Factors influencing frontal cortex development and recovery from early frontal injury
Autor: | Celeste Halliwell, Douglas O. Frost, Wendy Comeau, Bryan Kolb, Robbin Gibb |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Neuronal Plasticity
Frontal cortex Critical Period Psychological Rehabilitation Sensory system Context (language use) Recovery of Function General Medicine Article Frontal Lobe Developmental Neuroscience Frontal lobe Brain Injuries Pediatrics Perinatology and Child Health Neuroplasticity Humans Child Prefrontal cortex Consumer neuroscience Psychology Neuroscience Critical period |
Zdroj: | Developmental Neurorehabilitation. 12:269-278 |
ISSN: | 1751-8431 1751-8423 |
DOI: | 10.3109/17518420903087715 |
Popis: | Neocortical development represents more than a simple unfolding of a genetic blueprint but rather represents a complex dance of genetic and environmental events that interact to adapt the brain to fit a particular environmental context. Although most cortical regions are sensitive to a wide range of experiential factors during development and later in life, the prefrontal cortex appears to be unusually sensitive to perinatal experiences and relatively immune to many adulthood experiences relative to other neocortical regions.One way to examine experience-dependent prefrontal development is to conduct studies in which experiential perturbations are related neuronal morphology. This review of the research reveals both pre- and post-natal factors have important effects on prefrontal development and behaviour. Such factors include psychoactive drugs, including both illicit drugs and prescription drugs, stress, gonadal hormones and sensory and motor stimulation. A second method of study is to examine both the effects of perinatal prefrontal injury on the development of the remaining cerebral mantle and correlated behaviours as well as the effects of post-injury rehabilitation programmes on the anatomical and behavioural measures.Prefrontal injury alters cerebral development in a developmental-stage dependent manner with perinatal injuries having far more deleterious effects than similar injuries later in infancy. The outcome of perinatal injuries can be modified, however, by rehabilitation with many of the factors shown to influence prefrontal development in the otherwise normal brain. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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