Related to Brain & Nervous
Brain and Nervous System News
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Women's Brains May Age More Slowly Than Men's
Researchers wanted to see if they could predict someone’s age based on the way that their brain used fuel, or metabolism. On average, women appeared to be younger than men in terms of brain age.
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'Mind-Reading' AI Turns Thoughts Into Spoken Words
"Our ultimate goal is to develop technologies that can decode the internal voice of a patient who is unable to speak," said the study’s author.
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Just A Couple of Joints Can Damage Teen Brain
Brain scans show that some adolescents who've tried marijuana just a couple of times exhibit significant increases in the volume of their gray matter.
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Mad Cow Disease Diagnosed in Tennessee Man
A 32-year-old Tennessee man has been diagnosed with the rare human form of mad cow disease, also known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).
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Another Breakthrough: 3 Paralyzed People Now Walk
3 previously paralyzed people can now walk with minimal assistance, Swiss researchers report. They need only the aid of crutches or a walker, thanks to incredibly precise electrical stimulation of their spinal cord combined with intensive rehabilitation, the scientists say.
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Study: Blows Without Concussion May Not Hurt Brain
A small new study suggests that repeated impacts to the head that were not as severe as concussions did not result in brain damage to young athletes. The researchers say they need to follow the kids longer.
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Kids' Concussion Symptoms May Persist for a Year
A year after a concussion, as many as 31 percent of kids ages 4 to 15 still had symptoms that included inattention or fatigue, researchers report.
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Surfer Dies in Texas From Brain-Eating Amoeba
Infection typically occurs when contaminated water enters the body through the nose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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1 Football Rule Change Might Lower Concussion Risk
Moving the kickoff line forward by just five yards -- from the 35- to the 40-yard line -- reduced the average annual concussion rate in Ivy League football by more than 68 percent, a new study says.
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Spinal Implants 'Very Promising' for Paralysis
Researchers are cautiously optimistic after paralyzed patients took steps on their own in two studies of spinal cord stimulators.
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Short Bout of Exercise Might Boost Your Memory
Brain scans on 16 of the participants indicated that short bouts of mild exercise appeared to trigger an instant uptick in communication between the hippocampal dentate gyrus and the cortical brain regions. Both brain areas are key to processing memory.
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Spinal Implant Could Be Breakthrough in Paralysis
The electrical stimulator he has is one designed for nerve pain. The research team received permission from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to use it in this new way.
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Spine 'Zap' Helps Those Paralyzed Control Bladder
More than 80 percent of the 250,000 Americans with a spinal cord injury lose the ability to urinate at will after their injury and rely on a catheter to drain urine. But long-term catheter use is inconvenient and can pose infection risks.
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Childhood Brain Tumor Radiation Can Hinder Memory
Radiation treatment for medulloblastoma, the most common type of childhood brain tumor, can leave young survivors struggling to remember recent events, a small study has found. But survivors' ability to recall things that happened before radiation wasn't affected.
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Suicide Risk Higher in People with Brain Injury
A person’s risk of suicide more than triples in the first six months after a traumatic brain injury (TBI), and it stays significantly higher over the long term, a new Danish study suggests.
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How Severe Brain Injuries Might Trigger Dementia
In the study, the researchers analyzed the brain tissue of 15 patients who had survived a year or more after a traumatic brain injury (TBI) and compared that tissue with brain tissue from 15 healthy controls. They found the TBI patients had higher levels of abnormal tau proteins.
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Brain 'Plasticity': Boy OK After Drastic Surgery
The boy's intellect, visual perception and object recognition skills have all remained age-appropriate, even with a large portion of his brain gone.
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Dizziness Could Be A Sign of Dementia Risk
The condition is common in elderly people -- affecting about 30 percent of those aged 70 and older, based on a recent study. It is much less prevalent in younger adults, but when it happens there is cause for concern.
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Vitamin D Little Help Against Brain Diseases
There's no special protective benefit for the brain in vitamin D, a new review of research on the topic has found.
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Brains May Be as Unique as Fingerprints
Differences in genes and life experience change the structure of every individual's brain, so no two are just alike, a new study confirms.
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Are Concussions Tougher on Athletes With ADHD?
Young athletes who have ADHD may be more likely to have symptoms of depression and anxiety after a concussion, new research shows.
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Feel Younger Than Your Years? Your Brain Shows It
If you feel younger than your years, the structure of your brain is different, a small new study finds.
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Are Yawns Really Contagious?
One theory is that contagious yawning is related to empathy, and that people with higher levels of empathy yawn more often when someone else yawns, compared to people with lower levels of empathy or those with a mental disorder.
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Little Follow-Up for Many Concussion Patients
The findings, published online May 25 in JAMA Network Open, are based on a sample of 831 patients who went to a top-level trauma center with a concussion, or mild traumatic brain injury (TBI).
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Woman's Runny Nose Actually A Brain Fluid Leak
Specialists estimate the condition affects about five of every 100,000 people worldwide each year, often because of a head injury, but it is often misdiagnosed.
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