We also observed some similarities between our findings and other emerging gut microbiota studies in multiple sclerosis; whether these indicate a «gut signature» of multiple sclerosis or of broader autoimmune disease remains to be determined,» said Professor Helen Tremlett, lead author of the European Journal of
Neurology study.
This data forms the basis for the new
Neurology study.
In a commentary published alongside
the Neurology study, two doctors — Adam Spira of Johns Hopkins University and Yo - El Ju of Washington University — emphasized the potential benefits of facilitating better sleep.
Not exact matches
BIIB098: MRI and relapse results from the phase 3 EVOLVE - MS - 1
study in patients with relapsing and remitting multiple sclerosis were presented at the 70th annual meeting of the American Academy of
Neurology (AAN).
A
study, described on the
Neurology Reviews site in 2009, aimed to determine performance and perception during sleep deprivation.
A
study published in March in the journal
Neurology suggested that women who were physically fit in middle age were roughly 88 % less likely to develop dementia — defined as a decline in memory severe enough to interfere with daily life — than their peers who were only moderately fit.
Scientists behind a recent
study published in the journal
Neurology analyzed 101 late - middle - aged adults (the average age was just under 63), and collected spinal fluid samples from each participant.
In a second
study, published today (June 2) in the Annals of
Neurology, Bak set out to determine if the positive effects of bilingualism on cognition could actually be the other way around: that people who have better cognitive functions are more likely to learn foreign languages.
Fernando Pagan, a GUMC associate professor of
neurology who directs the Movement Disorders Program at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, said that to his knowledge, the
study «represents the first time a therapy appears to reverse — to a greater or lesser degree depending on stage of disease — cognitive and motor decline in patients with these neurodegenerative disorders.»
And especially the
study of Quantum theory,
Neurology and the
study of «perception» in shaping our internal worldviews.
This isn't the first
study dedicated to this subject, but it is «one of the largest
studies to date in living retired NFL players» and the «first to demonstrate significant objective evidence for traumatic brain injury in these former players,»
study author Francis X. Conidi of the Florida Center for Headache and Sports
Neurology and Florida State University College of Medicine said in a statement.
Well, a new
study that will be presented next week at an American Academy of
Neurology meeting offers «one of the most conclusive pieces of evidence yet of a definitive link between brain injury and playing football,» says the Washington Post.
Although he lives in a world of common sense, he knows that nuclear science, space exploration, and
studies in
neurology and brain chemistry are changing the picture of the world.
A 2012
study published in the journal Annals of
Neurology examined the memory capacity and berry consumption of 16,000 nurses.
A 2012
study published in Annals of
Neurology looked at the effect of blueberry and strawberry consumption in 16,000 participants.
«The results of this
study demonstrate that the K - D test is an accurate and reliable method for identifying athletes with head trauma, and is a strong candidate for a rapid sideline screening test for concussion, [with] particular relevance to contact sports including football, soccer, hockey, MMA and boxing,» wrote co-author, Dr. Laura J. Balcer of the Department of
Neurology, Opthalmology, and Epidemiology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
A test long used to test vision and reading has the potential to provide rapid and accurate sideline screening of concussion on the sports sideline, says a groundbreaking
study reported in the journal
Neurology.1
* Update: A 2012
study in the journal
Neurology by researchers at the Cleveland Clinic (2) also found no link between intentional heading and acute brain damage (e.g. concussion), but said that it was at least theoretically possible that it could represent a form of repetitive subthreshold mild brain injury over time and could be the cause of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
Ice hockey players with sports - related concussion have elevations in the axonal injury biomarker total tau and the astroglial injury biomarker S - 100 calcium - binding protein B, according to a
study published online March 13 in JAMA
Neurology.
«About 50 percent of the brain's pathways are tied in some to way to vision and visual processing,» said Dr. Steven Galetta, chairman of
neurology at N.Y.U. Langone Medical Center and senior author of the
study, which was published in The Journal of Neuro - Ophthalmology.
«This rocking is very gentle, very smooth, oscillating every four seconds,» Sophie Schwartz, a professor of
neurology who led the
study, told Shots.
At the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, Department of
Neurology his research team pioneered the first
studies of the physiology and behavior of mothers and infant sleeping together and apart, using physiological and behavioral recording devices.
Mothers who breastfeed for a total of at least 15 months over one or more pregnancies may be less likely to develop multiple sclerosis (MS) compared with those who don't breastfeed at all or do so for up to four months, according to a
study published in the July 12, 2017, online issue of
Neurology ®, the medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology.
«This is another example of a benefit to the mother from breastfeeding,» said
study author Annette Langer - Gould, MD, PhD, with Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Pasadena and a member of the American Academy of
Neurology.
She has also done extensive
studies in Chiropractic
Neurology and Childhood Developmental Disorders through the Carrick Institute.
Science Careers got a peek into the professional lives of scientists
studying healthy aging from the perspectives of genetics, sociology and psychology, engineering, and
neurology.
He completed his
neurology residency at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, conducted further
studies under a neuropharmacology research fellowship at Sloan - Kettering Cancer Center, and completed a neurointensive care fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
People with high levels of cynical distrust may be more likely to develop dementia, according to a
study published in the May 28, 2014, online issue of
Neurology ®, the medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology.
The
study, which appears in the journal
Neurology, points to a new way to improve care for people who suffer from the disease, but may have not have access to a neurologist.
«Virtual house calls for chronic diseases like Parkinson's are not only as effective as in - person care but broader adoption of this technology has the potential to expand access to patient - centered care,» said Ray Dorsey, M.D., the David M. Levy Professor of
Neurology at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) and lead author of the
study.
Kristian Doyle, assistant professor of immunobiology and
neurology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson, uses biomarkers to
study how the immune system deals with dead brain tissue after a stroke.
The lead author of the
study was Jacqueline French, MD, professor of
neurology and director of Translational Research & Clinical Trials Epilepsy at NYU Langone's Comprehensive Epilepsy Center.
Bolland and his team analyzed the 33
studies, three of which were published in
Neurology and retracted this summer after the author, Yoshihiro Sato, MD, of Mitate Hospital in Tagawa, Japan, admitted to scientific misconduct.
«Our research suggests that in mice, males may be more vulnerable to the effects of maternal inflammation than females, and the impact may be life long,» says
study leader Irina Burd, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of gynecology / obstetrics and
neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and director of the Integrated Research Center for Fetal Medicine.
«Down the road, we hope to be able to treat pregnant women whose babies are at risk for this type of neurologic damage and prevent it from happening,» says
study leader Irina Burd, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics and
neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and director of the Integrated Research Center for Fetal Medicine.
For women approaching menopause and suffering from migraine there is help, explains Jelena Pavlovic, MD, PhD, co-author of the
study, attending physician in
neurology, Montefiore and assistant professor of The Saul R. Korey Department of Neurology,
neurology, Montefiore and assistant professor of The Saul R. Korey Department of
Neurology,
Neurology, Einstein.
A recent
study published in Annals of
Neurology reports that healthy human tissue grafted to the brains of patients with Huntington's disease in the hopes of treating the neurological disorder also developed signs of the illness, several years after the graft.
In a
study published online June 21 in the Annals of Clinical and Translational
Neurology, the researchers show that the consumption of extra-virgin olive oil protects memory and learning ability and reduces the formation of amyloid - beta plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain — classic markers of Alzheimer's disease.
«Our
study identified miR - 182 as a glioblastoma tumor suppressor that reduces the expression of several oncogenes that promote cancer development,» said senior author of the
study Alexander Stegh, an assistant professor in the Ken and Ruth Davee department of
neurology and of medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The
study, published in the November 23, 2016, online issue of
Neurology ® Clinical Practice, a medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology, showed that 15 percent of those who developed the syndrome had a surgical procedure within two months prior to developing the disease.
Published in the journal Surgical
Neurology International the
study compared 21 Western countries between 1989 and 2010 and found that dementias are starting a decade earlier than they used to in adults.
«We have had a very poor understanding of the leukocyte trafficking process in Guillain - Barré syndrome,» said Eroboghene E. Ubogu, M.D., professor and director of the neuromuscular division in the Department of
Neurology, UAB School of Medicine and lead author of the
study.
The
study published in the journal
Neurology is funded by Parkinson's UK, the Wellcome Trust and the Norwegian Parkinson Foundation.
In a report on their
study, published June 20 as an Early View article online in Annals of
Neurology, the Johns Hopkins team found that increasing levels of the protein clumps corresponded with worsening nerve damage, indicating that the smaller skin biopsies they used appear to work well as a measure of disease severity.
«I was pleasantly surprised with how well this worked,» said Michelle Monje, MD, PhD, assistant professor of
neurology and a senior author of the
study.
Based on their results, Gigi Ebenezer, M.B.B.S., M.D., assistant professor of
neurology and the first author on the
study, reported that protein clumps were detected in 70 percent of cases and 20 percent of patients who carried disease - causing genes but hadn't yet developed symptoms.
Principal investigator Charles H. Tegeler, M.D., professor of
neurology at Wake Forest Baptist, and his team, performed five - minute recordings of heart rate and blood pressure in 131
study participants, during the enrollment visit, to assess the effect of the autonomic nervous system on the cardiovascular system.
«In the last few months, we've diagnosed several people with the disease years before the diagnosis is typically made, which has changed how we do medicine in our nerve clinic,» says Michael Polydefkis, M.D., professor of
neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and senior author on the
study.
The federally funded
study, now published online in
Neurology, the official publication of the American Academy of
Neurology, is also one of the first to follow black people.
A special program that involves balance and eye movement exercises may help people with multiple sclerosis (MS) with their balance problems and fatigue, according to a
study published in the January 31, 2018, online issue of
Neurology ®, the medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology.