‘Golfer’s curse’ blamed on writer”s cramp-like disorder

London, April 20(ANI): Some of the best golfers often find it hard to make as simple as 3 feet putts. Now, neurologists have suggested that it could be because of a movement disorder similar to writer”s cramp.

The problem also known as “golfer”s curse” has effected some of the game’s greats, such as Bernhard Langer, Ben Hogan, Harry Vardon and Sam Snead.

As part of the study, researchers recruited 25 golfers, who complained of the yips and 25 who did not.

The electrical activity in their muscles was measured, while they made dozens of putts of varying lengths.

They wore a “cyber glove” to measures movements in the hand.

It was found that 15 were in the group were with the yips.

Also, two more golfers, who thought they were just bad putters, were found to suffer from the condition, reports the Telegraph.

The study found the condition to be similar to the muscle rigidity or cramp, which affects writers.

“I believe that”s the case in a subset of golfers. Identifying that subset is my goal,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Charles Adler, a neurologist who led the research, as saying.

He advised golfers to change their grip or see a psychologist for remedy.

Such cramps have ruined the careers of concert pianists and guitarists too.

The condition is also known as the jitters, the jerks, the staggers, and “balky putter”.

The research was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in Toronto. (ANI)

Now send email through ‘human arm broadband’

London, Mar 16 (ANI): After sending data through wires and air, researchers have now successfully used the human body as a communication interface.

Researchers at Korea University in Seoul have transmitted data at a rate of 10 megabits per second through a person”s arm, between two electrodes placed on their skin 30 centimetres apart.

The thin, flexible electrodes use significantly less energy than a wireless link like Bluetooth, because low-frequency electromagnetic waves pass through skin with little attenuation— a route that also shelters them from outside interference.

And the researchers believe their technology holds huge health benefits for the users.

It is difficult to monitor vital signs, such as blood sugar and electrical activity of the heart, in a person going about their everyday lives because it means either covering them in snaking wires connected to a recording device, or using wireless transmission.

“If we use wireless for each of these vital signs we would need many batteries,” New Scientist quoted study co-author Sang-Hoon Lee as saying.

A network transmitting through the skin would cut energy needs by roughly 90 per cent, he said.

The researchers coated a metal electrode with a flexible silicon-rich polymer to ensure that it was skin safe by asking volunteers to wear an electrode on their shoulder, or behind their ear for a week.

They also carried out cytotoxicity tests using human cell cultures.

The entire device is 300 micrometres thick – about the width of three human hairs – and withstood tests in which it was bent to a 90-degree angle 700,000 times.

Now, the researchers are working with a large electronics manufacturer to develop health-monitoring networks using the new electrodes.

Lee said future versions could even be embedded beneath the skin for long-term monitoring applications, such as electrocardiography (ECG) or electroencephalography (EEG).

The study has been published in the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering. (ANI)

Soon, robot controlled by human brain cells

London, Sept 10 (ANI): Scientists from University of Reading are working on developing a robot that would be controlled by human brain cells.

Lead researchers Kevin Warwick and Ben Whalley have already used rat brain cells to control a simple wheeled robot.

During the study, the researchers grew around 300,000 rat neurons in a nutrient broth and device producing spikes of electrical activity were connected to the output of the robot’s distance sensors.

The neurons could successfully steer the robot around a small enclosure.

Based on the findings rat models, the researchers are now working on steering the robot with the help of human brain cells.

The researchers believe that understanding how the neuron culture responds to stimulation could lead to deeper insights of neurological conditions such as epilepsy.

For instance, the way large numbers of neurons sometimes spike in unison – a phenomenon known as “bursting” – may be similar to what happens during an epileptic seizure.

The research team suggests if the behavior could be altered by changing the culture chemically, electrically or physically, it might pave way for potential therapies.

To make the system a better model of human disease, a culture of human neurons will be connected to the robot once the current work with rat cells is completed.

They will analyze the differences in the behavior of robots controlled by rat and human neurons.

“We’ll be trying to find out if the learning aspects and memory appear to be similar,” New Scientist quoted Warwick as saying. (ANI)

“Upside down” lightning as powerful as strongest Earth-bound Bolts

Washington, August 24 (ANI): In a new research, a team of scientists has determined that lightning that shoots upward from clouds can be as powerful as the strongest bolts that strike the ground.

According to a report in National Geographic News, these rarely seen, highly charged meteorological events are known as ‘gigantic jets’, and they flash up to the lower levels of space, or ionosphere.

While they don’t occur every time there is lightning, they are substantially larger than their downward striking cousins.

But researchers had witnessed gigantic jets just a handful of times, leaving much unknown about the strength and electrical activity of the unusual lightning strikes.

On July 21, 2008, a team led by Steven Cummer at Duke University in North Carolina had a stroke of luck.

The scientists had set up an automated video system equipped to study magnetic activity from thunderstorms moving through the area around the university.

“My research group had actually been interested in studying sprites, a different lightning phenomenon in the upper atmosphere,” Cummer said.

Six months into the project, tropical storm Cristobal moved over the region, and the video system captured a gigantic jet rising from the tempest.

“Essentially nothing was known about the electrical nature of gigantic jets, (so) we immediately started analyzing our data to understand what was going on,” Cummer said. he researchers found that the upward lightning carried 144 Coulombs of electrical charge.

Whereas a conventional lightning bolt follows a six-inch channel and travels about 4.5 miles down to earth, the gigantic jet recorded by the scientists contained multiple channels and traveled about 40 miles upward.

“This gigantic jet carried as much charge to the upper atmosphere as the very biggest cloud-to-ground lightning strokes, about a hundred to a thousand times bigger than a typical lightning stroke,” Cummer said.

The finding totally shocked the research team, since it’s the first clear proof that an electric charge can move directly from the troposphere into the ionosphere, two layers of Earth’s atmosphere.

Until now, “we didn’t know whether gigantic jets actually made electrical contact with the upper atmosphere to discharge the thunderstorm,” Cummer said.

“That thunderstorms can be electrically connected to the upper atmosphere and push quite a bit of electric charge up there is a surprise,” he added.

Cummer is planning to install a low-light, high-speed camera to capture gigantic jet images in color, which could provide additional information about chemical processes and temperatures inside the phenomenon. (ANI)

Martian dust storms can generate lightning

Washington, August 9 (ANI): Scientists, using a new detector, have for the first time observed evidence that Martian dust storms can generate lightning.

Dust storms on Earth build up an electric field as dust particles collide, and then emit lightning as the electric field discharges.

Some previous evidence suggested that Martian dust storms might also generate lightning in this manner, but the phenomenon had not been directly observed.

To observe evidence of lightning on Mars, Christopher Ruf and his team from the Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences, University of Michigan, US, used a new detector that is able to distinguish nonthermal microwave radiation, which indicates a large electric discharge, from ordinary thermal radiation.

The instrument, installed in the 34-meter (111.55-feet) radio telescope of the Deep Space Network, made measurements from 22 May to 16 June 2006.

The research team detected nonthermal microwave emission in bursts several minutes long during a period of about 3 hours that coincided with a large dust storm on June 8, 2006.

On the basis of the spectrum of this radiation, the researchers concluded that the radiation was probably excited by lightning in the Martian dust storm.

According to them, the discovery of electrical activity in Martian dust storms has implications for atmospheric chemistry, habitability, and preparations for human exploration. (ANI)

How to text message without any pain in neck, arms and hands

Washington, June 24 (ANI): Suffering sore thumbs, pain in the neck, arms and hands owing to that constant text messaging to your girlfriend? Well, then you are certainly typing those messages differently than others.

According to a study at the Sahlgrenska Academy, young adults with symptoms in these parts of the body use a different technique when texting.

Ergonomist Ewa Gustafsson studied mobile phone habits among 56 young adults who text message on a daily basis.

Half of the subjects reported problems with the neck, arms or hands, while the other half had no such symptoms.

“Considering how much we use the small mobile phone keypads, it is important that we learn how they affect our bodies. We need to identify factors related to mobile phone usage that may affect our health and ability to work,” said Gustafsson.

Her thesis has shown that mobile phone users with neck, arm or hand symptoms tend to use their mobile phones differently than seen in a healthy control group.

‘Those with symptoms more often text messaged hunched over. Just like when using a computer, such posture should be avoided’, said Gustafsson.

She observed that those with neck, arm or hand problems have the tendency to use one thumb to text instead of two, thus using that one thumb with a higher speed and giving it fewer breaks.

‘It was fascinating to see how fast some individuals could use their thumbs and still find the right letters. Those with symptoms should use both thumbs to reduce the stress on their hands, but these individuals instead use the single-thumb technique to a larger extent than those without problems’, said Gustafsson.

There were also differences in terms of work technique, thumb movements and muscular activity.

She assessed thumb movements with a so-called electrogoniometer, and the muscular activity through electromyography (using electrodes to measure electrical activity in muscles).

Gustafsson also interviewed 25 young adults who use mobile phones and computers extensively to communicate.

‘These people use the technology as a tool to be and act in the present, to be social, effective and independent with almost unlimited possibilities. But there are also risks. Those interviewed related health risks to long-term usage, bad work posture and reduced physical activity’, she said. (ANI)

Why ‘coffee withdrawal’ leads to pounding headaches

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Suffering from pounding headache, fatigue just because you missed your morning coffee? Well, you’re not the only one to experience such caffeine withdrawal symptoms. Now, scientists have tried to explain why this happens.

Stacey Sigmon, Ph.D., research associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Vermont College of Medicine and colleagues at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine sought to investigate the biological mechanisms of caffeine withdrawal in a new study.

Consumers of coffee and other caffeinated products have often reported that caffeine withdrawal brings with it many after effects, which include headache, fatigue, feeling less alert, less energetic and experiencing difficulty concentrating.

In the study, the researchers looked at brain electrical activity and blood flow during caffeine withdrawal to examine what was taking place physiologically during acute caffeine abstinence, including the likely mechanism underlying the common “caffeine withdrawal headache.”
They examined caffeine’s effects in a double-blind study, which involved the administration of caffeine and placebo capsules.

The researchers measured each participant’s response to the caffeine or placebo using three different measures – brain electrical activity via electroencephalogram (EEG); blood flow velocity in the brain via ultrasound; and participants’ self-reports of subjective effects via questionnaires.

It was shown that stopping daily caffeine consumption produces changes in cerebral blood flow velocity and quantitative EEG that are likely related to the classic caffeine withdrawal symptoms of headache, drowsiness and decreased alertness.

More specifically, acute caffeine abstinence increased brain blood flow, an effect that may account for commonly reported withdrawal headaches.

Acute caffeine abstinence also produced changes in EEG (increased theta rhythm) that has previously been linked to the common withdrawal symptom of fatigue.

Consistent with the above results, volunteers reported increases in measures of “tired,” “fatigue,” “sluggish” and “weary.”

Overall, these findings provide the most rigorous demonstration to date of physiological effects of caffeine withdrawal.

Also, the researchers discovered a provocative and somewhat unexpected finding – that there were no net benefits linked with chronic caffeine administration.

“In addition to looking at caffeine withdrawal, this rigorous design also permitted comparison of chronic caffeine maintenance with chronic placebo maintenance, which provides unique information about the extent to which there are net beneficial effects of daily caffeine administration,” said Sigmon, who is first author on the study.

He added: “In contrast to what most of us coffee lovers would think, our study showed no difference between when the participant was maintained on chronic placebo and when the participant was stabilized on chronic caffeine administration. What this means is that consuming caffeine regularly does not appear to produce any net beneficial effects, based on the measures we examined.”

The study has been published recently in the online edition of the scientific journal Psychopharmacology. (ANI)

Novel non-invasive technique to predict, treat heart attacks

Washington, Apr 28 (ANI): There’s new hope for potential heart attack victims. Researchers from Tel Aviv University have developed a new non-invasive technique that would help predict and treat attacks.

The research team led by Dr. Sharon Zlochiver of the Department of Biomedical Engineering has shown that by looking at the electrical activity coupling two types of heart muscle cells one can identify an impending heart attack.

The new technique can not only predict when a heart attack will occur, but it can also help doctors – and patients -buy time before a deadly attack takes place.

“Seventy percent of the heart is made up of myocytes, which are contractile muscle cells. The remaining 30 percent is mostly rigid structural cells called fibroblasts that work to hold the muscle in place,” said Zlochiver.

“As the heart ages and contends with factors such as high blood pressure or genetic disease, this balance begins to change,” he added.

Zlochiver developed a mathematical model that shows when the proportion of structural fibroblast cells are at dangerous levels, at approximately 70pct of the heart’s volume, which is said to be the “tipping point” where a heart attack is imminent.

Studying the electric coupling – tiny electric signals – between myocytes and fibroblast cells, he was able to paint a more accurate picture of a heart’s health than could be deduced from even an MRI or CT scan.

“This coupling is crucial to the initiation of fibrillation,” he said.

Indicating how the electrical impulses move in a healthy heart, in a synchronized ordered manner, he compares that to a diseased heart, where electric coupling is scattered and irregular and the impulses break into chaotic local “tornados.”

The research was published in the Biophysical Journal. (ANI)

Gene that switches on during epilepsy development identified

Washington, Apr 23 (ANI): Researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine have identified a gene that switches on during development of epilepsy.

The discovery made while studying mice may help explain how some people without a genetic predisposition to epilepsy can develop the disorder.

In a study published this month in the Journal of Neuroscience, senior researcher Dwayne W. Godwin, Ph.D., a professor of neurobiology and anatomy, and colleagues, report discovering that a gene, already known to predispose people who inherit an active form of it to certain forms of epilepsy, can actually be “switched on” in animals that do not appear to have inherited the active form, and therefore a genetic predisposition, to the condition.

The gene codes a calcium channel in the brain that underlies seizures, so the finding may reveal a mechanism by which epilepsy develops in those with no apparent genetic predisposition to it.

“Epilepsy is a terrible disorder that affects millions of kids and adults all over the world,” Godwin said.

“There are many different forms of epilepsy with different symptoms. We don’t know why some people acquire epilepsy – the cause isn’t always clear from the person’s genetic makeup. We do know that in some forms of epilepsy, once someone has a seizure they tend to have more. Our findings from this study suggest that something about the brain changes that can lead to this increased tendency to have a seizure. Our study shows that an important change occurs in calcium channels that help to transmit this abnormal activity throughout the brain,” the expert added.

Calcium channels come in a variety of forms throughout the body and are responsible for several key functions, depending on their placement and quantity. The calcium channels in the brain are normally embedded within the membrane of brain cells, where they allow passage of calcium ions into the cell and are responsible for the electrical activity of the brain.

The passage of calcium ions into cells determines how excitable the cells are, and how easily abnormal activity spreads through the brain.

If, as in epilepsy, a particular channel shows up where it is not supposed to or appears in too many or too few numbers, the function that channel is responsible for can become abnormal. Researchers know that during epileptic seizures, these calcium channels in the brain, responsible for generating electrical brain rhythms, become highly active.

For the study, researchers used a mouse model to observe changes in tissue from regions of the brain that are involved in seizures, the hippocampus and the thalamus. They measured these changes at different time intervals as the mice developed epilepsy. The researchers found that after an initial seizure, more of this particular kind of calcium channel begins to be expressed where it wasn’t before, and the presence of the channel caused brain activity to become increasingly abnormal and epileptic.

“Calcium channels underlie valuable functions. But in the wrong place, at the wrong time, or in the wrong amount, their presence can be disruptive. In the context of brain circuits, the brain cells that have too many copies of the channel get over excited and respond abnormally,” Godwin said.

While the hippocampus is usually targeted in studies of epilepsy, the new channels were being made in a region of the brain called the thalamus. The thalamus is connected to the hippocampus and is involved in the spread of seizures throughout the brain.

“Certain kinds of channels are normal and expected in the thalamus, but after an initial seizure more copies of a channel that isn’t normally found in this brain region begin to appear,” explained graduate student John Graef, the first author on the study.

“The brain activity then becomes dominated by the new copies of this channel. It helps explain how seizures can develop and spread,” the expert added. (ANI)

Babies likely dream their first dreams in womb

Washington, April 14 (ANI): German researchers have found that very immature sheep foetuses can enter a dreaming sleep-like state weeks before the first rapid eye movements are seen.

Mathematical analysis carried out by mathematician Karin Schwab and neuroscientists at Friedrich Schiller University in Jena provides a tool to better understand the purpose of sleep.

It may also be helpful in studying how the brain develops, and in identifying vulnerable periods in brain development when damage could lead to disease later in life.

The researchers point out that directly measuring the brain activity of a human foetus in the womb is impossible, and that whatever is known about the early sleep habits comes mostly from watching eye movements.

The first rapid eye movements are seen around the seventh month of a foetus’ development.

For the current research, Schwab studied sheep, an animal that typically carries one or two foetuses similar in size and weight to a human foetus.

The course of brain development is also fairly similar in humans and sheep, lasting about 280 days in humans and 150 days in sheep.

The researchers recorded electrical activity in the brain of a 106-day-old developing sheep foetus directly, something that had never been done before.

Schwab’s team used sophisticated mathematical techniques for detecting patterns, and found cycles in the complexity of immature brain activity.

Unlike sleep patterns in later stages of development, the cycles fluctuated every 5 to 10 minutes and changed slowly as the foetus grows.

The researchers concede that it is difficult to imagine what the foetus experiences during such cycles in terms familiar to adults, but add that the patterns shed new light on the origins of sleep.

“Sleep does not suddenly evolve from a resting brain. Sleep and sleep state changes are active regulated processes,” says Schwab.

The new findings are also consistent with other data that shows that the brain cells that generate sleep states mature long before the rest of the brain is developed enough to fall into REM sleep.

Schwab says that a better understanding of brain development may provide clues about diseases later in life, like neurological disorders or crib death.

A research article on the mathematical analysis has been published in the journal Chaos. (ANI)

Dopamine neuron firing facilitates brain’s prediction of rewards

Washington, Apr 4 (ANI): Phasic firing of midbrain dopamine neurons helps the brain to differentiate between rewarding and aversive events, according to a study.

The study was a collaborative effort by Carlos Paladini, assistant professor of neuroscience at The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) and UTSA graduate student Collin Lobb, and researchers at The University of Washington at Seattle.

The researchers studied the firing patterns of midbrain dopamine neurons in mice during reward-based learning.

“Our research findings provide a direct functional link between the bursting activity of midbrain dopamine neurons and behaviour. The research has significant applications for the improvement of health, because the dopamine neurons we are studying are the same neurons that become inactivated during Parkinson’s Disease and with the consumption of psychostimulants such as cocaine and amphetamine,” said Paladini.

Midbrain dopamine neurons fire in two characteristic modes, tonic and phasic, which are thought to modulate distinct aspects of behaviour.

When an unexpected reward is presented to an individual, midbrain dopamine neurons fire high frequency bursts of electrical activity that allows the brain to learn to link the reward with cues in our environment, which may predict similar rewards in the future.

A protein called the NMDA receptor, which is expressed on the surface of the dopamine cells, is what controls the burst of electrical spikes observed in dopamine neurons.

For the study, the researchers removed the NMDA receptor from the dopamine cells only, leaving the dopamine neurons unable to fire bursts.

When researchers placed the mice in reward-based situations, it was found that the mice without the NMDA receptor in their dopaminergic neurons could not learn tasks that required them to link sensory cues with reward.

However, the same mice could learn tasks that did not involve an association with rewards.

“Now that we know NMDA receptors are required for burst firing in dopamine neurons, we need to explore the mechanisms by which NMDA receptor-mediated bursting is regulated or gated,” said Lobb.

The study has been published in the online edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Guitarists’ brains become synchronised during gigs just like their guitars

Washington, March 17 (ANI): When a group of musicians perform during a concert, their brains become synchronised in the same fashion as their instruments do, according to a new study.

Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin and the University of Salzburg came to this conclusion after recording the brain electrical activity in eight pairs of guitarists with the aid of electroencephalography (EEG).

The researchers say that the finding as to how EEG readouts from pairs of guitarists become more synchronized has wider potential implications for how our brains interact when we do.

During the study, each of the eight pairs played a short jazz-fusion melody together up to 60 times, while the EEG picked up their brain waves via electrodes on their scalps.

The researchers said that the similarities among the brainwaves’ phase, both within and between the brains of the musicians, increased significantly: first when listening to a metronome beat in preparation; and secondly as they began to play together.

They said that, as they had expected, the brains’ frontal and central regions showed the strongest synchronization patterns.

But, according to the researchers, the temporal and parietal regions also showed relatively high synchronization in at least half of the pairs of musicians.

The team said that the regions might be involved in processes supporting the coordinated action between players, or in enjoying the music.

“Our findings show that interpersonally coordinated actions are preceded and accompanied by between-brain oscillatory couplings,” says Ulman Lindenberger.

The study did not determine whether such occurs in response to the beat of the metronome and music, and as a result of watching each others’ movements and listening to each others’ music, or whether the brain synchronization takes place first and causes the coordinated performance.

While scientists have shown individuals’ brains getting tuning into music before, this is the first time that any research team have measured brain activity among musicians as they performed jointly in concert.

The study has been published in the online open access journal BMC Neuroscience. (ANI)

Men and women’s brains are hard-wired to perceive beauty differently

London, Feb 24 (ANI): Beauty is not only in the eye of the beholder, but it’s also in his brain, suggests a new study, which found that men process exquisiteness on the right side of their brains, while ladies use their whole mind to do the job.

The study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Scienceslaims that the difference may result from different evolutionary pressures on the two sexes in our hunter-gatherer ancestors.

Led by Camilo Cela-Conde of the Balearic University in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, the study used photographs of natural and urban scenes to reach the conclusion.

Research team showed photographs of the scenes to 10 male and 10 female volunteers, and asked them to classify each scene as beautiful or not beautiful.

As volunteers followed so, the researchers measured the electrical activity of their brains using a technique known as magnetoencephalography. Then they looked to see which parts of the brain were active only for scenes rated as beautiful – in other words, what “beauty” looks like in the brain.

Both men and women showed increased activity in the parietal region, near the top of the brain, in response to beautiful scenes, reports New Scientist.

In women, this increased activity occurred in both hemispheres of the brain, while in men it was restricted mainly to the right hemisphere. (ANI)

Men and women’s brains are hard-wired to perceive beauty differently

London, Feb 24 (ANI): Beauty is not only in the eye of the beholder, but it’s also in his brain, suggests a new study, which found that men process exquisiteness on the right side of their brains, while ladies use their whole mind to do the job.

The study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Scienceslaims that the difference may result from different evolutionary pressures on the two sexes in our hunter-gatherer ancestors.

Led by Camilo Cela-Conde of the Balearic University in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, the study used photographs of natural and urban scenes to reach the conclusion.

Research team showed photographs of the scenes to 10 male and 10 female volunteers, and asked them to classify each scene as beautiful or not beautiful.

As volunteers followed so, the researchers measured the electrical activity of their brains using a technique known as magnetoencephalography. Then they looked to see which parts of the brain were active only for scenes rated as beautiful – in other words, what “beauty” looks like in the brain.

Both men and women showed increased activity in the parietal region, near the top of the brain, in response to beautiful scenes, reports New Scientist.

In women, this increased activity occurred in both hemispheres of the brain, while in men it was restricted mainly to the right hemisphere. (ANI)

Men and women’s brains are hard-wired to perceive beauty differently

London, Feb 24 (ANI): Beauty is not only in the eye of the beholder, but it’s also in his brain, suggests a new study, which found that men process exquisiteness on the right side of their brains, while ladies use their whole mind to do the job.

The study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Scienceslaims that the difference may result from different evolutionary pressures on the two sexes in our hunter-gatherer ancestors.

Led by Camilo Cela-Conde of the Balearic University in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, the study used photographs of natural and urban scenes to reach the conclusion.

Research team showed photographs of the scenes to 10 male and 10 female volunteers, and asked them to classify each scene as beautiful or not beautiful.

As volunteers followed so, the researchers measured the electrical activity of their brains using a technique known as magnetoencephalography. Then they looked to see which parts of the brain were active only for scenes rated as beautiful – in other words, what “beauty” looks like in the brain.

Both men and women showed increased activity in the parietal region, near the top of the brain, in response to beautiful scenes, reports New Scientist.

In women, this increased activity occurred in both hemispheres of the brain, while in men it was restricted mainly to the right hemisphere. (ANI)

Chickens could help provide solutions for human heart abnormalities

Washington, Jan 22 (ANI): By focussing on chickens’ hearts, a scientist at University of Missouri has identified some proteins in the heart muscle that are critical in regulating embryonic heartbeat control.

Knowledge of these components and how they interact can enable researchers with a better understanding of heart development and abnormalities in humans.

For the study, the researchers examined embryonic chickens’ hearts, which develop morphologically and functionally similarly to humans’ hearts.

They then tested the electrical activity present in the cardiac muscle cells over a period of 24 hours, and found that the changes in local proteins have important effects on embryonic heart beat control.

“Electrical activity in the heart appears in very early stages of development. This study determined the role of the heart microenvironment in regulating electrical activity in cardiac cells that are required for normal cardiac function,” said Luis Polo-Parada, assistant professor in the Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology in the MU School of Medicine and investigator in the Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center.

He added: ” Understanding exactly how a heart is made and how it begins to function will allow us to significantly improve therapies for a wide range of cardiac anomalies, injuries and diseases such as hypertension, cardiac fibrosis, cardiac hypertrophy and congestive heart failure.”

Cardiac function depends on appropriate timing of contraction in various regions of the heart.

The electrical signals that arise within the heart cells that initiate contraction of the heart muscle are essential to the control of the heart.

The upper chambers of the heart, the atria, must contract before the lower chambers, the ventricles, to obtain a coordinated contraction that will propel the blood throughout the body.

Although scientists understand the gross actions of the electrical signals that drive cardiac contraction, they still don’t have a full idea of the changes in the local environment of the embryonic and adult heart cells that influence these contractions. (ANI)