Category Health/Medical

Protein found that Improves Mobility after Spinal Cord Injuries

Injured mouse spinal cord. Credit: UAB

Injured mouse spinal cord. Credit: UAB

Spinal cord injuries cause severe functional disabilities in those who sustain them, including paraplegia or tetraplegia, depending on the scale of the injury. This is due to the degeneration of the spinal pathways that carry nerve signals from the brain to the different parts of the body and vice versa, resulting in loss of mobility and sensitivity underneath the injured area. Over the past few years, different studies have shown that the inflammatory response that develops after an injury contributes to the degeneration of these pathways, thus increasing the functional deficits brought by the injury. However, clinical trials using anti-inflammatory drugs like methylprednisolone have not proven their efficacy.

This work shows for the first time that ...

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At least 60 genetic diseases called Neurocutaneous disorders affect Skin, Nervous system, neurologists report

The extent and severity of manifestations of NF vary greatly from person to person and varies within the same family.  Although isolated café-au-lait spots can be found in many people without NF, individuals with more than 5 of these have a good chance of also having NF1, particularly if they appear on the skin within the first 5 years of life. More than 5 café-au-lait spots are found in 1.8% of newborns, 25-40% of children and 14% of adults with NF1. Freckling under the armpits is a clear sign of NF1.  After puberty, Lisch nodules are present in 97-100% of patients with NF1. Clinically, they do not cause any problems but help to confirm diagnosis.  There are basically 4 types of neurofibromas found in NF1:  Cutaneous: superficial, soft button-like tumours with no malignant potential Subcutaneous: tumours in the dermis that may cause localised pain or tenderness Nodular plexiform: large network of tumours involving the dorsal nerve roots Diffuse plexiform: invasive tumours that may involve all layers of skin, muscle, bone and blood vessels

The extent and severity of manifestations of NF vary greatly from person to person and varies within the same family.
Although isolated café-au-lait spots can be found in many people without NF, individuals with more than 5 of these have a good chance of also having NF1, particularly if they appear on the skin within the first 5 years of life. More than 5 café-au-lait spots are found in 1.8% of newborns, 25-40% of children and 14% of adults with NF1. Freckling under the armpits is a clear sign of NF1.
After puberty, Lisch nodules are present in 97-100% of patients with NF1. Clinically, they do not cause any problems but help to confirm diagnosis.
There are basically 4 types of neurofibromas found in NF1:
Cutaneous: superficial, soft button-like tumours with no malignant potential
Subcutaneous...

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Memory Capacity of Brain is 10X more than Previously thought

Salk scientists computationally reconstructed brain tissue in the hippocampus to study the sizes of connections (synapses). The larger the synapse, the more likely the neuron will send a signal to a neighboring neuron. The team found that there are actually 26 discrete sizes that can change over a span of a few minutes, meaning that the brain has a far great capacity at storing information than previously thought. Pictured here is a synapse between an axon (green) and dendrite (yellow). Credit: Salk Institute

Salk scientists computationally reconstructed brain tissue in the hippocampus to study the sizes of connections (synapses). The larger the synapse, the more likely the neuron will send a signal to a neighboring neuron. The team found that there are actually 26 discrete sizes that can change over a span of a few minutes, meaning that the brain has a far great capacity at storing information than previously thought. Pictured here is a synapse between an axon (green) and dendrite (yellow). Credit: Salk Institute

The brain’s memory capacity is in the petabyte range, as much as entire Web. The new work answers a longstanding question as to how the brain is so energy efficient and could help engineers build computers that are incredibly powerful but also conserve energy.

“This is a real bombshel...

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Cells from Cow Knee Joints used to Grow New Cartilage Tissue in Lab

Production of neocartilage tissues using primary chondrocytes

Production of neocartilage tissues using primary chondrocytes

In an effort to develop a method for cartilage tissue engineering, Umeå Uni Sweden researchers have successfully used cartilage cells from cow knee joints. By creating a successful method with conditions conducive to growing healthy cartilage tissue, the findings could help lead to a new cure for osteoarthritis using stem cell-based tissue engineering.

Articular cartilage is tissue that is found on all the joint surfaces in the body. Since the tissue is not supplied with any blood vessels, it has a low self-repair capacity. Joint injuries and wear often damage cartilage tissue, leading to a condition called osteoarthritis. In 2012 in Sweden, 26.6% of all people aged 45 yrs or older were diagnosed with OA.

“There is currently no...

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