«Mechanistic finding may help develop treatment for Ice
Bucket Challenge disease: Study blames a fault in the cell's machine that cuts and pastes genetic instructions for a deadly motor neuron disease.»
Not exact matches
The project's launch featured a prominent ALS patient and research advocate: Pat Quinn, co-founder of the ALS Ice
Bucket Challenge, an initially - derided social media stunt that went on to raise hundreds of millions of dollars for ALS research and may have spurred important new discoveries about the
disease's genetic roots.
Glen Macdonald, president of the Wealth & Giving Forum, said there could even be a backlash against the
bucket challenge because the serious message of a
disease is getting lost in all the stunts and videos.
In 2015, the viral «Ice
Bucket Challenge» helped fund groundbreaking research that led to the discovery of a gene associated with the
disease.
The video is part of the Ice
Bucket Challenge, launched by the ALS Foundation to raise money for fighting ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's
disease.
State Department lawyers banned American ambassadors and other officers from the Ice
Bucket Challenge, which benefits Lou Gehrig's
disease patients.
The aim of the Ice
Bucket Challenge is to raise awareness of the neurodegenerative
disease, motor neurone
disease.
Despite being classified as rare
disease, public awareness is very high, fueled by celebrity patients like Stephen Hawking and culminating in last years» Ice
Bucket Challenge, the first charity campaign with global impact.
(Reuters)- The Ice
Bucket Challenge that went viral two years ago, raising hundreds of millions of dollars, has helped identify a new gene behind the neurodegenerative
disease ALS, or Lou Gehrig's
disease, researchers say.
Bin Bag
Challenge - #binbagchallenge We all remember the famous and viral «Ice
Bucket Challenge» to raise awareness for the neurodegenerative
disease ALS.
While people may have written off the «ice
bucket challenge», used to raise money and awareness for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig's
disease, as just a social media flash in the pan, the money raised by people participating in the
challenge and their supporters funded the research that led to the discovery of the gene (NEK1) that causes ALS.
We've seen several celebrities and tech industry leaders like Apple's CEO Tim Cook, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and many more take the Ice
Bucket Challenge to raise awareness and donations towards the
disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.