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

Highlights of the 25th Congress of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology 2012

Europe's leading voice for research on disorders of the brain: Celebrating a quarter-century at the cutting edge and looking ahead to new advances

2012-10-25
(Press-News.org) In the course of the 25th ECNP Congress leading experts and five and a half thousand psychiatrists, neurologists, neuroscience researchers and public health professionals from over 90 different countries met from 13 to 17 October 2012 in Vienna, Austria, to celebrate ECNP´s 25-year anniversary and engage in groundbreaking debate.

Against the background of the increasing burden of disorders of the brain and restrained drug development in this area, the ECNP Congress once again highlighted the key importance of neuroscience for better treatment and prevention. "Crucially, ECNP has initiated new measures and cross-talk between the relevant stakeholders in the field to guarantee that the next 25 years of European neuroscience are just as productive as the last", said Joseph Zohar, President of ECNP, on the occasion of the 25th ECNP Congress in Vienna.

According to an ECNP landmark study, every year around one third of the EU´s population suffers from one or more mental or neurological disorders. Addressing these issues through improved prevention, treatment and rehabilitation is Europe´s major health care challenge in the 21st century.

Latest advances in understanding and treating disorders of the brain

The ECNP Congress, which is the largest scientific meeting on mental and neurological health in Europe, enjoys an international reputation for its world-class programme consisting of evidence-based treatment as well as clinical and preclinical research issues, covering virtually all disorders of the brain.

On the occasion of its 25th anniversary, the ECNP Congress 2012 offered an enriched programme with new features such as "scientific cafés", designed as topic-focused gatherings for networking and collaboration, more plenary sessions than ever before, an expanded educational track with interactive sessions, as well as a number of special guests such as keynote lecturer Colin Blakemore from the University of Oxford, UK, one of Europe´s foremost figures in brain science.

The plastic brain: a promising route to novel treatments

In the ECNP keynote lecture on his groundbreaking work on the plasticity of the brain, Professor Blakemore highlighted the revolutionary change in our concept of the brain, which is now seen as the most dynamic, adaptable and plastic organ in the human body. "Aberrant plasticity of the brain is suspected to be at the heart of many symptoms and disorders", said Blakemore at the 25th ECNP Congress. "Thus utilising and enhancing neuronal plasticity might lead us to new forms of treatment and prevention."

Neural mechanisms of risk for mental disorders

Another highlight of the 25th ECNP Congress was the presentation of the ECNP Neuropsychopharmacology Award, which recognises innovative and distinguished research achievements in neuropsychopharmacology and closely related disciplines. The joint-winners were Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg, Germany, and Paul Harrison, UK, in recognition of their pioneering works in the neural mechanisms of risk for psychiatric disorders and in the pathophysiology and treatment of schizophrenia, respectively.

In his plenary lecture, Professor Meyer-Lindenberg focussed on both genetic and environmental risk factors for mental disorders. "Early detection of abnormalities could provide a chance of primary intervention, with the potential to devise strategies that target these mechanisms even before the illness manifests itself", said Meyer-Lindenberg.

A webcast summarising the scientific highlights of the 25th ECNP Congress in Vienna including personal commentaries on the state of the field and the Congress's contribution to cutting-edge research by leading scientists can be viewed on the ECNP homepage: www.ecnp.eu/publications/webcasts/25th-ECNP-congress/Highlights.aspx

ECNP: a source of reliable, evidence-based information for the public

The scientific programme of the 25th ECNP Congress was topped off with two press conferences and a panel discussion, which addressed highly topical developments and advances in the field of mental health:

Dr. Paramala Santosh, London, UK, presented the recently initiated, EU-funded Suicidality: Treatment Occurring in Paediatrics (STOP)-project, which was developed to provide suicidality measures and is currently being piloted in children and adolescents to alert clinicians about increased suicide risk and prompt early intervention, especially when new medication is started. Since the majority of youth who have completed suicide had significant psychiatric problems, including depression and substance abuse, evaluation of suicide risk should be carried out regularly as part of suicide prevention programmes. The importance of such programmes is underlined by the fact that mortality from suicide today is the third leading cause of death in the mid-adolescent years.

The panel discussion with Dr. Anna Goudriaan, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and Professor Jon Grant, Chicago, USA, revealed that patients with pathological gambling have addictive features also in the anticipation of reward, since they show heightened activity in the reward system of the brain during the expectation of winning. An imbalance between control and motivation is crucial for continued gambling. These new findings provide interesting perspectives for future treatments that are targeted at the neural mechanisms of pathological gambling, whose prevalence rates reach up to 5% of adults in high-risk groups.

Professor Philip Gorwood, Paris, France, highlighted the public health disaster of alcohol dependence, which is one of the leading causes of preventable deaths in the European Union. Professor Gorwood stressed that understanding alcohol dependence as a brain disorder helps significantly, as it could reflect not only the chronicity of the disorder and diminish the associated culpability, but also provide new insight and therefore treatment approaches. Promising new treatment strategies include not only pharmacological, but also non-pharmacological interventions such as motor rehabilitation, environmental enrichment (positive environmental conditions), and deep brain stimulation (DBS) in severe cases of alcoholism.

### Webcasts of the press conferences and the panel discussion are available online at: www.ecnp.eu/publications/webcasts/25th-ECNP-congress/press-conferences.aspx

The next ECNP Congress will be held in Barcelona, Spain, from 5-9 October 2013.

ECNP is an independent scientific association whose mission is to advance the science of the brain, promote better treatment and enhance brain health. The annual ECNP Congress is well established as Europe´s premier meeting in the science and treatment of disorders of the brain, which attracts researchers, clinicians, policy makers and representatives of the healthcare industry from across the world.

For further information about ECNP and its activities please visit the ECNP website: www.ecnp.eu

Contact: Sonja Mak
ECNP Press Office
Tel. +43 1 405 5734
Fax +43 1 405 5734-16
E-mail: s.mak@update.europe.at


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

US NAS and Royal Society Issue Statement on Earthquake Case in Italy

2012-10-25
The case of six Italian scientists sentenced to be jailed for failing to warn of the L'Aquila earthquake in Italy in 2009 highlights the difficult task facing scientists in dealing with risk communication and uncertainty. We deal with risks and uncertainty all the time in our daily lives. Weather forecasts do not come with guarantees and despite the death tolls on our roads we continue to use bikes, cars, and buses. We have also long built our homes and workplaces in areas known to have a history of earthquakes, floods, or volcanic activity. Much as society and governments ...

New bio-adhesive polymer demonstrated in JoVE

2012-10-25
A new video-article in JoVE, Journal of Visualized Experiments, details the use of a new laser-activated bio-adhesive polymer. The chitosan-based polymer, SurgiLux, was developed by scientists at the University of New South Wales. Chitosan is a polymer derived from chitin, which is found in fungal cell walls or in exoskeletons of crustaceans and insects.This molecular component allows SurgiLux to form low energy bonds between the polymer and the desired tissue when it absorbs light. The technology may soon replace traditional sutures in the clinic. For thousands of years, ...

Omega-3 intake heightens working memory in healthy young adults

2012-10-25
PITTSBURGH—While Omega-3 essential fatty acids—found in foods like wild fish and grass-fed livestock—are necessary for human body functioning, their effects on the working memory of healthy young adults have not been studied until now. In the first study of its kind, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have determined that healthy young adults ages 18-25 can improve their working memory even further by increasing their Omega-3 fatty acid intake. Their findings have been published online in PLOS One. "Before seeing this data, I would have said it was impossible ...

Study shows PFO closure may be superior to medical therapy in preventing stroke

2012-10-25
HOUSTON – (Oct. 25, 2012) – Results of a large-scale, randomized clinical trial called RESPECT revealed that patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure may be superior to medical therapy in preventing recurrent stroke, according to a presentation of findings today at the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) conference in Miami. "In contrast to a previously reported randomized trial for the treatment of cryptogenic stroke, the RESPECT trial enrolled only patients with documented cryptogenic embolic strokes and excluded patients with other potential causes of stroke ...

New anti-tumor cell therapy strategies are more effective

New anti-tumor cell therapy strategies are more effective
2012-10-25
New Rochelle, NY, October 25, 2012—Targeted T-cells can seek out and destroy tumor cells that carry specific antigen markers. Two novel anti-tumor therapies that take advantage of this T-cell response are described in articles published in Human Gene Therapy, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The articles are available free on the Human Gene Therapy website at http://www.liebertpub.com/hum. Richard Morgan and colleagues from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, and Duke University Medical ...

Using planarian flatworms to understand organ regeneration

Using planarian flatworms to understand organ regeneration
2012-10-25
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Researchers report in the journal Developmental Cell that they have identified genes that control growth and regeneration of the intestine in the freshwater planarian Schmidtea mediterranea. "How animals repair their internal organs after injury is not well understood," said University of Illinois cell and developmental biology professor Phillip Newmark, who led the study. "Planarian flatworms are useful models for studying this question." After injury, planaria are able to re-grow missing body parts, including any organs that are damaged or lost, ...

Now the mobile phone goes emotional

2012-10-25
Mobile devices include an increasing number of input and output techniques that are currently not used for communication. Recent research results by Dr Eve Hoggan from HIIT / University of Helsinki, Finland, however, indicate that a synchronous haptic communication system has value as a communication channel in real-world settings with users that express greetings, presence and emotions through presages. -Pressure and tactile techniques have been explored in tangible interfaces for remote communication on dedicated devices but until now, these techniques have not been ...

Why astronauts experience low blood pressure after returning to Earth from space

2012-10-25
Bethesda, MD—When astronauts return to Earth, their altitude isn't the only thing that drops—their blood pressure does too. This condition, known as orthostatic hypotension, occurs in up to half of those astronauts on short-term missions (two weeks or less) and in nearly all astronauts after long-term missions (four to six months). A new research report published online in The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org) solves the biological mystery of how this happens by showing that low gravity compromises the ability of arteries and veins to constrict normally, inhibiting ...

Whitehead scientists identify major flaw in standard approach to global gene expression analysis

2012-10-25
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (October 25, 2012) –Whitehead Institute researchers report that common assumptions employed in the generation and interpretation of data from global gene expression analyses can lead to seriously flawed conclusions about gene activity and cell behavior in a wide range of current biological research. "Expression analysis is one of the most commonly used methods in modern biology," says Whitehead Member Richard Young. "So we are concerned that flawed assumptions may affect the interpretation of many biological studies." Much of today's interpretation ...

A new technique to study how myeloids become white blood cells

A new technique to study how myeloids become white blood cells
2012-10-25
University of Illinois cell and developmental Biology professor Fei Wang and colleagues have created a new technique to study how myeloids, a type of blood stem cell, become the white blood cells important for immune system defense against infections and tissue damage. This approach offers new insights into the molecular mechanisms at work during myeloid differentiation, and may improve our ability to treat myeloid diseases like leukemia, the researchers report. Their findings appear in the journal Blood. Myeloids are blood stem cells from bone marrow or the spinal cord ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Consensus statement on universal chemosensory testing calls for better standardization, infrastructure, and education in the field

Two-part vaccine strategy generates a stronger, longer-lasting immune boost against HIV

How lottery-style bottle returns could transform recycling

Researchers with UTHealth Houston School of Public Health awarded $5 million to study cancer risk among firefighters in Texas

C-Path’s translational therapeutics accelerator announces new grant award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

What is a brain age gap, and how may it affect thinking and memory skills?

Food insecurity, neighborhood, lack of social support, linked to worse stroke recovery

Scientists discover new approach to gene therapy

A statement on the Supreme Court decision

Low social support and a tendency to compare yourself to others may be associated with problematic social media use, per study of 403 Italian adolescents

Which therapy works best for knee arthritis?

Seeing through a new LENS allows brain-like navigation in robots

Organ sculpting cells may hold clues to how cancer spreads

Wildfires that keep us inside might drive the spread of infectious disease, per study of the U.S. West Coast wildfires of 2020

Catching excitons in motion—ultrafast dynamics in carbon nanotubes revealed by nano-infrared spectroscopy

New research proposes framework to define and measure the biology of health

Earliest evidence of humans in the Americas confirmed in new U of A study

Tracking microbial rhythms reveals new target for treating metabolic diseases

Funding for Public Health Law teaching announced

Addictive use of social media, not total time, associated with youth mental health

Hey Doc, you got something for snails?

Social factors may determine how human-like we think animals are

Climate change cuts global crop yields, even when farmers adapt

Message in a bubble: using physics to encode messages in ice

Before dispersing out of Africa, humans learned to thrive in diverse habitats

Addictive screen use trajectories and suicidal behaviors, suicidal ideation, and mental health in US youths

Better images for humans and computers

Racial and ethnic differences in mental health service use among adolescents

CT angiography, healthy lifestyle behaviors, and preventive therapy

Food insecurity in US surgical patients

[Press-News.org] Highlights of the 25th Congress of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology 2012
Europe's leading voice for research on disorders of the brain: Celebrating a quarter-century at the cutting edge and looking ahead to new advances