Margaret Vizzard
Professor
Department of Neurological Sciences
University of Vermont
United States of America
Biography
Prof Margaret Vizzard, his Ph.D.Physiology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA. He has successfully completed his Administrative responsibilities as Professor. His research has includednterests concern the neural control, organization, electrical and neurochemical properties of urinary bladder and how these properties are altered following neural injury, disease or during early postnatal development. Current rodent models of bladder dysfunction include: spinal cord injury, peripheral nerve injury, acute and chronic bladder inflammation, bladder pain syndrome, Parkinson’s disease and partial bladder outlet obstruction. The Vizzard laboratory defines the changes that occur with injury/disease or postnatal maturation and then determines what factors control and regulate these plastic changes. We aim to define interventional strategies that improve bladder function in the face of neural injury or disease. Within the Vizzard lab, we emphasize the contribution of neur opeptides and growth factors to voiding dysfunction as well as an emerging interest in the role of TRP channels.
Research Interest
The Vizzard laboratory research interests concern the neural control, organization, electrical and neurochemical properties of urinary bladder and how these properties are altered following neural injury, disease or during early postnatal development. Current rodent models of bladder dysfunction include: spinal cord injury, peripheral nerve injury, acute and chronic bladder inflammation, bladder pain syndrome, Parkinson’s disease and partial bladder outlet obstruction. The Vizzard laboratory defines the changes that occur with injury/disease or postnatal maturation and then determines what factors control and regulate these plastic changes. We aim to define interventional strategies that improve bladder function in the face of neural injury or disease. Within the Vizzard lab, we emphasize the contribution of neuropeptides and growth factors to voiding dysfunction as well as an emerging interest in the role of TRP channels. The Vizzard laboratory uses a multidisciplinary approach to address the above questions. Some of these techniques and approaches include: conventional and transneuronal tracing using neurotropic viruses (eg., pseudorabies virus and herpes simplex virus-type to map bladder reflex circuitry in health and disease; immunostaining for neuroactive compounds to determine if the balance of neuroactive compounds is altered to push the system into an overactive or underactive mode of operation; biochemical and molecular approaches to determine what factors may be altered centrally (spinal cord) or peripherally (dorsal root ganglia, pelvic ganglia, urinary bladder); whole-cell patch clamp recording and intracellular recording from dorsal root ganglion or pelvic ganglion cells to determine if cells are more or less excitable in health or disease; whole animal bladder function testing to evaluate the effects of interventional strategies on bladder function in health and disease; in vitro analysis of urinary bladder strips to assess spontaneous and stimulation evoked changes in contractility.
Publications
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Vizzard MA, Erdman SL, Förstermann U, de Groat WC. Differential distribution of nitric oxide synthase in neural pathways to the urogenital organs (urethra, penis, urinary bladder) of the rat. Brain research. 1994 May 23;646(2):279-91.
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de Groat WC, Araki I, Vizzard MA, Yoshiyama M, Yoshimura N, Sugaya K, Tai C, Roppolo JR. Developmental and injury induced plasticity in the micturition reflex pathway. Behavioural brain research. 1998 May 31;92(2):127-40.
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Vizzard MA. Changes in urinary bladder neurotrophic factor mRNA and NGF protein following urinary bladder dysfunction. Experimental neurology. 2000 Jan 31;161(1):273-84.