Mobile phones may help partially sighted ””see”” better

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Mobile phones or hand-held games consoles can be used to provide training course for partially-sighted people, helping them become more self-reliable, according to a new study.

The new research has found that a computer-based technique developed and assessed by Durham University improved partially-sighted people””s ability to ””see”” better. It may eventually improve and broaden the portfolio of rehabilitation techniques for partially-sighted patients.

The study tested the technique on patients who suffer from a condition affecting their sight called hemianopia.

Hemianopia sufferers lose half of their visual field due to stroke or other brain injury. They are heavily dependent on others as they struggle with balance, walking, finding things around the house, and they are not normally able to drive.

The study, which tested patients”” visual ability before and after the training, found that patients became faster and more accurate at detecting objects, such as coloured dots or numbers, on a computer screen.

The researchers believe the test helped patients to compensate for their lost vision by exploring their ””blind field”” more, which is the part of the visual field affected by the brain damage. Further research is needed to pinpoint exactly why the technique helps patients to ””see”” better but the scientists believe it is likely due to improved attention, concentration and awareness of their visual problems.

The study findings offer hope that people who receive regular training like this could live more independently in their day-to-day lives because their visual ability would be improved.

Lead researcher, Dr Alison Lane, from Durham University””s Psychology Department, said: “This research shows us that basic training works in getting people to use their ””poor”” visual side better.

“Although we are not yet sure why this happens, we think it might be because training increases their attention, concentration and awareness of their ””blind”” field.

“We think attention is key in improving people””s abilities to use their limited vision.”

She added: “This simple technique is a very viable rehabilitation option and in future could be easily accessible at low cost to everyone who needs it.”

The Durham study compared two types of rehabilitation techniques – one focused on exploration and the other on attention. Neither training option is currently available on the NHS although alternative training programmes can be bought privately.

The research, which tested 46 patients, found that the basic attention training without the need for patients to move their eyes extensively was for the most part as effective at rehabilitation as the more specialised exploration technique.

The scientists say patients may even be able to see similar improvements in their vision by playing mainstream computer games, particularly those whereby you need to scan virtual environments with your eyes.

The study has been published in the academic journal, Brain. (ANI)

High-fat ketogenic diet ‘can help treat persistent childhood seizures’

Washington, May 18 (ANI): A high-fat ketogenic diet, made up of high-fat foods and few carbohydrates, can help reduce or completely eliminate debilitating seizures in most children with infantile spasms, whose seizures persist despite medication, say researchers.

The Johns Hopkins Children”s Center study has been published online April 30 in the journal Epilepsia.

Infantile spasms, also called West syndrome, is a stubborn form of epilepsy that often does not get better with antiseizure drugs. Because poorly controlled infantile spasms may cause brain damage, the Hopkins team”s findings suggest the diet should be started at the earliest sign that medications aren”t working.

“Stopping or reducing the number of seizures can go a long way toward preserving neurological function, and the ketogenic diet should be our immediate next line of defense in children with persistent infantile spasms who don”t improve with medication,” says senior investigator Eric Kossoff, M.D., a pediatric neurologist and director of the ketogenic diet program at Hopkins Children”s.

The ketogenic diet works by triggering biochemical changes that eliminate seizure-causing short circuits in the brain”s signaling system. It has been used successfully in several forms of epilepsy. (ANI)

Dark chocolate may provide protection against brain injury from stroke

Washington, May 6 (ANI): A compound in dark chocolate may protect the brain after a stroke by increasing cellular signals already known to shield nerve cells from damage, Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered.

Ninety minutes after feeding mice a single modest dose of epicatechin, a compound found naturally in dark chocolate, the scientists induced an ischemic stroke by essentially cutting off blood supply to the animals” brains.

They found that the animals that had preventively ingested the epicatechin suffered significantly less brain damage than the ones that had not been given the compound.

While most treatments against stroke in humans have to be given within a two- to three-hour time window to be effective, epicatechin appeared to limit further neuronal damage when given to mice 3.5 hours after a stroke. Given six hours after a stroke, however, the compound offered no protection to brain cells.

Sylvain Doré, Ph.D., associate professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine and pharmacology and molecular sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, says his study suggests that epicatechin stimulates two previously well-established pathways known to shield nerve cells in the brain from damage.

When the stroke hits, the brain is ready to protect itself because these pathways — Nrf2 and heme oxygenase 1 — are activated. In mice that selectively lacked activity in those pathways, the study found, epicatechin had no significant protective effect and their brain cells died after a stroke.

The study appears online in the Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. (ANI)

Lottery game can assess brain damage following stroke

Washington, Apr 29 (ANI): A lottery game could help to assess brain damage in people who have had a stroke, say researchers.

Patients recovering from stroke sometimes behave as if completely unaware of one half of the world: colliding with obstacles on their left, or eating food only from the right side of their plate.

This puzzling phenomenon is termed “spatial neglect” and it affects roughly 45 percent of patients suffering from a stroke in the right side of the brain. The condition can indicate a long road to recovery, but researchers have now developed a quick and simple lottery game, which can be used to assess the extent of these symptoms and potentially aid the design of rehabilitation programmes.

The findings are reported in the May 2010 issue of Elsevier”s Cortex.

Dr Tobias Loetscher (University of Melbourne) and colleagues studied a group of stroke patients, using tests based on a simple lottery game in which patients first chose six lottery numbers by marking them with a pencil on a real lottery ticket. Predictably, the patients with spatial neglect tended to pick numbers located on the right-hand side of the ticket, neglecting those on the left.

However, spatial neglect does not only affect a patient”s interaction with the “real world”; it can also affect spatial imagination. In the second part of the test, patients were asked to spontaneously name six numbers without the aid of a lottery ticket. It is commonly believed that when we think of numbers we visualize them arranged along a mental number line with numbers increasing from left to right. The results of the study showed some patients picking only large numbers, indicating that they were unable to access the left side of mental images.

The information obtained from such simple bed-side tests could potentially be used to tailor effective rehabilitation procedures, which suit the individual patient. For example, patients who show signs of spatial neglect when marking numbers on the real lottery ticket, but not when picking numbers from their imagination, could be taught how to scan the missing part of their “real world”, since they may be able to envisage it in their minds. (ANI)

Shisha ”as bad as ciggies”

Kuala Lumpur, April 27 (ANI): Smoking a shisha pipe is as harmful as smoking tobacco, according to a new research.

People who smoke shisha, or herbal tobacco, can suffer from high carbon monoxide levels, the Department of Health and the Tobacco Control Collaborating Centre has found, Qatar News Agency (QNA) has reported.

High levels of carbon monoxide can cause brain damage and unconsciousness.

Shisha is a water-pipe in which fruit-scented tobacco is burnt using coal, passed through an ornate water vessel and inhaled through a hose.

The research revealed that one session of smoking shisha resulted in carbon monoxide levels at least four to five times higher than the amount produced by one cigarette.

Dr Hilary Wareing, director of the Tobacco Control Collaborating Centre, told the BBC”s Asian Network that the results of the research shocked her.

“Our mouths opened at the level of harm – none of the tests we did showed anything other than shisha is hazardous to health,” New Straits Times Online quoted her as saying. (ANI)

17 Indians sentenced to death for killing a Pakistani in UAE

Mon, Mar 29 01:50 PM

Seventeen Indians have been sentenced to death by Sharjah’s Shariah Court for killing a Pakistani man and injuring three others in a vicious attack last year.

Judge Yousuf Al Hamadi sentenced the 17 men to death after all evidence, including DNA tests, showed they had knifed the Pakistani to death, ‘Khaleej Times’ reported on Monday.

The victim had died of his wounds after he was stabbed repeatedly on various parts of his body and had also suffered brain damage, police said.

The attack in January last year followed a fight over the control of the illegal liquor business in Al Sajaa area of Sharjah, one of the emirates of UAE, the paper said.

The police had said the suspects had attempted to kill three other compatriots of the victim, but they managed to escape and were rushed to Kuwaiti Hospital for treatment.

The convicted men are aged between 17 and 30 years.

According to the three Pakistanis who survived, 50 people set upon them with knives on that fateful day last year.

Police had rushed to the area and arrested the 17, who had allegedly led the attack. The others were let off due to lack of evidence.

During court hearings, all the suspects confessed they had fought with and murdered the victim. Forensics reports and DNA tests also proved their role in the crime.
Agencies

Walker still in F1 seat despite brain scare

Australian F1 Grand Prix boss Ron Walker is re-evaluating his life after a brush with death but has no plans to step down as chairman of the big race.

Mr Walker underwent emergency brain surgery on Monday after hitting his head on the road when he fell off his bike while riding around the Tan in Melbourne’s Royal Botanic Gardens last month.

Mr Walker, 70, knew he had broken a couple of ribs in the fall but was unaware of brain damage until last Saturday night when he was unable to button up his shirt or tie a Windsor knot as he was getting dressed to go out.

A visit to a neurosurgeon on Sunday and an MRI scan showed he had a clot on his brain which required immediate surgery.

Surgeons at St Vincent’s Hospital drilled a hole in the front of his forehead to relieve the pressure, which could have caused a seizure.

“You do reevaluate your life and think about how much more leisure time you can fit into it,” Mr Walker said.

He said while riding in the park he ran into some debris and went sailing over the handlebars, hitting his head on the ground.

He was wearing a helmet.

“I banged my head and didn’t think much of it but on Saturday night I asked my limbs to do something and they didn’t obey me,” he told reporters.

“I didn’t know what was going on – I thought it may have been the onset of MS.

“I tried to do my buttons up but my fingers wouldn’t work and I forgot how to do a Windsor knot.”

But the setback and the re-evaluation is not enough for him to consider quitting the F1 chairmanship after Melbourne’s 15th year of hosting the race, being held at Albert Park this weekend.

“I still feel physically fit,” he said.

“I’ve got 45 young people who run the race, I just take credit for it.”

But Mr Walker says he has retired from riding bikes and will settle for walking around the Tan to keep fit.

- AAP

‘Russian roulette’ at wedding turns tragic after guest shoots himself

Melbourne, Mar 23 (ANI): A wedding turned into a tragedy, when a guest was seriously wounded playing “Russian roulette” in front of a horrified bride and groom.

The police arrested a wedding guest, who had been giving a toast when he pretended he was playing the deadly game with a gun.

According to the Daily Mail, the guest claimed that he thought that the gun was entirely empty.

But then he gave the gun to another guest, who in his turn also fired the handgun against his head – and dropped to ground as a rubber bullet exploded into his skull.

And the video of the incident has sparked horror after being posted on the web.

The unnamed man”s condition was later described as “very poor” after doctors removed a bullet from his skull.

He suffered brain damage and paralysis, according to Russian reports.

The man who produced the handgun at the Astrakhan wedding was arrested.

“I wanted to perform my party trick. I expected lots of applause after I did it and never guess someone would repeat it,” the Herald Sun quoted him as saying.

He insisted he had taken out all the bullets before doing his party “trick”.

The police said that the man is due to appear in court over the incident. (ANI)

Botched ops in UK leave 722 objects inside patients in 1 year!

London, March 17 (ANI): As many as 722 objects were said to have been left inside patients in 2008 alone, courtesy careless medical staff and botched operations.

Using a Freedom of Information request, a British tabloid investigated a long list of grave mistakes made by NHS staff in the past two years.

The Sun came up with a dossier of errors revealing eye popping accounts of carelessness, ranging from operating instruments, such as pliers, scalpels, coils and swabs, being left inside patients’ bodies, to the sick being dumped in hospital bathrooms when wards were full.

As many as 11 people were “seriously harmed” during NHS ops every day, it was claimed.

Other serious errors at NHS hospitals in England included failing to sterilise equipment, wrongly administering drugs on a regular basis and giving patients the wrong blood type.

In the list of horrific mistakes was the case of a man who was left infertile after surgeons at West Suffolk Hospital, Bury St Edmunds removed part of the wrong testicle.

In a separate incident at Walsall Hospitals NHS Trust, an eight-year-old suffered brain damage when medical staff failed to monitor the child properly after an ear, nose and throat operation.

Liberal Democrat health spokesman Norman Lamb said: “We have to ensure that patient safety isn”t being compromised to satisfy the whims of Whitehall.

“There really is no excuse for leaving objects inside people. Far too many avoidable mistakes are still being made.

“If we really want to raise standards in the NHS we need to give local people the power to hold their health services to account.” (ANI)

Irishman suffers brain injury in Sydney assault

An Irishman is in hospital with serious brain injuries after an assault in Sydney’s eastern suburbs at the weekend.

Police say the assault happened at the Royal Hotel at Randwick on Sunday night about 8:00pm.

The 29-year-old man from Coogee fell back and hit his head on the ground.

He was taken to the intensive care unit of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital where he had emergency surgery for serious head injuries.

Police arrested a 19-year-old man at his Randwick home yesterday afternoon.

He was taken to Maroubra Police Station and charged with recklessly inflicting grievous bodily harm.

Police released the man on conditional bail to face Waverley Local Court next month.

It is the third serious assault of an Irishman in the eastern suburbs in the past two years.

Six months ago, 23-year-old Gearoid Walsh died after he was punched during a fight in a Coogee kebab shop.

In 2008, David Keohane suffered brain damage when he was attacked on his way home from a night out in Coogee.

The trial for one of his alleged attackers is underway in Sydney.

Childhood virus may become the saviour of soldiers

Washington, September 7 (ANI): Scientists have found that a harmless piece from a common childhood virus may help stop a biological process that kills a significant percentage of battlefield casualties, heart attack victims and oxygen-deprived newborns.

Researchers at Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters (CHKD) and Eastern Virginia Medical School (EVMS), in Norfolk, Virginia, have found that introducing the virus’ shell in vitro shuts down what’s known as the complement response, a primordial part of the immune system that attacks and destroys the organs and vascular lining of people who have been deprived of oxygen for prolonged periods.

While presenting their findings on Sunday at the 12th European meeting on complement in human disease in Budapest, Hungary, the researchers said that the complement response kicks in after the victim has been revived, in what is known as a reperfusion injury.

According to them, it does its work slowly but unrelentingly, killing soldiers, infants or heart attack victims over the course of days.

“To find a way to manipulate the complement system pharmacologically has been like a search for the Holy Grail,” said one of the lead researchers, Dr. Kenji Cunnion, an infectious disease physician at CHKD and an associate professor of pediatrics at EVMS.

Cunnion and Dr. Neel Krishna, a pediatric virologist at CHKD and assistant professor of microbiology at EVMS, see clear military applications.

“The complement reaction is one of the major causes of death of the battlefield. By the time you get a victim to the hospital, it may be too late,” said Krishna.

Agreeing to that statement, Dr. L.D. Britt, Brickhouse professor and chairman of surgery at EVMS, said: “Hemorrhagic shock is the leading cause of death in combat trauma and reperfusion injury plays a significant role both in increased mortality and increased brain damage.”

The senior consultant to the military on combat trauma added: “This research could help save the lives of soldiers, as well as the lives of other trauma victims who have been without oxygen for extended periods.”

Britt, Cunnion, and Krishna are now seeking a grant from the Department of Defense to expedite research and development. (ANI)

Vitamin C deficiency may impair newborn babies’ mental development

Washington, Sept 3 (ANI): A new study has revealed that vitamin C deficiency may impair the mental development of newborn babies.

The study showed that guinea pigs, which lack vitamin C, have 30 per cent less hippocampal neurones and significantly worse spatial memory.

According to lead researcher Jens Lykkesfeldt, like guinea pigs, human beings are dependent on getting vitamin C through their diet.

He speculates that vitamin C deficiency in pregnant and breast-feeding women may also lead to impaired development in foetuses and new-born babies.

This vitamin seems quite important to brain activity.

Tests have shown that mouse foetuses that were not able to transport vitamin C develop severe brain damage, which resembles the ones found in premature babies and which is linked to learning and cognitive disabilities later in life.

In some areas in the world, vitamin C deficiency is very common – population studies in Brazil and Mexico have shown that 30 to 40 per cent of the pregnant women have too low levels of vitamin C, and the low level is also found in their foetuses and new-born babies.

“We may thus be witnessing that children get learning disabilities because they have not gotten enough vitamin C in their early life,” said Lykkesfeldt, from Faculty of Life Sciences at University of Copenhagen.

“This is unbearable when it would be so easy to prevent this deficiency by giving a vitamin supplement to high-risk pregnant women and new mothers,” Lykkesfeldt added.

The researchers are currently studying how early in pregnancy vitamin C deficiency affects the embryonic development of guinea pigs and whether the damage may be reversed after birth.

The study appears in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. (ANI)

Study links high BP to memory problems in middle age

Washington, Aug 25 (ANI): A new study has shown that high blood pressure is associated with memory problems in people over 45.

In the study, scientists found that people with high diastolic blood pressure, which is the bottom number of a blood pressure reading, were more likely to have cognitive impairment, or problems with their memory and thinking skills, than people with normal diastolic readings.

For every 10-point increase in the reading,the odds of a person having cognitive problems was seven percent higher.

The results were valid after adjusting for other factors that could affect cognitive abilities, such as age, smoking status, exercise level, education, diabetes or high cholesterol.

The study involved nearly 20,000 people age 45 and older across the country had never had a stroke or mini-stroke.

A total of 1,505 of the participants, or 7.6 percent, had cognitive problems, and 9,844, or 49.6 percent, were taking medication for high blood pressure.

High blood pressure is defined as a reading equal to or higher than 140/90 or taking medication for high blood pressure.

“It’s possible that by preventing or treating high blood pressure, we could potentially prevent cognitive impairment, which can be a precursor to dementia,” said study author Georgios Tsivgoulis, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and a member of the American Academy of Neurology.

Research has shown that high diastolic blood pressure leads to weakening of small arteries in the brain, which can result in the development of small areas of brain damage.

Tsivgoulis said more research is needed to confirm the relationship between high blood pressure and cognitive impairment.

The study has been published in the August 25, 2009, print issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. (ANI)

Smoking may lead to brain damage in multiple sclerosis patients

Washington, Aug 18 (ANI): Cigarette smoking can cause brain damage in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), according to a new study.

Scientists at the University at Buffalo have shown that MS patients who smoked for a little as six months during their lifetime had more destruction of brain tissue and more brain atrophy than the patients who never smoked.

“Cigarette smoking is one of the most compelling environmental risk factors linked to the development and worsening of MS,” said Dr Robert Zivadinov, UB professor of neurology, director of the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Centre (BNAC) where the research was conducted and first author on the study.

“The biological basis of the potential link between smoking and MS has not yet been fully elucidated.

“In addition to nicotine, cigarette smoke contains hundreds of potentially toxic components, including tar, carbon monoxide and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

“In MS patients, smoking was associated with higher increased lesion burden and greater brain atrophy. Our results indicate that a wide range of quantitative brain MRI markers are affected by smoking in MS patients,” he added.

The study involved 368 patients from the Baird Multiple Sclerosis Center of the Jacobs Neurological Institute (JNI), where 128 had a history of smoking: 96 were active smokers who had smoked more than 10 cigarettes-per-day in the three months prior to the study start and 32 were former smokers who had smoked cumulatively for at least six months sometime in the past.

The remaining 240 participants were lifelong nonsmokers.

They found that that smokers with MS had a greater breakdown of the blood-brain barrier.

They had nearly 17 percent more brain lesions – patches of inflammation in the sheath surrounding the nerve fibres that impair their function – than nonsmokers with MS, and also had less brain volume.

Smoking also was associated with increased physical disability.

“The findings underscore the detrimental effect of smoking, providing a link between smoking and a more severe brain injury in MS patients,” said Dr Bianca Weinstock-Guttman, director of the Baird MS Center, UB associate professor of neurology and a principal co-author on the study.

The study appears in Neurology(r), the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. (ANI)

Novel peptide nanoparticles to fight fatal brain infections

London, June 29 (ANI): New peptide nanoparticles developed by researchers at the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (IBN) of Singapore could pave the way for new methods of drug and gene delivery for the treatment of meningitis and drug-resistant bacteria and fungal infections.

The stable bioengineered nanoparticles effectively seek out and destroy bacteria and fungal cells that could cause fatal infections and are highly therapeutic.

Major brain infections like meningitis and encephalitis are leading causes of death, hearing loss, learning disability, and brain damage in patients.

Conversely, the peptide nanoparticles contain a membrane-penetrating component that enables them to pass through the blood brain barrier to the infected areas of the brain that require treatment.

IBN’s peptide nanoparticles can traverse the blood brain barrier, thereby offering a superior alternative to existing treatments for brain infections.

The brain membrane is impenetrable to most conventional antibiotics because the molecular structure of most drugs is too big to enter the membrane.

“Our treatment damages the structure of the pathogen and literally breaks it apart,” Nature magazine quoted Dr. Yiyan Yang, group leader at IBN, as saying.

He added: “Our oligopeptide has a unique chemical structure that forms nanoparticles with membranepenetrating components on their surface. These nanoparticles can easily enter bacteria, yeast or fungal cells and destabilize them to cause cell death. For example, the nanoparticles cause damage to bacteria cell walls and prevent further bacterial growth.”

The researchers have demonstrated that these engineered peptide nanoparticles have high anti-microbial activity and are highly effective in killing microbes.

In addition, the peptide nanoparticles are more powerful in inhibiting the growth of fungal infections than conventionally available anti-fungal drugs such as fluconazole and amphotericin B.

“We are able to kill bacteria better than conventional antibiotics. By attacking the cellular structure of the microbes, our nanoparticles can be used to successfully combat persistant bacterial infections,” added IBN scientist Dr. Lihong Liu.

Pre-clinical tests have shown that IBN’s peptide nanoparticles are biocompatible, and cause no damage to the liver or kidneys at tested doses.

Highly anti-infective, the therapeutic doses of the peptide nanoparticles are expected to be safe for use because they also do not damage red blood cells.

The study has been published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology. (ANI)

Snoring may cause brain damage in sleep apnoea patients

Melbourne, May 18 (ANI): Snoring could severely impair brain function among sleep apnoea sufferers, say researchers at the University of New South Wales.

The researchers have found that the changes in brain biochemistry linked with obstructive sleep apnoea have been compared to changes evident in people who have “had a severe stroke or who are dying”.

“It used to be thought that apnoea snoring had absolutely no acute effects on brain function but this is plainly not true,” News.com.au quoted Professor Caroline Rae, lead author of the study, as saying in a statement.

It is believed that the impairment is caused due to the lack of oxygen reaching the brain during extended pauses in breathing-a common characteristic of severe sleep apnoea.

After studying the brains of 13 men with severe, untreated, obstructive sleep apnoea, the researchers found that even a slight lack of oxygen supply to the brain has an effect on function.

Rae said that they still did not know why the lack of oxygen causes a change in brain chemistry.

“The brain could be basically resetting its bioenergetics to make itself more resistant to lack of oxygen. It may be a compensatory mechanism to keep you alive, we just don’t know. But even if it is, it’s not likely to be doing you much good,” she said.

Twenty five percent of middle-aged men are affected by sleep apnoea, and almost three per cent of them experience a severe form of the condition characterised by extended pauses in breathing, repetitive asphyxia and sleep fragmentation.

Rae said the research findings highlight the importance for people to change their attitude toward snoring.

“People look at people snoring and think it’s funny. That has to stop,” she said. (ANI)

Scientists identify brain protein key to Parkinson’s disease, drug addiction

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Scientists at Columbia University Medical Center and the University of Rochester Medical Center have identified a protein that seems to be key to the processes that lead to Parkinson’s disease, and is involved in the brain’s response to addictive drugs like methamphetamine.

Telling that this protein is called organic cation transporter 3 (oct3), the researchers have revealed that their work fills a longstanding gap in scientists’ understanding of the brain damage that causes symptoms like tremor, stiffness, slowness of movement and postural instability.

The researchers have found that oct3, which shepherds molecules into and out of cells, plays a critical role by bringing toxic chemicals to the doorstep of the brain cells that die in patients with Parkinson’s disease.

They have also shown that oct3 is involved in the brain’s response to methamphetamine and other addictive drugs.

According to them, their study supports a role for astrocytes, a type of brain cells that has been often overlooked by scientists focused more on cells known as neurons that send electrical signals.

“Astrocytes are definitely much more than support cells in the brain. Scientists are discovering their involvement in many diseases. The latest results point to their role in Parkinson’s disease,” said Dr. Kim Tieu, assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center.

Tieu, who initiated the study as a post-doctoral research associate in the laboratory of Dr. Serge Przedborski, the Page and William Black Professor of Neurology at Columbia University, has revealed that they chose to study how the brain handles a chemical known as MPTP, which ultimately damages the exact same brain cells that are injured in patients with Parkinson’s disease.

While MPTP does not cause Parkinson’s disease, scientists regularly use it as a model for the disease because it causes an identical type of brain damage.

In the brain, this chemical is known to convert primarily in astrocytes to a chemical called MPP+, which is deadly to dopamine neurons.

An over two-decade-old study suggests that MPP+ is released from astrocytes before it kills dopaminergic neurons, but exactly how it is freed from astrocytes has been a mystery.

The current study has now shown that oct3 as the shepherd that escorts toxic MPP+ out of the astrocytes and into the space surrounding dopamine neurons, which is where another molecule known as the dopamine transporter picks it up and brings it into the neuron itself.

Upon blocking or genetically removing oct3 in mice, the researchers found that the dopamine neurons in the brains did not die despite the presence of MPTP in the brain. When oct3 was present in the usual amounts, dopamine neurons died as expected.

“The neurons affected in Parkinson’s disease don’t live in isolation in the brain. You must understand the brain environment as a whole to understand disease. For many years, people had a neuron-centric view of neurodegenerative diseases. But more and more scientists are realizing that if you wish to understand the process of neurodegeneration, you must take into account the astrocytes, the microglia, as well as the neurons. Astrocytes maintain an intimate relationship with neurons, and to understand one, you have to understand the other,” said Przedborski.

Analysing brain tissue from people who died of Parkinson’s disease, the researchers found oct3 to be active in astrocytes in the brain region affected by Parkinson’s disease.

The team found the same while experimenting on mice, where the absence of oct3 correlated exactly to areas of the brain where neurons were not damaged.

The finding that oct3 may play a role matches other scientists’ observations that people in whom its activity is reduced have a higher potential for addiction.

The researchers believe that the molecule may also offer a new target for treating depression. Since one of oct3′s functions is to remove serotonin from the brain, blocking it may offer a new avenue to treat depression.

A research paper based on their study has been published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Two genes associated with increased risk of ischemic stroke identified

A stroke is a brain attack, it happens when the blood supply is cut to the brain, it causes brain cells to die and results in brain damage. Recently group of researchers identified a chromosomal region that may contain two genetic variants which could increase risk of ischemic stroke.

Researchers analyzed data collected from 1,544 people who had strokes and 18,058 people who did not. Researchers found that each variant increases the risk of this type of stroke by 30 percent. Statistics revealed that 20 percent of whites and 10 percent of blacks in the United States and Europe have at least one copy of the genetic variant.

Myriam Fornage, co-author of the study and a cardiology professor at the Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Diseases at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston said: “Basically, the studies were monitoring the development of stroke over time, and we superimposed onto that information the genetic data, which was to look at 2.2 million polymorphisms across the genome in these participants.” “We identified two polymorphisms that were located in the same chromosomal region.”

Fornage added that we still don’t know the actual mutation, [although] we have a good idea that it’s the NINJ2 gene, involved in the brain’s response to injury. The other gene candidate is WNK1, involved with blood pressure control.

Researchers added more study is needed to known the exact gene.

German NGO helps physically challenged children in Ladakh

Leh, Apr 3(ANI): A few German volunteers along with residents in Ladakh district of Jammu and Kashmir are running a non-governmental organisation to provide required medical facilities to the physically challenged children of the state.

In 2003, a German couple, Karola and Juergen Kostial while visiting a village in Ladakh came across a child with CP (Cerebral Palsy = brain damage). They then realised that there are many other untreated children with similar conditions in the region and that they and their families desperately needed help.

They then started Ladakh-Hilfe (Ladakh Help), a non-profit organisation funded by donations. The organisation started sending professional physiotherapists and occupational therapists from Germany, Switzerland and Austria to Ladakh to work as volunteers.

However, in 2008, residents in association with the Ladakh-Hilfe founded an NGO ‘Rewa Society, Ladakh Disabled Children Group’.

“I think it’s very important that you don’t always compare normal children with handicapped children because every child has the right of their own development. The children that come to Rewa, they just need a little bit more time and special treatment,” said Alexandra, a German volunteer.

Residents are being employed by the organisation and many dedicated foreign volunteers give professional care to the physically challenged children.

Working with the people in the remote areas requires a lot of patience and sensibility, said an official.

“It was very difficult in the beginning. We had to struggle a lot. But somehow, we managed to convince the parents of the physically challenged children. We tell them how to treat a disabled child, how to keep him/her at home and to love him/her like any other normal child. We educate the parents. Things have now improved a lot and we are happy,” said Tshering Dolkar, Senior Coordinator, Rewa Society And Ladakh Hilfe, Leh.

The main objective of the society and the German based NGO Ladakh Hilfe is to help physically challenged children of the Ladakh region to become independent by equipping them with necessary skills.

Apart from physiotherapy, children are also taught basic exercise and they have shown remarkable improvement.

“Initially, all of us, my family members thought that she is very healthy that’s why she is not being able to walk properly. But later on we came to know about her problem. We then took her to the hospital. The doctor told us about a few therapies and about the Rewa Society. Now I can see improvement in her after joining the centre,” said Zaro Bano, mother of a physically challenged child.

At present, almost 15 children are undergoing treatment at the Rewa Ability Centre. By Jigmet Vangchuk (ANI)

Rigorous visual training can make partially blind stroke patients see again

Washington, Apr 1 (ANI): People who have gone partially blind after suffering a stroke can regain some vision by doing a set of vigorous visual exercises on a computer every day for several months, according to a new study.

Dr. Krystel Huxlin, a neuroscientist and associate professor who led the study of seven patients at the University of Rochester Eye Institute, has developed a computer system that exercises the brain, forcing it to develop to compensate for the damage caused by stroke.

“We were very surprised when we saw the results from our first patients. This is a type of brain damage that clinicians and scientists have long believed you simply can’t recover from. It’s devastating, and patients are usually sent home to somehow deal with it the best they can,” said Huxlin.

He added that the results have come as a ray of hope for patients with vision damage from stroke or other causes.

In the study, Huxlin studied seven people who had suffered a stroke that damaged an area of the brain known as the primary visual cortex or V1, which serves as the gateway to the rest of the brain for all the visual information that comes through our eyes.

V1 passes visual information along to dozens of other brain areas, which process and make sense of the information, ultimately allowing us to see.

Patients with damage to the primary visual cortex have severely impaired vision – they typically have a difficult or impossible time reading, driving, or getting out to do ordinary chores like grocery shopping.

The patients’ eyes can take in visual information despite the stroke, but it’s the damaged brain that cannot make sense of it to create vision.

The researchers sought to build on this “blindsight” – visual information, of which the patient is unaware, that still reaches the brain.

The study was conducted on seven people, four women and three men, between 30 to 80 years of age, who had had a stroke anywhere from eight to 40 months before the experiment began. All had suffered substantial damage to the primary visual cortex.

The team focused on motion perception, since it’s an aspect of vision critical for most everyday tasks.

The researchers wanted to see whether the brain’s middle temporal region, which was healthy in the participants, could be stimulated so extensively that it could take on some of the tasks normally handled by the visual cortex.

For the experiment, participants fixed their gaze on a small black square in the middle of a computer screen, and the scientists used a sensitive eye tracker to make sure patients keep staring at the square.

Every few seconds, a group of about 100 small dots appears within a circle on the screen, somewhere in the person’s damaged visual field – in other words, when the patients stare at the square, they don’t initially see the dots.

The dots twinkle into existence, appear to move as a group either to the left or the right, then disappear after about one-half second. Then the patient has to choose whether the dots are moving left or right.

A chime indicates whether he or she chose correctly, providing feedback that lets the brain know whether it made the right choice and speeding up learning.

The five participants who performed the training and completed the experiment had significantly improved vision. They were able to see in ways they weren’t able to before the experiment began.

A few found the experiment life-changing – a couple of participants are driving again, for instance, or have gained the confidence to go shopping and exercise frequently.

“Basically, it’s exercising the visual part of the brain every day. It’s very hard work, very gruelling. By forcing patients to choose, you’re helping the brain re-develop,” said Huxlin.

The study has been published in the Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)