Old mice made hundreds
more new brain cells when paired with a young mouse (right chart, two - toned) than when paired with an old mouse (teal).
Not exact matches
And you'll also feel smarter; exercise creates
new brain cells and makes those
new cells more effective.
Brain new probes are allowing them to track the Cerebrrin coordinated activity of hundreds of brain cells; and more precise brain implants are giving patients more control over artificial l
Brain new probes are allowing them to track the Cerebrrin coordinated activity of hundreds of
brain cells; and more precise brain implants are giving patients more control over artificial l
brain cells; and
more precise
brain implants are giving patients more control over artificial l
brain implants are giving patients
more control over artificial limbs.
In the
new study, the scientists expressed surprise that the early abnormal growth of
brain cells they observed in the fish embryo specifically affected male hormones, potentially indicating why
more boys than girls are diagnosed with certain neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism.
Include protein - rich food in your diet — this means
more of fish and lean meats because your body needs amino acids to build
new cells and develop feat
brain, heart, muscle and tissue.
Using chemicals like these in combination with
new imaging tools, such as the multi-photon confocal microscope, has enabled researchers to explore the minuscule world of the neuron and observe
brain cells in action with far
more precision.
A single genetic mutation made the Zika virus far
more dangerous by enhancing its ability to kill nerve
cells in developing
brains, a
new study suggests.
Interphone compared surveyed
cell phone use in 6,420 people with
brain tumors to that of 7,658 healthy people in 13 developed countries — Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan,
New Zealand, Norway, Sweden and the U.K. — to try to determine whether people with
brain tumors had used their
cell phones
more than healthy people, an association that might suggest that
cell phones caused the tumors.
The findings, published today in the journal
Cell, give
new insights into how the
brain regulates body fat and may lead to
more effective ways to lose weight and prevent obesity by promoting the conversion of white fat to brown fat.
The study answered long - standing questions in the field, but the researchers stated that this is just the beginning of many
more experiments aimed at understanding how our
brains are able to form
new nerve
cells throughout life.
The study could help identify people who would most benefit from
new drugs designed to save
brain cells, but
more research is necessary to determine if the genetic mutations are implicated in disease.
The active periods might be providing brief windows during which nerve
cells can easily connect to other
cells, and the slower,
more relaxed periods might allow the
brain to then cement those
new connections in place.
They had
more inflammation - causing immune
cells in their
brains, as expected, but they also stopped making
new brain cells.
Researchers are also creating
more citizen science projects with high entertainment value, such as EyeWire, a
new online
brain - mapping game where players compete to build 3 - D neuron structures, and GeneGame, the successor to
Cell Slider.
Sure enough, they showed signs of ageing:
more inflammation in the
brain, and fewer
new brain cells being generated, which happens in a process called neurogenesis.
«A better understanding of the
brain region and
cell type - specific binding targets of Hnrnph1 will tell us
more about the function of this gene and possibly identify
new therapeutic strategies for minimizing risk and treating psychostimulant addiction — a disorder for which there is currently no FDA - approved drug,» explained corresponding author Camron Bryant, PhD, assistant professor of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics & Psychiatry at BUSM.
The virus selectively infects
cells that form the
brain's cortex, or outer layer, making them
more likely to die and less likely to divide normally and make
new brain cells.
When a stem
cell divides, each
new cell has the potential either to remain a stem
cell or become another type of
cell with a
more specialized function, such as a muscle
cell, a red blood
cell, or a
brain cell (Fig 1).
Oligodendrocytes, a type of
brain cell that plays a crucial role in diseases such as multiple sclerosis, are
more diverse than have previously been thought, according to a
new study led by Sten Linnarsson, Karolinska Institutet / SciLifeLab and Gonçalo Castelo - Branco, Karolinska Institutet.
Its assault made those
cells more likely to die and less likely to divide normally and make
new brain cells.
More recently, neuroscientists have been able to take a wider view of
brain function using
new technology to track activity levels across the entire
brain instead of individual
cells.
Additionally, the insights gained from this research may also help scientists develop
new drugs that are
more selective to a particular region or type of
brain cell.
Using a
new selection method, Caltech researchers have evolved the protein shell of a harmless virus, AAV9, so that it can
more efficiently cross the blood
brain barrier and deliver genes, such as the green fluorescent protein (GFP), to
cells throughout the central nervous system.
In general, old and young
brains were capable of making the same number of
new neurons from
more primitive «progenitor»
cells in the hippocampus.
Researchers are using stem
cells to help them understand normal development of
brain tissue and what goes wrong in MS. Stem
cells are also enormously useful for testing
new drugs and treatments and for learning
more about the body's natural repair mechanisms.
For
more than a century, scientists thought that glial
cells were responsible for scar formation; now, however, a paper published in Science shows that spinal cord scar tissue largely derives from a completely unexpected type of
cell called a pericyte, opening
new opportunities for the treatment of damaged nerve tissue.Lesions to the
brain or spinal cord rarely heal fully, which leads to permanent functional impairment.
The final stage is headed by Jian Jin, a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, will develop
new compounds that will allow researchers to even
more precisely activate the G - coupled receptors of individual
cell types in the particular
brain regions.
It increases the blood flow and feeds the
brain with
more oxygen, it aids the release of hormones and stimulates a process known as neurogenesis, i.e. the
brain's ability to grow
new brain cells and adapt existing ones.
In this episode Rhonda talks about how heat stress from using the sauna makes the body
more resilient to the stresses of aging, possible reasons why one study associated sauna use with up to a 40 % lower all - cause mortality as well as a 50 % lower cardiovascular disease related mortality, how it enhances athletic endurance, staves off muscle atrophy, improves regrowth of muscle after disuse, and some of the profound effects on the
brain, including the growth of
new brain cells, improvement in focus, learning, and memory, and even potentially ameliorating depression and anxiety.
The greater the distance that a runner had covered during the experiment, the
more new cells its
brain now contained.
New Recommendations from the National Sleep Foundation - The Atlantic January 2015 - Poor Sleep in Adolescence Predicts Future Problems, Study Says - Los Angeles Times January 2015 - How Sleep Keeps You Healthy, Helps You Heal - Discovery News September 2014 - Lack of Sleep Increases Risk of Failure in School Among Teens - Science World Report, from Sleep Medicine August 2014 - Sleep Woes in Old Age May Be Linked to
Brain Cell Loss - Health magazine August 2014 — University of Chicago Study: Getting
More Sleep Could Cut Junk Food Cravings in Half — CBS News August 2014 — University of Montreal Study Shows Learning Is Best Enhanced During Sleep - Jewish Business News February 2014 - Link Found between Sleep Duration and Depression - Psych Central February 2014 - Less Sleep,
More Time Online, Raises Risk for Teen Depression — National Public Radio
It is commonly understood that melatonin is produced by the pineal gland in the
brain, however,
new research shows that we have up to 400x
more melatonin in our guts and that bacteria in the gut are communicating with the
cells that produce sleep related hormones.