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  • Brain Diseases Told To Keep Pace

    by Susan July 29, 2010 at 9:22 am

    Crippling diseases of the brain, caused by strokes, car accidents, and critical to this study, Parkinson’s devastate families and render patients vegetative or compromised in some way.  The latest research offering a genuine hope focuses on the Parkinson’s patient, and has been dubbed a pacemaker for the brain.

    Still very much in the early stages, the team working at Tel Aviv University have developed a biometric chip that can potentially build on the current deep brain stimulation techniques already used, but prevent the potential over stimulation that can happen at present.  Currently the treatment is given continuously regardless of whether it is needed or not.

    The use of this Rehabilitation Nano Chip (ReNaChip) would mean that electrodes implanted into the scalp can be connected with wires on the outside of head to the chip, which will then only administer the electrical stimulation when needed and take breaks as appropriate.  This means that the patient would not be receiving treatment when sleeping and, in the case of a severe epileptic, only begin treatment as the brain displays warning signs that a seizure is imminent.

    Currently the equipment worn by the patient is externally visible, and the team also hope one day to be able to make the chip so small it can be etched onto the electrode thus doing away with the need for wires and boxes located elsewhere on the patients body.  The new research could certainly revolutionize the prognosis for brain disease patients and bring new hope to them and their families.




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    Attacking Alzheimer’s

    by Susan July 1, 2010 at 6:54 am

    Debilitating diseases that cause progressive degeneration are not only traumatic for the patient and family, but incredibly frustrating for the medical profession as there is little we can do to halt or slow them.  A breakthrough in Alzheimer’s disease could finally open the door for scientists to begin to unlock the progress and develop new ways to combat this terminal disease that feasts on the brain, rendering the patient lost to the outside world forever.

    Using a radioactive compound was the idea of a team of scientist based at Johns Hopkins University School and the results show a clear difference in the brain scan images of healthy patients and those previously diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.  The compound, called Florbetapir, is injected into test subjects and within 30 minutes the results are starting to emerge, by 90 a full picture can be seen.  In subjects known to have a Alzheimer’s history the accumulation in the brain of the compound was significantly higher than healthy counterparts.

    Having proven reliable in all tests the safe to use compound offers a greater degree of flexibility for the physician.  It means that patients presenting with general symptoms that could potentially have one of several degenerative diseases of the brain can instantly be analyzed to see if Alzheimer’s is to blame. More importantly it allows research scientists a chance to track the progress of the disease, for the first time able to see the stages as the brain changes happen, the compound will accumulate more and in different areas as the disease progresses, and potentially this holds the key to curing, or halting the condition before complete disability has been reached.




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