Leah Hannah Carr MD
Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine Specialist | Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine
3401 CIVIC CENTER BLVD PHILADELPHIA PA, 19104About
Dr. Leah Carr is a Neonatal-Perinatal Physician practicing in PHILADELPHIA, PA. Dr. Carr cares for the critically ill newborn and premature infants. Neonatal-Perinatal Physicians treat conditions such as breathing disorders, birth defects, infections, and any other life-threatening medical problems. They coordinate with their young patients families and other physicians to determine appropriate treatment.
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Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Contribution of group III and IV muscle afferents to multisensorial spinal motor control in cats.
- Interaction between cutaneous and muscle afferent activity in polysynaptic reflex pathways: a human experimental study.
- Neither a general flexor nor a withdrawal pattern of nociceptive reflexes evoked from the human foot.
- Contribution of TTX-resistant C-fibres and Adelta-fibres to nociceptive flexor-reflex and non-flexor-reflex pathways in cats.
- Nociceptive input to ascending tract neurones forwarding information from low threshold cutaneous and muscle afferents in cats.
- Nociceptive input to spinal interneurones in reflex pathways from group II muscle afferents in cats.
- Convergence from Lb, cutaneous and joint afferents in reflex pathways to motoneurones.
- Characteristics of the excitatory pathway from group II muscle afferents to alpha motoneurones.
- Parallel nociceptive reflex pathways with negative and positive feedback functions to foot extensors in the cat.
- Phrenic, intercostal and sympathetic activity related to fictive locomotor activity of limb muscles in spinal cats.
- Two types of motor modulation underlying human stepping evoked by spinal cord electrical stimulation (SCES).
- Nociceptive reflexes evoked by TTX-resistant C-fibre afferents and their sensitivity to opioids in the cat.
- Group II excitation in motoneurones and double sensory innervation of extensor digitorum brevis.
- Rhythmic phrenic, intercostal and sympathetic activity in relation to limb and trunk motor activity in spinal cats.
- alpha-Neurexins are required for efficient transmitter release and synaptic homeostasis at the mouse neuromuscular junction.
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