Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $25,572
31%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 31%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: brain

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • For The First Time, Scientists Show Structural, Brain-Wide Changes During Menstruation

    10/19/2023 8:03:02 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 48 replies
    The microstructure of white matter – the fatty network of neuronal fibers that transfer information between regions of gray matter – has been found to change with hormonal shifts, including puberty, oral contraception use, gender-affirming hormone therapy, and post-menopausal estrogen therapy. To address the menstruation gap in our understanding, the team took MRI scans of their subjects during three menstrual phases: menses, ovulation, and mid-luteal. At the time of each of these scans, the researchers also measured the participants' hormone levels. The results showed that, as hormones fluctuate, gray and white matter volumes change too, as does the volume of...
  • ‘Anti-police’ Activist Stabbed to Death in New York – WATCH

    10/04/2023 9:06:06 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 94 replies
    Daily Fetched ^ | October 4, 2023 | Jason Walsh
    A New York City social justice activist was stabbed to death in front of his girlfriend as the pair made their way home from a wedding in Long Island on Monday. The shocking video shows a deranged man appearing on the street as he followed the pair before slaughtering the activist and fleeing the scene. The disturbing surveillance footage has provided police with a clear image of the suspect, who remains at large. (WARNING: The following footage some may find upsetting) VIDEO AT LINK............ As the New York Daily News reported, “The footage shows Ryan Carson, 32, and his girlfriend...
  • In-depth review reveals dietary lipid intervention as potential strategy to prevent brain aging (Phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine & plasmalogen)

    10/01/2023 6:08:35 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 12 replies
    Medical Xpress / Engineering ^ | Sept. 28, 2023 | Wei Xiong et al
    A new review highlights the significant role of dietary lipids in preventing brain aging and cognitive decline. As the global burden of aging-related brain diseases, particularly dementia, continues to rise, this research offers promising insights into potential nutritional interventions that could improve brain function during aging. The review focuses on the intricate relationship between lipid homeostasis and brain aging, emphasizing the importance of maintaining synaptic plasticity to prevent cognitive impairment. By examining evidence from epidemiological and animal studies, the research team demonstrates the crucial functions of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), specifically phospholipids such as phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and plasmalogen, in promoting...
  • Consciousness theory slammed as ‘pseudoscience’ — sparking uproar

    09/21/2023 7:40:33 PM PDT · by FarCenter · 23 replies
    A letter, signed by 124 scholars and posted online last week1, has caused an uproar in the consciousness research community. It claims that a prominent theory describing what makes someone or something conscious — called the integrated information theory (IIT) — should be labelled “pseudoscience”. Since its publication on 15 September in the preprint repository PsyArXiv, the letter has some researchers arguing over the label and others worried it will increase polarization in a field that has grappled with issues of credibility in the past. “I think it’s inflammatory to describe IIT as pseudoscience,” says neuroscientist Anil Seth, director of...
  • How Are The Mind & The Brain Different? A Neuroscientist Explains

    09/21/2023 3:52:12 AM PDT · by RoosterRedux · 71 replies
    mindbodygreen.com ^ | March 8, 2021 | Caroline Leaf, Communication Pathologist and Neuroscientist
    For many people, the mind and brain are interchangeable. They use one word or the other to talk about the same thing: the organ in our skull that we use to think. However, the mind and brain are actually two very different, but interconnected, entities. As a neuroscientist, this reality is the foundation of my life's research and work: The mind works through the brain but is separate from the brain. What is the difference between the mind and the brain? So what exactly is the difference between the mind and the brain? Well, the mind is separate, yet inseparable...
  • Study: How cardio fitness and rigorous exercise counteract cognitive decline

    09/04/2023 6:30:37 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 8 replies
    Medical Xpress / University of Texas at Dallas / Neuroscience ^ | Aug. 29, 2023 | Stephen Fontenot / Paulina Skolasinska et al
    New research supports the idea that the brains of older adults who maintain physical fitness by engaging in regular strenuous exercise more closely resemble those of younger adults. The researchers used functional MRI to measure fluctuations in blood oxygen level-dependent signals as the 52 study participants performed tasks involving several varieties of cognitive control. The fMRI scans indicated that young adults primarily used the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex—a classical working memory, cognitive control center of the brain that is activated more as tasks became more demanding. In general, the brain calls upon its resources like firefighters respond to a multi-alarm fire:...
  • Finding A Live Brain Worm Is Rare. 4 Ways To Protect Yourself From More Common Parasites

    08/28/2023 9:33:29 PM PDT · by RomanSoldier19 · 15 replies
    https://menafn.com ^ | 8/29/2023 | Vincent Ho
    News reports this morning describe how shocked doctors removed a live worm from a woman's brain in a Canberra hospital last year. The woman had previously been admitted to hospital with stomach symptoms, dry cough and night sweats and months later experienced depression and forgetfulness that led to a brain scan. In the case study published in Emerging InfectiDiseases journal, doctors describe removing the live 8cm-long nematode (roundworm) from the brain of the 64-year-old woman who was immunosuppressed. The worm was identified as O. robertsi which is native to Australia, where it lives on carpet pythons. The woman may have...
  • Bodybuilding supplement may help stave off progression of Alzheimer's (Cheap HMB restores neuronal connections and reduces plaques)

    07/24/2023 10:07:33 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 14 replies
    RUSH researchers recently discovered that a muscle-building supplement called beta-hydroxy beta-methylbutyrate, also called HMB, may help protect memory, reduce plaques and ultimately help prevent the progression of Alzheimer's disease. HMB is not a prescription drug or a steroid, but an over-the-counter supplement that is available in sports and fitness stores. Bodybuilders regularly use HMB to increase exercise-induced gains in muscle size and strength while improving exercise performance. HMB is considered safe even after long-term use, with no known side effects. "This may be one of the safest and the easiest approaches to halt disease progression and protect memory in Alzheimer's...
  • Parkinson's disease: Intense exercise may help to keep the disease at bay

    07/16/2023 5:20:53 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 21 replies
    Neuroscientists have found that intensive exercise could slow the course of Parkinson's disease. The finding could pave the way for new non-drug approaches. The research has identified a new mechanism responsible for the positive effects of exercise on brain plasticity. Professor Paolo Calabresi, said, "We have discovered a never observed mechanism, through which exercise performed in the early stages of the disease induces beneficial effects on movement control that may last over time even after training is suspended." Previous work has shown that intensive physical activity is associated with increased production of a critical growth factor, the brain-derived neurotrophic factor...
  • Simple oxygen treatment could help patients 'dramatically improve' following brain injury (100% Oxygen)

    07/13/2023 6:18:27 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 8 replies
    Medical Xpress / Frontiers / Frontiers in Neuroscience ^ | July 12, 2023 | Dr. Marc Dalecki et al
    Motor learning skills let us move through the world. But age or sickness can weaken our ability to learn motor tasks. Scientists studying the impact of oxygen supplementation on motor learning have found a promising treatment that could help patients who have experienced neurological trauma recover old skills. "A simple and easy to administer treatment with 100% oxygen can drastically improve human motor learning processes," said Dr. Marc Dalecki. Our brains need a lot of oxygen. In low-oxygen contexts cognitive function decreases, while in high-oxygen contexts it recovers, and the delivery of 100% oxygen is already used to help preserve...
  • We need a serious conversation about Joe Biden’s brain

    07/03/2023 5:52:01 AM PDT · by ChicagoConservative27 · 65 replies
    The Hill ^ | 07/03/2023 | BECKET ADAMS
    Speaking to reporters Wednesday, the president falsely claimed that Russia is at war with Iraq. Russia is at war with Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin is “clearly losing the war in Iraq,” Biden told the press pool, “losing the war at home. And he has become a bit of a pariah around the world.” On Tuesday, during an unrelated fundraising event in Chevy Chase, Md., Biden had made the exact same slip-up, mistaking Ukraine for Iraq. “If anybody told you … that we’d be able to bring all of Europe together in the onslaught on Iraq and get NATO to...
  • Can this medication reverse multiple sclerosis? Brain biomarker shows it can (Clemastine)

    06/13/2023 8:05:12 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 6 replies
    A decade after scientists identified an over-the-counter antihistamine as a treatment for multiple sclerosis, researchers have developed an approach to measure the drug's effectiveness in repairing the brain. The researchers, led by Ari Green, used MRI scans to study the drug's impact on the brain of 50 participants in a clinical study. In MS, patients lose myelin, the protective insulation around nerve fibers. This myelin loss triggers delays in nerve signals, leading to weakness and spasticity, and other symptoms. In the brain, water trapped between the thin layers of myelin that wrap nerve fibers cannot move as freely as water...
  • Study highlights need for expanded application of prism adaptation treatment for spatial neglect (Brain injury therapy)

    A team of rehabilitation researchers has discovered that prism adaptation therapy (PAT) is as beneficial for treating right-sided spatial neglect as left-sided spatial neglect in a cohort of individuals with stroke and traumatic and non-traumatic brain injuries. Spatial neglect, a disorder of spatial cognition commonly experienced by individuals with acquired- or traumatic-brain injury, increases the risks for prolonged hospitalization, injuries, poor motor recovery, and discharge to long-term care facilities. Left-sided spatial neglect is well recognized and known to respond to prism adaptation treatment (PAT). However, little is known about PAT's effectiveness for individuals with right-sided spatial neglect. Using a clinical...
  • Tens of thousands of lives a year could be saved by new treatment protocol for brain hemorrhage (Quick correction of blood pressure)

    05/29/2023 8:47:25 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 3 replies
    Data from the phase III INTERACT3 study demonstrate that a new combination of treatments for stroke due to intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) significantly improves the chances of surviving without major disability. The INTERACT3 study is the first-ever randomized controlled trial to show a clearly positive outcome for the treatment of ICH. Timely administration of the new treatment protocol—known as a Care Bundle—centered on the rapid control of high blood pressure, led to improved recovery, lower rates of death, and better overall quality of life. Professor Craig Anderson said, "Despite the high rates of ICH and its severity, there are few proven...
  • Is 80-year-old Joe Biden really fit for four more years? After a first term marked by gaffes and falls, doctors tell DailyMail.com they fear for health of President who has suffered two brain aneurysms and has a heart issue - raises his risk of dementia

    05/27/2023 3:56:58 AM PDT · by Libloather · 51 replies
    Daily Mail ^ | 4/25/23 | Caitlin Tilley
    Medical experts have raised concerns about whether President Joe Biden is fit to serve another term after the 80-year-old officially launched his reelection campaign. They fear Biden, who would be 86 at the end of a second stint in the White House, is already showing signs of 'cognitive impairment' and that the stress of another presidency could deteriorate his condition further and raise the risk of an on-screen accident. The President's first term has been marked by a series of high-profile gaffes, falls and visible signs of disorientation - including stumbling up the steps of Air Force One and falling...
  • Researchers developing non-invasive brain-computer interface that converts thoughts into text

    05/06/2023 8:46:40 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 31 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 05/06/2023 | Eric Utter
    A team of researchers at the University of Texas has developed a noninvasive means by which human thoughts can be converted into text. Though currently somewhat clunky, the "semantic decoder" could one day be miniaturized and mobilized such that one's most private thoughts could be made apparent anywhere and endlessly.The scientists' paper, recently published in the journal Nature Neuroscience (look for the centerfold!), indicated that a "brain-computer interface that decodes continuous language from non-invasive recordings would have many scientific and practical applications."I'm sure that is the case. You can bet that tyrannical governments from China to Canada, and from Iran...
  • GlyNAC supplementation found to improve cognitive decline and brain health in aging (Reverses cognitive decline, and much more)

    05/06/2023 6:31:54 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 30 replies
    Medical Xpress / Baylor College of Medicine / Antioxidants ^ | May 4, 2023 | Homa Shalchi / Premranjan Kumar et al
    Supplementing GlyNAC—a combination of glycine and N-acetylcysteine as precursors of the natural antioxidant glutathione—improved or reversed age-associated cognitive decline in old mice and improved multiple associated defects in the aging brain. Sekhar and his team worked with three groups of mice. Two groups were aged naturally side-by-side until they were 90 weeks old, which is similar to a 70-year-old person. At 90 weeks of age, both groups of old mice were evaluated for their cognitive abilities, such as remembering the correct route in a maze that leads to a food reward. These results were compared to those of young mice,...
  • Keeping a tighter rein on blood pressure in adults over 50 is desirable for brain health

    04/27/2023 7:17:33 AM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 13 replies
    Intensive blood pressure treatment significantly reduces the risk of adverse cerebrovascular events such as stroke. New research shows evidence of how the brain benefits from consistently lower blood pressure. The study is a follow-up analysis of the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT), a multicenter clinical trial that compared intensive systolic blood pressure control (target less than 120 mm Hg) versus standard control (target less than 140 mm Hg). SPRINT enrolled participants aged 50 or older with hypertension and without diabetes or a history of stroke. "Our study demonstrates that lowering systolic blood pressure to below 120 mm Hg is...
  • Spike protein accumulates in the brain and causes infarcts, bleeds, inflammation - Pfizer & Moderna COVID-19 mRNA vaccines cause severe neurological injuries

    04/07/2023 6:52:37 PM PDT · by george76 · 80 replies
    Dr. William Makis MD ^ | 4/7/2023 | Dr. William Makis MD
    A new paper from Germany posted on April 5, 2023 proves that the spike protein accumulates in the brain and causes death of brain cells (which would certainly explain a great deal of what we see around us). (click here) Key findings: “Our results revealed the accumulation of the spike protein in the skull marrow, brain meninges, and brain parenchyma.” “The injection of the spike protein alone caused cell death in the brain, highlighting a direct effect on brain tissue.” “we observed the presence of spike protein in the skull of deceased long after their COVID-19 infection, suggesting that the...
  • Traumatic brain injury interferes with immune system cells' recycling process in brain cells, finds study (Rapamycin helps)

    04/05/2023 8:15:32 PM PDT · by ConservativeMind · 2 replies
    Medical Xpress / University of Maryland School of Medicine / Autophagy ^ | April 4, 2023 | Vanessa McMains / Nivedita Hegdekar et al
    Researchers found that after traumatic brain injury, the brain's immune system cells' internal recycling function slowed dramatically, allowing waste products to build up and interfere with recovery from injury. The researchers also found that treating mice that had traumatic brain injury with a drug to promote cellular recycling improved the mice's ability to recover from injury. The body's cells regularly recycle their own worn-out or damaged parts that accrue through normal wear and tear, infection, or injury in a process known as autophagy. In a previous study, Dr. Lipinski's group showed that traumatic brain injury reduced the ability of neurons—the...