Mobile phone with ringtone as loud as speeding train wins over the elderly

London, June 4 (ANI): A mobile phone with a ringtone as loud as a pneumatic drill or speeding train is proving a hit among the elderly.

The Geemarc Clearsound CL8200,which has a top volume of 1,000 decibels, has been designed for the millions of elderly people who find modern mobile phones far too complex as well as far too quiet.

It is understood to be the loudest mobile phone on the market.

The phone, which has been manufactured by the British Company in Hertfordshire, has been on sale for a few months at specialist websites including the Royal National Institute for Deaf People, which says it has sold thousands.

Hearingdirect.com, which sells discounted hearing aids and other accessories, said that it had seen twice as many visitors to its site since the phone was launched.

“We have found a lot of our customers who are hard of hearing were fed up with the amount of unnecessary technology on other mobile phones and wanted a simple phone they could hear ringing, make calls and receive texts. They were tired of missing calls because they could not hear the ring and fiddling with small buttons. We think it”s going to be a big seller,” the Telegraph quoted Jamie Murray Wells, the chairman of HearingDirect.com, as saying.

As well as the ultra-loud ringtone, the phone also has a loud receiving tone, allowing listeners to hear their caller louder than normal.

This volume is 25 decibels as compared to a standard 8 to 10 decibel standard volume.

A spokesman for Geemarc, which is based in Hertfordshire, said: “There is a real need for a phone that doesn”t look like a disability phone, but which is really simple to use. There are a lot of elderly people frustrated at iPhones, and smart phones which can practically boil a kettle but are very difficult to use if you are hard of hearing or short sighted.”

The mobile phone costs 89.99 pounds, and comes with a pay-as-you-go SIM card, with 5 pounds worth of credit. It is also compatible with any other SIM card. (ANI)

Chinese farmer kills official for forcing wife’s abortion

Beijing, May 11 (IANS) A farmer allegedly killed a family planning official in China’s Jilin province and injured her two minor children, after she forced his wife to undergo an abortion.

The farmer, identified as Zhang Xuezhong, killed Jiang Xiaoling May 1 because he was angry she forced his wife to abort their baby, officials said Monday.

Jiang’s husband, Zhao Guogui, also a farmer in Xinhua village, said Monday the alleged killer rushed to his home with a stick and beat his wife to death. He also beat his son, 15, and daughter, 11, both of whom are now in hospital. The girl is in a comatose state in the intensive care unit, hospital officials said.

Zhang has been arrested.

Zhang was angry as Jiang had reported his wife’s pregnancy was in violation of the country’s family planning rules, Zhao said.

‘He is so ruthless. My wife reported to the superiors that his wife was unlawfully pregnant again,’ Zhao was quoted as saying by Global Times.

Jiang discovered in February 2010 that Zhang’s wife was pregnant and tried to make her undergo an abortion. The couple refused and Jiang reported them to higher officials.

After officials convinced her, Zhang’s wife underwent the operation, Zhao said.

Farmers in the countryside are allowed to have a second child if the first one is a girl or has a disability, according to the family planning policy.

Zhang had earlier served 13 years in prison for attempting to kill his father-in-law.

Specially-abled girl participates in paragliding event in Pune

Pune, May 11 (ANI): A specially-abled girl, Chandrakala Dahare, hailing from Pune, went paragliding at a height of 150 feet.

A student of Kantilal Khivsara College in the city, Dahare owes her paragliding experience to her instructor Anand Munje.

Under Munje”s supervision, Dahare flew from Bavdhan Tila (hillock) on Monday.
Describing her experience, Dahare said she had never done anything like that before.

“These people came and showed me some videos on the CD player, about how to do paragliding. I felt very nice after watching that video I thought I should give it a try. I have never attempted such a thing in the past so I decided to come here and give it a try,” said Dahare.

Munje took special precautionary measures like extra padding so that Dahare did not sustain any kind of injury.

“Already she is having one disability and in that case nobody would like to have another disability in addition to that. So, obviously, I had to ensure that she does not have any injury of whatever kind. So taking that into consideration, I selected summer season. We just got very good wind conditions and I attached additional padding and sleeping bag at her back, so that in case she falls she won”t get injured,” said Munje. (ANI)

Kids with hearing loss in 1 ear fall behind in language skills

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Loss of hearing in one ear hurts children’s ability to comprehend and use language, according to a new study.

“For many years, pediatricians and educators thought that as long as children have one normal hearing ear, their speech and language would develop normally,” says lead author Judith E. C. Lieu, MD, a Washington University ear, nose and throat specialist at St. Louis Children”s Hospital.

“But then a few studies began suggesting these children might have problems in school. Now our study has shown that on average, children with hearing loss in one ear have poorer oral language scores than children with hearing in both ears,” Lieu says.

Hearing loss in one ear can stem from congenital abnormalities in the ear, head trauma or infections such as meningitis. Children with hearing loss in one ear may go undetected because they can appear to have normal hearing. Their difficulty hearing may be mistaken simply for lack of attention or selective hearing, says Lieu, assistant professor of otolaryngology.

Even children with recognized one-side hearing loss often aren”t fitted with hearing aids and often don”t receive accommodations for disability.

The study will be published in the June issue of the journal Pediatrics. (ANI)

Schools join forces to help disabled kids

Canberra’s public and private schools will combine resources and expertise to help students with special needs.

Education Minister Andrew Barr has established a working group consisting of representatives from all sectors to share expertise and resources.

Mr Barr says it is hoped the closer collaboration will make it easier for students with disabilities to move from one school to another.

“What we have identified is there is often a disconnect when a student with a disability leaves a school that they’ve been at for a long time and then transitions into a new school environment,” he said.

“It’s really important that those linkages and a proper handover occurs and that can be even more complex if the transition is from a public school to a non-government school and vice versa.”

Mr Barr says the working group will create closer ties and partnerships between schools.

SA Upper House set to be finalised

The final make-up of the South Australia’s Legislative Council will be declared on Thursday morning.

Half the Upper House members faced the voters on March 20, with Labor and the Liberals winning four seats each.

The Greens’ Tammy Jennings and Family First’s Robert Brokenshire each secured one and Dignity for Disability, whose lead candidate died during the election campaign, is expected to gain the 11th position for its number two candidate on the voting paper, Kelly Vincent.

The successful Labor candidates are all existing members of the Legislative Council; Paul Holloway, Gail Gago, Bernard Finnigan and John Gazzola.

Jing Lee is the new Liberal who will join David Ridgway, Stephen Wade and Terry Stephens who have been re-elected.

Despite a huge swing against the ALP statewide, Mike Rann’s third-term Government has seen its Lower House majority trimmed by just two seats.

Minister says affordable housing is value for money

Seniors and people with a disability will be offered discounted rent in 26 new homes to be built in Lismore.

The Federal Minister for Housing, Tanya Plibersek says rents will be fixed at 20 percent below the market rate.

She says the $5-million project on the corner of Dibbs and Dalziel streets will be developed in conjunction with Baptist Community Services.

The Minister says it will go some way to relieving housing stress in the region.

“This program and other programs like our Nation Building Economic Stimulus Social Housing Program, which will build 116 new homes in Ballina, Casino, Grafton and Lismore will begin to make a difference,” Ms Plibersek said.

“I don’t think there are any overnight solutions to the housing stress, but I hope our contribution will begin to make a difference,” she said.

The Minister says she’s confident homes built under the National Rental Affordibility Scheme represent value for taxpayers’ money.

The Government has been accused of wasting money by paying too much for school renovations under its Building the Education Revolution scheme.

But Ms Plibersek says housing figures for New South Wales tell a different story.

“We anticipated that homes would cost around $300,000 each for a home and land, and in fact in NSW we’re getting much better value than that. We’re seeing homes come in between (a) 250 and 270,000 dollar average, which is pretty good for a home-and-land package when you average out costs right across the state,” she said.

Students with disabilities ‘denied school enrolment’

Parents of children with a disability say some are being denied school enrolment because of a lack of resources and support.

Legislation to allow children with a disability to study at mainstream schools was introduced in 2001.

The advocacy group, Queensland Parents for People with a Disability (QPPD), is hoping a survey of families’ schooling experiences will help pinpoint problems.

QPPD president Lisa Bridle says inclusive schooling should not be difficult.

“Sometimes schools are reluctant to make a commitment to a child’s enrolment because they are not sure that they’re going to be able to offer adequate support,” she said.

“So we would like that to be more transparent and also for resources not to be used as a discouragement.”

Ms Bridle says there are still many barriers for children trying to access education.

“Anecdotally we’re finding despite good policies that are pro inclusion of students with disabilities, the practices are really lagging behind so many students are continuing to be excluded,” she said.

Boy killed in house fire

Police continue to investigate the cause of a fire that killed a 17-year-old disabled boy in South Guildford.

The boy’s parents escaped the blaze and ran for help and are now in hospital with serious injuries.

The fire started in the back rooms of the Queen Street home.

Detective Senior Sergeant Dave Gorton from the Arson Squad says the teenager was almost out of the house when he was overcome by the fire.

“We believe that the deceased was in his bedroom at the time of the fire however as a result of a disability he has he was unable to move very far through the house,” he said.

It is the second fatal house fire in Perth in recent days.

A woman in her 50s died in a fire at her home in Mandurah on Thursday.

Mayberry misses again at Paralympics

Byron Bay’s Marty Mayberry has crashed out in the first round of the Giant Slalom event at the Paralympics in Canada this morning.

The 24-year-old missed a gate close to the finish and was disqualified for the second time this week.

Team communications manager, Tim Mannion says Mayberry will now focus on his favoured downhill events.

He says conditions at Whistler are tough.

“The conditions don’t suit Marty’s particular disability and he was just really going for it and his ski just caught the edge and he wasn’t able to stick to his racing line so he just got bumped off his course a little bit and just couldn’t make it through the gate in time,” Mr Mannion said.

“Marty was disappointed, but knew that this Giant Slalom wasn’t his pet event, he’s really focussed on the downhill which is his best medal chance and he’s still very optimistic about his chances,” he said.

In a statement released by the Australian Paralympic Committee, Mayberry explained what went wrong and spoke of his confidence going to the remaining events.

“Conditions are tough, I let the ski run too early and paid the price,” Mayberry said.

“Up until Aspen (World Cup), I’d only finished three or four out of 12 races, and I ended up winning a couple of medals there, so it’s easy now to switch off, forget about it and move on,” he said.

“Conditions are funny, at the top it’s dry powder and sunshine it’s like Colorado, but down here it’s like Australia, we’ve got two different countries on the one hill,” Mayberry said.

Creating awareness among specially abled persons is a difficult task, says Abidi

New Delhi, Mar 15 (ANI): Activist Javed Abidi, fighting for the cause of specially abled people, believes that awareness and sensitization among disabled people is the biggest challenge for their enumeration in 2011 census.

“The greatest challenge would be to create awareness and sensitization among disabled people and their families across the country to ensure that every single person is enumerated…that every single people do not shy away from people for being labeled as a person with disability,” said Javed Abidi, director of NCPEDP.

The question on seeking details of specially abled people was first included in the census of 2001.

The achievement of 2001 census was the inclusion of the question on specially abled people in order to get the statistics of specially abled in India.

However, at most places, it was reported that the enumerators did not ask the question on disability. The figure that emerged was that only 2.13 percent of India”s population was specially abled people.

The data plays a major role in formulation of policies and allocation of resources. In India the estimated number of specially abled persons varies from two percent to about eight percent of the population.

The National Centre for Promotion of Employment for Disabled People (NCPEDP) is now deciding on the question that is to be asked in census 2011 in order to get a more accurate data. (ANI)

Exercise beats shockwaves for chronic shoulder pain

London, Sept 16 (ANI): Supervised exercise helps ease chronic shoulder pain better than sound shockwave treatment, a new study suggests.

In the study, published in the online British Medical Journal, team of researchers based in Oslo, Norway compared the effectiveness of radial extracorporeal shockwave treatment (low to medium energy impulses delivered into the tissue) with supervised exercises in patients with shoulder pain.

The research involved 104 men and women aged between 18 and 70 years.

Participants were randomised to receive either radial extracorporeal shockwave treatment (one session weekly for four to six weeks) or supervised exercises (two 45 minute sessions weekly for up to 12 weeks).

Both groups were similar at the start of the study with regard to age, education, dominant arm affected and pain duration.

All patients were monitored at six, 12 and 18 weeks and were advised not to have any additional treatment except analgesics (including anti-inflammatory drugs) during the follow-up period. Pain and disability were measured using a recognised scoring index.

After 18 weeks, 32 of patients in the exercise group achieved a reduction in shoulder pain and disability scores compared with 18 in the shockwave treatment group.

More patients in the exercise group returned to work, while more patients in the shockwave treatment group had additional treatment after 12 weeks, suggesting that they were less satisfied.

The authors conclude: “Supervised exercises were more effective than radial extracorporeal shockwave treatment for short term improvement in patients with subacromial shoulder pain.” (ANI)

Natalizumab drug improves quality of life of MS patients

Washington, Sept 13 (ANI): A new study has found that multiple sclerosis patients taking Tysabri (Natalizumab) experienced a significant improvement in both their physical function and psychological well-being.

“The symptoms that an MS patient deals with on a daily basis result in significant psychological and physical effects that can adversely impact their quality of life,” said Dr William Stuart, medical director of the Multiple Sclerosis Center of Atlanta.

“In a previous pivotal trial, TYSABRI not only showed a reduction in relapse rates and disability progression, but also improved quality of life.

“Results from this observational study further demonstrate the impact of TYSABRI on improving MS patients’ well-being as reported by patients who live with this disease every day,” he added.

The study assessed the health outcomes from patients’ perspectives before starting TYSABRI and after the third, sixth and 12th infusions of TYSABRI.

After six TYSABRI infusions, patients reported statistically significant improvement in disease-specific quality of life (QoL), which measures the physical impact of MS in terms of mobility and self care, as well as the psychological impact of MS in terms of anxiety/depression.

The participants also scored higher in general health-related quality of life.

The findings were presented at the 25th Congress of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS). (ANI)

Back injury could end Phil Collins’ drumming career

London, Sept 11 (ANI): Genesis drummer Phil Collins may be forced to quit drumming after a back injury.

The 58-year-old had suffered back injury during the last Genesis tour, in 2007, and had said earlier this week that the problem had come about because of his drumming posture, due to which his vertebrae had been crushing his spinal cord.

The rockstar has now revealed that a surgery to repair the dislocated vertebrae in his neck had left him incapable of holding drumsticks properly or playing the piano.

However Collins was optimistic about the future and said “stuff appens in life”

The Telegraph quoted him as saying: “There isn’t any drama regarding my ‘disability’ and playing drums.

“Somehow during the last Genesis tour I dislocated some vertebrae in my upper neck and that affected my hands.

“After a successful operation on my neck, my hands still can’t function normally.

“Maybe in a year or so it will change, but for now it is impossible for me to play drums or piano.

“I am not in any ‘distressed’ state – stuff happens in life.” (ANI)

The Oz dating agency that breaks hearts!

Melbourne, Sep 5 (ANI): The unscrupulous dealings of a New South Wales dating agency was recently uncovered after its victims reported that they were fleeced of thousands of dollars without getting anything in return.

Fair Trading Minister Virginia Judge said the government had received a series of complaints from consumers and was taking steps to ban TLC Consulting Services.

She said a Fair Trading investigation found the Tweed Heads company had used misleading and deceptive tactics to induce people to sign expensive contracts for dating services, life coaching and grooming packages.

Some victims reported paying up to 35,000 dollars and 110,000 dollars but received nothing in return.

Judge said evidence also existed that the company had preyed on emotionally vulnerable people struggling to find a partner because they had a disability or lived in remote areas.

“This company will not find you true love but will leave you with a broken heart and an empty wallet,” News.com.au quoted her as saying.

“The conduct of this company is unconscionable.

“It is important we stop the unscrupulous operators from breaking any more hearts,” she added. (ANI)

Genetic discovery could pave way for obesity, diabetes treatments

Washington, Aug 27 (ANI): Researchers at University of Central Florida have identified a new genetic mechanism that controls the body’s fat-building process, paving way for treatments for obesity and type 2 diabetes.

The discovery has the potential to help hundreds of millions of people and dramatically cut health care costs.

Led by Pappachan Kolattukudy, director of UCF’s Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences in the College of Medicine, found that a gene called MCPIP (Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 Induced Protein) controls the development of fat cells.

Until now, a different protein, known as peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR gamma), has been universally accepted as the master controller of fat cell formation, known as adipogenesis.

But the new findings has opened new doors for scientists looking forward to develop drugs that could benefit the more than 300 million people worldwide who are clinically obese, and who have much higher risks of suffering from chronic disease and disability.

Besides, it is projected that more than 300 million people will be diabetic by the year 2025.

Kolattukudy said MCPIP is potentially an ideal target for drugs that would prevent the body from becoming resistant to insulin and prone to type 2 diabetes.

“Our research has shown that MCPIP is a regulator of fat cell formation and blood vessel formation that feeds the growing fat tissue. Therefore, a drug that can shut down its function can prevent obesity and the major inflammatory diseases resulting from obesity, including diabetes and cardiovascular diseases,” the expert said.

For the study, the researchers introduced MCPIP to living cells from mice that had been stripped of the PPAR gamma gene and found that the cells still completed the developmental process necessary to build fat.

Now, the researchers are planning to explore chemical combinations to discover drugs that are effective at shutting down the novel gene.

The development of new drugs that can block or slow down the formation of MCPIP likely would take several years.

The findings will be published in the October issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry. (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)

Obesity linked to increased risk of rapid cartilage loss

Washington, July 14 (ANI): A new study has shown that obesity, among other factors, is strongly associated with an increased risk of rapid cartilage loss.

Tibio-femoral cartilage is a flexible connective tissue that covers and protects the bones of the knee. Cartilage damage can occur due to excessive wear and tear, injury, misalignment of the joint or other factors, including osteoarthritis (the most common form of arthritis).

In osteoarthritis, the cartilage breaks down and, in severe cases, can completely wear away, leaving the joint without a cushion. The bones rub together, causing further damage, significant pain and loss of mobility.

The best way to prevent or slow cartilage loss and subsequent disability is to identify risk factors early.

“Osteoarthritis is a slowly progressive disorder, but a minority of patients with hardly any osteoarthritis at first diagnosis exhibit fast disease progression,” said the study’s lead author, Frank W. Roemer, M.D., adjunct associate professor at Boston University and co-director of the Quantitative Imaging Center at the Department of Radiology at Boston University School of Medicine.

“So we set out to identify baseline risk factors that might predict rapid cartilage loss in patients with early knee osteoarthritis or at high risk for the disease,” Dr. Roemer added.

The researchers recruited patients from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study, a prospective study of 3,026 people, age 50 – 79, at risk for osteoarthritis or with early x-ray evidence of the disease.

Dr. Roemer’s study consisted of 347 knees in 336 patients. The patient group was comprised of 65.2 percent women, mean age 61.2, with a mean BMI of 29.5, which is classified as overweight. Recommended BMI typically ranges from 18.5 to 25. Only knees with minimal or no baseline cartilage damage were included.

Of 347 knees selected for the study, 20.2 percent exhibited slow cartilage loss over the 30-month follow-up period and 5.8 percent showed rapid cartilage loss.

Rapid cartilage loss was defined by a whole organ magnetic imaging score of at least 5, indicating a large full thickness loss of 75 percent in any subregion of the knee during the follow-up period.

The results showed that the top risk factors contributing to rapid cartilage loss were baseline cartilage damage, high BMI, tears or other injury to the meniscus (the cartilage cushion at the knee joint) and severe lesions seen on MRI at the initial exam. Other predictors were synovitis (inflammation of the membrane that lines the joints) and effusion (abnormal build-up of joint fluid).

Excess weight was significantly associated with an increased risk of rapid cartilage loss. No other demographic factors-including age, sex and ethnicity-were associated with rapid cartilage loss.

“As obesity is one of the few established risk factors for osteoarthritis, it is not surprising that obesity may also precede and predict rapid cartilage loss,” Dr. Roemer said.
he study has been published in the August issue of Radiology. (ANI)

Women with curable brain tumour refusing surgery to save her looks

London, July 10 (ANI): A women with a curable brain tumour is refusing surgery because it will ruin her looks.

Martha McBrier, 46, says that she’ rather die than have an abnormal face.

“My growing brain tumour is slowly killing me. It has already destroyed most of my hearing and every morning it takes me over two hours to steady myself enough to get out of bed,” the Mirror quoted

But one thing always makes me smile – when I look in the mirror I see my normal face.

Doctors insist they can cure me but the surgery that would save my life could paralyse part of my face.

And while I don’t consider myself vain, I would rather die than walk down the road with a face that doesn’t look normal.

My fear is that surgery might leave me ugly with a paralysed mouth where I can’t eat or talk properly. Or my eye won’t close properly or will constantly twitch.

And obvious disability isn’t the only thing that stops me having an operation. As a part-time stand-up comedienne, I worry about losing my sense of humour.

The thought that doctors might remove part of me along with this tumour terrifies me,” she added. (ANI)

Why minor neuromuscular damage can affect one’s ability to complete everyday tasks

Washington, July 9 (ANI): In what may help understand why minor damage to the neuromuscular system can at times profoundly affect one’s ability to complete everyday tasks, scientists have found that activities combining movement and force tax the brain to capacity, countering a long-held belief that difficulty with dexterous tasks results from the limits of the muscles themselves.

“Our results show how much the mechanics of the body, and a given task, affect what the brain can or can’t do,” said Francisco Valero-Cuevas of the Brain-Body Dynamics Lab at the University of Southern California, who led the research.

“The so-called ‘problem’ of muscle redundancy-having too many muscles and joints to control-may not be the only challenge the brain faces when controlling our bodies. Rather, we seem to have about as many muscles as we need, and not too many, as others have proposed in the past.

“The scientific world and the clinical world have long been arriving at conflicting conclusions, and this work begins to resolve the paradox.

“While neuroscience and biomechanics studies have suggested that muscles and joints are, in theory, redundant and provide numerous alternative solutions to simple tasks, clinicians routinely see people seeking treatment for hand disability resulting from relatively minor conditions such as aging,” added Valero-Cuevas.

The study followed previous experiments that suggested the brain and complex musculature can barely keep up with requirements posed by our anatomy and the mechanics of even ordinary, real-world, finger tasks like rubbing a surface.

The conclusions begin to explain why even minor damage to the neuromuscular system seems to produce real deficits in manipulation.

The research focused on simultaneous force and motion-specifically from fingers either pushing or rubbing a surface-with volunteers conducting the experiment at defined, yet varying, speeds.

Knowing the force-producing properties of muscle, the researchers expected the rubbing motion would show reduced downward force as the speed of motion increased.

Surprisingly, whether rubbing slowly or at a pace 36-times faster, speed had little affect on the downward force the volunteers could produce.

The researchers interpret the results to mean the brain is sufficiently occupied by the physical demands of combining motions and forces, so the muscle properties are not the limiting factors for how much force the fingers can create.

“This begins to explain the clinical reality that when something in the system is damaged, either in the brain or body, we can see losses of function. We are not as ‘redundant’ as we thought,” said Valero-Cuevas.

The research team is conducting additional research to determine what exact neural and anatomical mechanisms are producing these results.

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