inflammation, and Cell Death after Repeated Traumatic Brain Injury <i>In vivo</i>
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