Neuroscience

Month

March 2013

Mar 11, 2013159 notes
#art #visual perception #neurological disorders #neurodegenerative diseases #neuroscience #science
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Mar 10, 2013153 notes
#tech #brain #3D modeling #kinect fusion #augmented reality #neurosurgery #medicine #science
Mar 10, 20131,383 notes
#3D printing technology #3D-printed implant #implants #skull #bone damage #biomedicine #science
Mar 10, 201359 notes
#animals #marsupials #handedness #hand preference #corpus callosum #neuroscience #science
Mar 10, 201394 notes
#brain #brain activity #Brain Activity Map #brain-mapping #neuroimaging #technology #neuroscience #science
Mar 10, 2013171 notes
#chewing gum #concentration #memory tasks #STM #performance #psychology #neuroscience #science
Mar 10, 201357 notes
#alzheimer's disease #dementia #astroglia #learning #memory #neurons #sodium phenylbutyrate #neuroscience #science
Mar 10, 201329 notes
#MS #chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency #neuroimaging #neurobiology #science
People with MS-Related Memory and Attention Problems Have Signs of Extensive Brain Damage

People with multiple sclerosis (MS) who have cognitive problems, or problems with memory, attention, and concentration, have more damage to areas of the brain involved in cognitive processes than people with MS who do not have cognitive problems, according to a study published in the March 6, 2013, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

The study used a type of MRI brain scan called diffusion tensor imaging along with regular MRI scans to compare brain measurements in 20 people with MS who had related cognitive problems, 35 people with MS who did not have cognitive problems and 30 healthy participants.

The diffusion tensor images showed that, compared to the healthy control participants, 49 percent of the investigated brain white matter had impaired integrity in those with MS and no cognitive problems, while impaired integrity was evident in 76 percent of the investigated white matter of those with MS and related cognitive problems. In the people with MS-related cognitive problems, the extra white matter dysfunction was particularly seen in areas important for cognitive skills, such as the thalamus.

“This state-of-the-art imaging technology confirms that cognitive symptoms in MS have a biological basis,” said study author Hanneke E. Hulst, MSc, of VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. “The consequence of this discovery is that imaging can now be used to capture a wider spectrum of changes in the brains of people with MS, and will therefore help determine more accurately whether new treatments are helping with all aspects of the disease.” Cognitive problems are common in MS, affecting up to 65 percent of people with the disease.

Mar 10, 201338 notes
#MS #neuroimaging #diffusion tensor images #white matter #cognitive disorders #neuroscience #science
Virus and genes involved in causation of schizophrenia

For the first time, an international team of researchers has found that a combination of a particular virus in the mother and a specific gene variant in the child increases the risk of the child developing schizophrenia.

Viruses and genes interact in a way that may increase the risk of developing schizophrenia significantly. This happens already in the developing foetus.

An international team of scientists led by Aarhus University, Denmark, has made this discovery. As the first in the world, they scanned the entire genome of hundreds of sick and healthy people to see if there is an interaction between genes and a very common virus - cytomegalovirus - and to see whether the interaction influences the risk of developing schizophrenia.

And it does.

Women that have been infected by the virus - and around 70% has - will have a statistically significant increased risk of giving birth to a child who later develops schizophrenia if the child also has the aforementioned gene variant. This variant is found in 15 percent. The risk is five times higher than usual, the researchers report in Molecular Psychiatry.

No cause for alarm

People infected with cytomegalovirus most often do not know it, as the infection by the virus, which belongs to the herpes virus family, is usually very mild. But the researchers stress that there is no cause for alarm - even if both risk factors are present in mother and child, there may be a variety of other factors that prevents disease development in the child.

But as schizophrenia affects 1 per cent of the global population, this new knowledge is very important.

"In the longer term, the development of an effective vaccine against cytomegalovirus may help to prevent many cases of schizophrenia," says Professor of Medical Genetics at Aarhus University, Anders Børglum.

"And our discovery emphasizes that mental disorders such as schizophrenia may arise in the context of an interaction between genes and biological environmental factors very early in life."

Mar 9, 2013134 notes
#schizophrenia #virus #cytomegalovirus #genes #GWA #genomics #infection #science
Mind-controlled exoskeleton to help disabled people walk again

Every year thousands of people in Europe are paralysed by a spinal cord injury. Many are young adults, facing the rest of their lives confined to a wheelchair. Although no medical cure currently exists, in the future they could be able to walk again thanks to a mind-controlled robotic exoskeleton being developed by EU-funded researchers.

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The system, based on innovative ‘Brain-neural-computer interface’ (BNCI) technology - combined with a light-weight exoskeleton attached to users’ legs and a virtual reality environment for training - could also find applications in the rehabilitation of stroke victims and in assisting astronauts rebuild muscle mass after prolonged periods in space.

In the United Kingdom, every eight hours someone suffers a spinal cord injury, often leading to partial or full lower-body paralysis. In the United States, more than 250.000 people are living with paralysis as a result of damage to their spinal cord, usually because of a traffic accident, fall or sporting injury. Many are under the age of 50, and with no known medical cure or way of repairing damaged spinal nerves they face the rest of their lives in a wheelchair.

But by bypassing the spinal cord entirely and routing brain signals to a robotic exoskeleton, they should be able to get back on their feet. That is the ultimate goal of researchers working in the ‘Mind-controlled orthosis and VR-training environment for walk empowering' (Mindwalker) project, a three-year initiative supported by EUR 2.75 million in funding from the European Commission.

'Mindwalker was proposed as a very ambitious project intended to investigate promising approaches to exploit brain signals for the purpose of controlling advanced orthosis, and to design and implement a prototype system demonstrating the potential of related technologies,' explains Michel Ilzkovitz, the project coordinator at Space Applications Services in Belgium.

The team’s approach relies on an advanced BNCI system that converts electroencephalography (EEG) signals from the brain, or electromyography (EMG) signals from shoulder muscles, into electronic commands to control the exoskeleton.

The Laboratory of Neurophysiology and Movement Biomechanics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) focused on the exploitation of EEG and EMG signals treated by an artificial neural network, while the Foundation Santa Lucia in Italy developed techniques based on EMG signals modelled by the coupling of neural and biomechanical oscillators.

One approach for controlling the exoskeleton uses so-called ‘steady-state visually evoked potential’, a method that reads flickering visual stimuli produced at different frequencies to induce correlated EEG signals. Detection of these EEG signals is used to trigger commands such as ‘stand’, ‘walk’, ‘faster’ or ‘slower’.

A second approach is based on processing EMG signals generated by the user’s shoulders and exploits the natural arm-leg coordination in human walking: arm-swing patterns can be perceived in this way and converted into control signals commanding the exoskeleton’s legs.

A third approach, ‘ideation’, is also based on EEG-signal processing. It uses the identification and exploitation of EEG Theta cortical signals produced by the natural mental process associated with walking. The approach was investigated by the Mindwalker team but had to be dropped due to the difficulty, and time needed, in turning the results of early experiments into a fully exploitable system.

Regardless of which method is used, the BNCI signals have to be filtered and processed before they can be used to control the exoskeleton. To achieve this, the Mindwalker researchers fed the signals into a ‘Dynamic recurrent neural network’ (DRNN), a processing technique capable of learning and exploiting the dynamic character of the BNCI signals.

'This is appealing for kinematic control and allows a much more natural and fluid way of controlling an exoskeleton,' Mr Ilzkovitz says.

The team adopted a similarly practical approach for collecting EEG signals from the user’s scalp. Most BNCI systems are either invasive, requiring electrodes to be placed directly into brain tissue, or require users to wear a ‘wet’ capon their head, necessitating lengthy fitting procedures and the use of special gels to reduce the electrical resistance at the interface between the skin and the electrodes. While such systems deliver signals of very good quality and signal-to-noise ratio, they are impractical for everyday use.

The Mindwalker team therefore turned to a ‘dry’ technology developed by Berlin-based eemagine Medical Imaging Solutions: a cap covered in electrodes that the user can fit themselves, and which uses innovative electronic components to amplify and optimise signals before sending them to the neural network.

'The dry EEG cap can be placed by the subject on their head by themselves in less than a minute, just like a swimming cap,' Mr Ilzkovitz says.

Read More →

Mar 9, 2013507 notes
#tech #exoskeletons #BNCI #spinal cord injury #paralysis #robotics #mind control #mindwalker #EEG #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 2013130 notes
#anorexia #anorexia nervosa #eating disorders #deep brain stimulation #neuroimaging #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 201384 notes
#neuroimaging #brain #brain activity #blood flow #nucleus accumbens #fMRI #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 201371 notes
#brain cells #virus #brain infections #granule cells #cerebral cortex #medicine #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 2013118 notes
#emotions #happiness #hypocretin #neurotransmitter #narcolepsy #depression #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 201375 notes
#honeybees #caffeine #memory #LTM #animal behavior #neuroscience #science
Mar 9, 2013105 notes
#science #brain injury #TBI #brain cells #blood flow #electrical activity #neurons #synapses #brain tissue #neuroscience
Mar 8, 2013148 notes
#animals #animal communication #sniffing #social disorders #social behavior #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 201357 notes
#brain #blood vessels #dementia #alzheimer's disease #amyloid beta #neuroscience #science
Worming Our Way to New Treatments for Alzheimer’s Disease

According to a 2012 World Health Organization report, over 35 million people worldwide currently have dementia, a number that is expected to double by 2030 (66 million) and triple by 2050 (115 million). Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of dementia, has no cure and there are currently only a handful of approved treatments that slow, but do not prevent, the progression of symptoms.

New drug development, no matter the disease, is a slow, expensive, and risky process. Thus, innovative techniques to study and assess the possibilities of already-existing drugs for different diseases can be used to alleviate the traditional burdens of cost and time. Detailed in their new article in Biological Psychiatry, researchers from the University of Washington, led by Dr. Brian Kraemer, have developed an exciting new approach to screening potential new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease using C. elegans, a small transparent worm.

Their focus was on tau, a protein involved in maintaining brain cell structure. In Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders, tau protein becomes abnormally modified and forms clumps of protein called aggregates. These aggregates are a hallmark of the dying nerve cells in Alzheimer’s disease and other related disorders. Diseases with abnormal tau are called tauopathies.

Dr. Kraemer’s lab previously developed a worm model for tauopathy by expressing human tau in C. elegans nerve cells. This model has behavioral abnormalities, accumulates abnormal tau protein, and exhibits loss of nerve cells—all of which are general features of Alzheimer’s disease.

Using their worm model for this study, they screened a library of 1,120 drugs approved for human use and tested each at three different concentrations to identify compounds that suppress the effects of abnormal tau aggregation.

“We have identified six compounds capable of reliably alleviating tau induced behavioral abnormalities in our C. elegans model for tauopathy. In a human cultured cell model for abnormal tau protein, we have also seen that azaperone treatment can decrease the amount of abnormal tau,” said Kraemer.

Azaperone, an antipsychotic drug, normally binds to certain dopamine receptors found in nerve cells. They demonstrated that removing those receptors in either C. elegans or human cells has the same effect as azaperone treatment, indicating that azaperone and related drugs should alter abnormal tau accumulation. Other antipsychotic drugs also have a similar effect to azaperone.

Tests of these compounds for anti-tau properties are now underway in existing mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease.

“This study is an exemplary instance of how a simple C. elegans model system may be used to rapidly screen drugs for diseases and evaluate mechanism of action,” said Drs. Sangeetha Iyer and Jonathan Pierce-Shimomura, authors of a commentary that accompanies this article.

Dr. John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry, agrees and added: “Studying the worm, C. elegans, has already provided us with fundamental insights into how the brain develops. The new approach described by McCormick and colleagues suggests that this animal model may be a powerful new approach to studying novel treatments that prevent its decline.”

Mar 8, 201348 notes
#alzheimer's disease #dementia #C. elegans #tau protein #nerve cells #brain cells #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 201380 notes
#longevity #lifespan #resveratrol #animal model #aging #red wine #medicine #science
Mar 8, 201369 notes
#brain #fruit flies #neurons #stem cells #fetal development #nutrition #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 2013158 notes
#glial cells #cognition #progenitor cells #neuronal connections #learning #astrocytes #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 201363 notes
#grid cells #electrical activity #virtual environment #neural system #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 2013110 notes
#glial cells #astrocytes #brain #neuronal circuits #synapses #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 2013123 notes
#neurons #memory formation #nucleus #neural networks #gene expression #epigenetics #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 201367 notes
#nerve cells #schwann cells #peripheral neuropathy #mitochondria #fatty acids #neuroscience #science
Mar 8, 2013116 notes
#obesity #inflammation #fat cells #adipocytes #immune cells #leptin #T cells #medicine #science
Mar 7, 2013555 notes
#science #brain #alzheimer's disease #dementia #nerve cells #memory #hippocampus #animal model #neuroscience
Mar 7, 201384 notes
#alzheimer's disease #dementia #brain circuitry #genetic code #connectome #genetics #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 201349 notes
#addiction #cocaine addiction #addiction recovery #opioid receptors #animal model #stress #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 2013211 notes
#anxiety #hippocampus #dentate gyrus #optogenetics #neurons #PTSD #panic disorders #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 2013149 notes
#spinal cord injuries #prosthetic devices #prosthetics #spinal cord #medicine #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 2013107 notes
#brain #brain regions #brain activity #brain function #multitasking #parietal cortex #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 2013116 notes
#brain #cognitive function #cocktail party #attention #language #psychology #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 201388 notes
#taste #taste bud cells #brain cells #ion channel #neurons #taste perception #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 20131,015 notes
#science #brain #plasticity #synaptic connections #synapses #adolescent brains #adulthood #neuroscience
Mar 7, 201358 notes
#breath #breath test #breathing patterns #stress #blood pressure #heart rate #medicine #science
Mar 7, 201391 notes
#tadpoles #stress #stress hormones #corticosterone #fight-or-flight response #evolution #neuroscience #science
New Effort to Identify Parkinson’s Biomarkers

Last month, the National Institutes of Health announced a new collaborative initiative that aims to accelerate the search for biomarkers — changes in the body that can be used to predict, diagnose or monitor a disease — in Parkinson’s disease, in part by improving collaboration among researchers and helping patients get involved in clinical studies. As part of this program, launched by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), part of the NIH, Clemens Scherzer, MD, a neurologist and researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), was awarded $2.6 million over five years to work on the development of biomarkers and facilitate NINDS-wide access to one of the largest data and biospecimens bank in the world for Parkinson’s available at BWH. This NINIDS initiative is highlighted in an editorial in the March issue of Lancet Neurology.

"There is a critical gap in the research that leads to lack of treatment for diseases like Parkinson’s," said Scherzer. "Biomarkers are desperately needed to make clinical trials more efficient, less expensive and to monitor disease and treatment response. We are hopeful that this initiative will fast track new discoveries in this area."

According to Scherzer, most of our knowledge of the human brain is based on the analysis of just 1.5 percent of the human genome that encodes proteins. The first part of Scherzer’s project will examine the function of the remaining 98.5 percent of the genome that, so far, has been unexplored in the human brain. While this remainder had been previously dismissed as “junk”, it is now becoming clearer that parts of it actively regulate cell biology.  Scherzer and colleagues believe that “dark matter” RNA transcribed from stretches of so called “junk” DNA is active in brain cells and contributes to the complexity of normal dopamine neurons and, when corrupted, Parkinson’s disease.

"This offers a potentially ground breaking opportunity for biomarker development. Initially, the team will search for these RNAs associated in brain tissue of individuals at earliest stages of the disease. Then, this team will look for related biomarkers in the bloodstream and cerebrospinal fluid in both healthy brains and those with Parkinson’s," Scherzer said.

Scherzer’s lab has been spearheading biomarker research in this field since 2004 and the team already has 2,000 patients enrolled and being followed in a longitudinal study with rich clinical data and one of the largest biobanks in the world for Parkinson’s tissue with support from the Harvard NeuroDiscovery Center. The biobank was designed as an incubator for Parkinson’s research and until now was chiefly available for research collaborations within the Harvard-affiliated community. As part of this new project, this vast resource will be open to all NIH-funded investigators.

"Our ultimate goal is to personalize treatment for our patients with Parkinson’s." said Scherzer. "By opening up this vast collection of specimens, we are exploding the resources that are available to NIH-funded investigators looking at this disease. We hope to harness the power of collaboration to speed up biomarkers discovery."

Mar 7, 201330 notes
#parkinson's disease #biomarker #brain #brain tissue #genomics #neuroscience #science
Mar 7, 2013172 notes
#science #bipolar disorder #kynurenic acid #psychosis #inflammation #cognitive function #neuroscience
Mar 7, 2013173 notes
#schizophrenia #genes #microRNA-137 #genetics #neuroimaging #brain circuits #hippocampus #neuroscience #science
Mar 6, 2013115 notes
#brain #brain damage #concussions #brain injuries #athletes #computer model #diffusion tensor imaging #neuroscience #science
Mar 6, 201397 notes
#brain #stroke #benign dizziness #eye movements #electronic device #medicine #science
Mar 6, 2013244 notes
#alzheimer's disease #dementia #green tea #beta amyloid #proteins #flavonoids #neuroscience #science
Mar 6, 201343 notes
#brain #dementia #aging #neurons #proteins #animal model #neuroscience #science
Brain tumours and peripheral neuropathy

Researchers from Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry are part of an international team which has for the first time identified the role of a tumour suppressor in peripheral neuropathy in those suffering multiple tumours of the brain and nervous system.

One in 25,000 people worldwide is affected by neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2), a condition where the loss of a tumour suppressor called Merlin results in multiple tumours in the brain and nervous system.

Sufferers may experience 20 to 30 tumours at any one time and such numbers often lead to hearing loss, disability and eventually death. Those with NF2 may also experience peripheral neuropathy, which is when the nerves carrying messages to and from the brain and spinal column to the rest of the body do not work.

Peripheral neuropathy leads to further complications for NF2 sufferers, such as pain and numbness, muscle problems, problems with body organs and other symptoms of nerve damage, such as bladder problems, uncontrollable sweating and sexual dysfunction.

Researchers from Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry are part of an international research team which has for the first time identified the role of a tumour suppressor called Merlin in regulating the integrity of axons. Axons are nerve fibres which transmit information around the body and it is these are that damaged in peripheral neuropathy.

The research team showed that Merlin regulates a protein called neurofilament which supplies structural support for the axon. A better understanding of this mechanism could lead to effective drug therapies to alleviate the symptoms of peripheral neuropathy in patients with NF2.

The results of the research is published this week in Nature Neuroscience.

Mar 6, 201343 notes
#peripheral neuropathy #nerve fibres #neurofibromatosis #tumor #nervous system #brain #neuroscience #science
Mar 6, 2013185 notes
#retina #cell death #retinal ganglion cells #neural circuits #circadian rhythms #neurons #neuroscience #science
Mar 6, 2013117 notes
#phantom limb #phantom limb pain #pain #fMRI #braine responses #nerve endings #neuroscience #science
Study reveals potential target to better treat, cure anxiety disorders

Researchers at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have, for the first time, identified a specific group of cells in the brainstem whose activation during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is critical for the regulation of emotional memory processing. The findings, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, could help lead to the development of effective behavioral and pharmacological therapies to treat anxiety disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, phobias and panic attacks.

There are two main stages of sleep – REM and non-REM – and both are necessary to maintain health and to regulate multiple memory systems, including emotional memory. During non-REM sleep, the body repairs tissue, regenerates cells and improves the function of the body’s immune system. During REM sleep, the brain becomes more active and the muscles of the body become paralyzed. Additionally, dreaming generally occurs during REM sleep, as well as physiological events including saccadic eye movements and rapid fluctuations of respiration, heart rate and body temperature. One particular physiological event, which is a hallmark sign of REM sleep, is the appearance of phasic pontine waves (P-waves). The P-wave is a unique brain wave generated by the activation of a group of glutamatergic cells in a specific region within the brainstem called the pons.

Memories of fearful experiences can lead to enduring alterations in emotion and behavior and sleep plays a natural emotional regulatory role after stressful and traumatic events. Persistence of sleep disturbances, particularly of REM sleep, is predictive of developing symptoms of anxiety disorders. A core symptom of these disorders frequently reported by patients is the persistence of fear-provoking memories that they are unable to extinguish. Presently, exposure therapy, which involves controlled re-exposure to the original fearful experience, is considered one of the most effective evidence-based treatments for anxiety disorders. Exposure therapy produces a new memory, called an extinction memory, to coexist and compete with the fearful memory when the fearful cue/context is re-encountered.

The strength of the extinction memory determines the efficacy of exposure therapy. A demonstrated prerequisite for the successful development of an extinction memory is adequate sleep, particularly REM sleep, after exposure therapy. However, adequate or increased sleep alone does not universally guarantee its therapeutic efficacy.

"Given the inconsistency and unpredictability of exposure therapy, we are working to identify which process(es) during REM sleep dictate the success or failure of exposure therapy," said Subimal Datta, PhD, director and principle investigator at the Laboratory of Sleep and Cognitive Neuroscience at BUSM who served as the study’s lead author.

The researchers used contextual fear extinction training, which works to turn off the conditioned fear, to study which brain mechanisms play a role in the success of exposure therapy. The study results showed that fear extinction training increased REM sleep. Surprisingly, however, only 57 percent of subjects retained fear extinction memory, meaning that they did not experience the fear, after 24 hours. There was a tremendous increase of phasic P-wave activity among those subjects. In 43 percent of subjects, however, the wave activity was absent and they failed to retain fear extinction memory, meaning that they re-experienced fear.

"The study results provide direct evidence that the activation of phasic P-wave activity within the brainstem, in conjunction with exposure therapy, is critical for the development of long-term retention of fear extinction memory," said Datta, who also is a professor of psychiatry and neurology at BUSM. In addition, the study indicates the important role that the brainstem plays in regulating emotional memory.

Future research will explore how to activate this mechanism in order to help facilitate the development of new potential pharmacological treatments that will complement exposure therapy to better treat anxiety and other psychological disorders.

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, anxiety disorders affect approximately 40 million American adults each year. While anxiety can sometimes be a normal and beneficial reaction to stress, some people experience excessive anxiety that they are unable to control, which can negatively impact their day to day life.

Mar 6, 2013186 notes
#anxiety #memory #eye movements #saccadic eye movements #brainwaves #sleep #fear extinction #neuroscience #science
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