PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Plasticity supports cognitive recovery after brain damage

2010-11-04
(Press-News.org) New research provides fascinating insight into mechanisms that underlie recovery after damage to a region of the brain important for memory and attention. The research, published by Cell Press in the November 4th issue of the journal Neuron, highlights the role of undamaged portions of the brain that can "take over" and support the recovery of function.

Brain damage can have devastating consequences, depending on the location and severity of the injury. Damage to an area of the brain called the prefrontal cortex often results in deficits in memory and attention. However, people can recover some function over time. Studies examining recovery after motor or language deficits have indicated that undamaged regions of the brain can compensate for the damaged areas. While it is clear that neural plasticity is necessary for functional recovery after damage to the prefrontal cortex, specific mechanisms of cognitive recovery are not as well understood.

"In our current study, we were interested in examining whether intact cognitive performance in patients with damage to the prefrontal cortex in one hemisphere of the brain is mediated by functional compensation of the prefrontal cortex on the intact, undamaged side of the brain," explains lead study author, Dr. Bradley Voytek from the University of California at Berkeley.

Dr. Voytek and colleagues designed a study examining brain activity in patients with damage to the prefrontal cortex on only one side of the brain. Patients and matched control subjects performed a visual working memory task or a visual attention task. Importantly, the researchers presented stimuli to one hemisphere at a time, allowing them to challenge either the intact or damaged prefrontal cortex in the patients with brain damage. They observed transient increases in activity related to attention and memory in the intact prefrontal cortex within a second of stimulus presentation to the damaged hemisphere.

"Our results show that the neural changes observed in movement recovery after motor cortex damage expand to cognitive domains and apply to a dynamic model of memory and attention compensation by the intact, undamaged cortex," concludes Dr. Voytek. "We demonstrate that brain recovery can manifest itself as transient changes in information processing occurring on a sub-second timescale after the injured brain has been challenged to perform, supporting a dynamic and flexible model of neural plasticity."

###

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Armed antibody triggers remissions for Hodgkin's lymphoma

2010-11-04
HOUSTON ― An antibody loaded with an anti-cancer agent produced complete or partial remissions in 38 percent of patients with relapsed or therapy-resistant Hodgkin lymphoma enrolled in a phase I clinical trial, investigators report in the Nov. 4 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. "That level of objective responses to a drug is impressive for a Phase I trial," said study lead author Anas Younes, M.D., professor in The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center's Department of Lymphoma/Myeloma. "These encouraging results are being confirmed in a large ...

Combining radiation therapy, chemotherapy safely treats head and neck cancer patients

2010-11-04
SAN DIEGO, Nov. 3 – Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), a radiation therapy procedure pioneered at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI) that precisely delivers a large dose of radiation to tumors, may effectively control and treat head and neck cancers when combined with the chemotherapy Cetuximab, according to researchers from UPCI. The results of the research will be presented today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) annual meeting in San Diego. The study, led by Dwight E. Heron, M.D., professor of otolaryngology and vice chairman ...

Higher medication spending doesn't indicate better prescribing quality

2010-11-04
PITTSBURGH, Nov. 3 – Medicare patients in regions that spend the most on prescription medications are not necessarily getting better quality care, according to a new study of spending practices from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health (GSPH). The findings, published in the Nov. 3 Online First issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, reveal great variation across the country in both drug spending and the rate of inappropriate prescriptions for the elderly. Lead investigator Yuting Zhang, Ph.D., assistant professor of health economics at GSPH, ...

Study shows drop in unnecessary care after Medicare reimbursement cut

2010-11-04
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — When Medicare policy changes led to reductions in reimbursement for hormonal treatment of prostate cancer, there was a sharp decline in its use among patients not likely to benefit from the treatment. But among patients for whom the therapy is clearly beneficial, doctors continued to prescribe it at the same rate, according to a new study. This finding suggests that financial reform of health care can reduce unnecessary care without impacting care to those patients most likely to benefit from a treatment. "We found that physicians respond to reimbursement, ...

Meta-flex: Your new brand for invisibility clothing

2010-11-04
Flexible smart materials that can manipulate light to shield objects from view have been much-theorised but now researchers in Scotland have made a practical breakthrough that brings the possibility of an invisibility cardigan – or any other item of invisibility clothing - one step closer. Two challenges to the creation of smart flexible materials that can cloak from visible light are making meta-atoms small enough to interact with visible light, and the fabrication of metamaterials that can be detached from the hard surfaces they are developed on to be used in more ...

Recombination hotspot stacks the DNA deck in finding a new diabetes susceptibility gene

2010-11-04
November 4, 2010 – The autoimmune disease type 1 diabetes (T1D), also known as juvenile diabetes, is diagnosed in approximately 70,000 children worldwide per year. Genetics is increasingly being recognized as playing a significant role in susceptibility to the disorder, but outside a handful of genes, a clear understanding of the genetic architecture that underlies T1D has remained elusive. In a study published online today in Genome Research (www.genome.org), scientists have identified a novel gene associated with diabetes in mice that is revealing new clues about genomic ...

New compounds may treat both alcohol and cigarette addictions

2010-11-04
Researchers at the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center at the University of California, San Francisco, and Pfizer Inc., have determined that two new compounds may be effective in treating both alcohol and nicotine dependence at the same time. In a paper published in the November 3, 2010 issue of Neuropsychopharmacology, the researchers showed that alcohol consumption in rodents was significantly decreased by two compounds that target neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subtype 34*. nAChRs are proteins found in the brain and broader ...

Moving holograms: From science fiction to reality

Moving holograms: From science fiction to reality
2010-11-04
Remember the Star Wars scene in which R2D2 projects a three-dimensional image of a troubled Princess Leia delivering a call for help to Luke Skywalker and his allies? What used to be science fiction is now close to becoming reality thanks to a breakthrough in 3D holographic imaging technology developed at the University of Arizona College of Optical Sciences. A team led by optical sciences professor Nasser Peyghambarian developed a new type of holographic telepresence that allows the projection of a three-dimensional, moving image without the need for special eyewear ...

Gladstone scientists identify process by which Alzheimer's disease creeps through the brain

2010-11-04
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – November 3, 2010—Scientists at the Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease (GIND) have offered new information about the events that underlie the "spread" of Alzheimer's disease (AD) throughout the brain. The research, published in the November 4th issue of the journal Neuron, follows disease progression from a vulnerable brain region that is affected early in the disease to interconnected brain regions that are affected in later stages. The findings may contribute to design of therapeutic interventions, as targeting the brain region where AD originates ...

UCLA autism study reveals how genetic changes rewire the brain

2010-11-04
Many gene variants have been linked to autism, but how do these subtle changes alter the brain, and ultimately, behavior? Using a blend of brain imaging and genetic detective work, scientists at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine and Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior are the first to illustrate how genetic variants rewire the brain. Published in the Nov. 3 online edition of Science Translational Medicine, their discovery offers the crucial missing physical evidence that links altered genes to modified brain function and learning. "This is a key ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

American College of Cardiology issues guidance on using Apple Watch for heart health monitoring

2025 Andreas Grüntzig Ethica Award presented to Lars Wallentin and Stefan James on behalf of Swedish cardiovascular registry experts

Research reveals unexpected roles of TEAD proteins in neurodevelopment

UTA ATLAS team shares Breakthrough Prize in physics

New research on ALS opens up for early treatment

Molecules in blood and urine could reveal how much ultra-processed food you eat

Language isn’t just for communication — it also shapes how sensory experiences are stored in the brain

Reducing underwater noise when installing subsea structures #ASA188

How membranes may have brought about the chemistry of life on earth

NIH researchers develop biomarker score for predicting diets high in ultra-processed foods

AI and partnerships are vital to tackling food contamination - study

Fluridone widens Palmer pigweed control options for rice growers, but stick to the label

Christopher Kane appointed President of American Board of Urology

SwRI breaks pressure and temperature record for sCO2 materials testing

Native turtles return to Yosemite after removal of invasive bullfrogs

Maternal air pollution exposure worsens asthma severity for offspring

Post-intensive care syndrome linked to long-term deficits

ICU delirium tests misclassify Spanish-speakers

Terrence Sejnowski elected to the Royal Society and the American Philosophical Society

Commercially available peroxide binds incompatible polymers for recycling

Depression linked to physical pain years later

Beyond ‘one size fits all’: Study reveals ethnic differences in breast cancer development and outcomes, demanding tailored care approaches

New flammable gas research facility under construction at Southwest Research Institute

Planning grants awarded for competitive proposals testing efficacy of food is medicine

Substance use screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment among youth-serving clinicians

LJI scientists uncover key clues to how a viral infection can lead to arthritis-like disease

Aging and DNA damage: investigating the microbiome’s stealthy impact – a perspective

Updated economic geography model incorporates heterogeneity in firm productivity and environmental pollution

Magnetic shaftless propeller millirobot with multimodal motion for small-scale fluidic manipulation

Green tea, turmeric, and berries may help reverse epigenetic aging in men

[Press-News.org] Plasticity supports cognitive recovery after brain damage