408-854-1883 starts at $30 per hr home care

  • Caregivers
  • Senior
  • Blogs
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Caregivers
  • Senior
  • Blogs
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Marketplace

Soon

408-854-1883 text

Marketplace

Soon

Book an Appointment

Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

How the Brain Makes Predictions

How the Brain Makes Predictions

Summary: A new study will examine how the brain learns to make predictions over our lifespan.

Source: Goethe University Frankfurt.

Imagine coming into the office in the morning. Within a split second you will be able to tell whether everything is in its usual place – the furniture, the computer, your files – or not, as the case may be, or whether something has been left on your desk that does not belong there, for example a box of chocolates. Behind this ability to assess our environment is the “predictive brain”, i.e. the interaction of brain processes that lead to predictions. On what principles these predictions are based and how the interaction of the processes involved differ across the lifespan is the subject of research work being conducted by Professor Yee Lee Shing, who has held the Chair of Developmental Psychology at Goethe University Frankfurt since January.

According to Professor Shing, the brain is essentially a “prediction machine” that is constantly busy comparing new input from the environment with predictions generated by internal models of the brain. Only in this way is the human brain able to adapt to ever new situations and grasp new environments. To date, however, no researcher has examined the nature of the underlying internal models themselves or how new experiences influence these models. What is also so far unknown is how such a supposedly universal principle manifests itself in different brains – for example young or old ones. The long-term memory that may underlie the brain’s internal models is potentially the episodic and the semantic memory, personal experiences on the one hand and learned knowledge of the world on the other. Whilst children are better at remembering episodic contexts – think how unbeatable they are when playing “Memory” – older people can rely more on their semantic memory.

Shing wants to investigate empirically the interaction of different types of memory and new experiences. Using the magnetic resonance facilities available at the Brain Imaging Center of Goethe University Frankfurt, she wants to learn more about which cognitive and neural interactions take place where in the brain, first of all with the help of healthy participants of different ages. In the long term, her research work could help to cast light on clinical conditions with aberrant prediction processing, such as autism and schizophrenia. The European Research Council (ERC) will support the project for five years with € 1.5 million. This will fund two doctoral and two postdoctoral researcher positions.

Born in 1980 in Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), Yee Lee Shing moved to the USA at the age of 19 to study psychology. From 2004 to 2015 she worked at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin. She also held a Humboldt Fellowship there at Humboldt University.

“I found the broad perspective on the development of the human brain across the lifespan very interesting. In addition, the new International Max Planck Research School on the Life Course (LIFE) offered me an interdisciplinary and trans-Atlantic research context,” she says, explaining her decision at that time to come to Germany. Shing’s doctoral supervisors were Professor Ulman Lindenberger and Professor Shu-Chen Li. Shing was a lecturer at the University of Stirling in Scotland from 2015 onwards.

brain

Professor Shing was still working in Stirling when she submitted her project proposal. Her decision to return to Germany and accept the appointment in Frankfurt is also partly due to Brexit: “My husband and my two children are German. We felt that our future in Great Britain was uncertain. After so many years in Europe I didn’t want to live outside the EU,” she says. Now she is looking forward to a productive working environment at the Institute of Psychology at Goethe University Frankfurt.

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Source: Goethe University Frankfurt
Publisher: Organized by NeuroscienceNews.com.
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on How the Brain Makes Predictions

Ask Connie at Quora

via Ask Connie at Quora

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Ask Connie at Quora

Ask Connie at Quora

All Answers
https://www.quora.com/profile/Connie-b-Dellobuono
  • What will happen if a person accidentally drinks kerosene/petrol/diesel?
  • How many hours does it take normally for the stomach to empty totally after a good meal. Is it a good eating habit not to eat during this time?
  • It takes 4 hrs to digest meat and 30 min to digest eggs. Constipation occurs often in over medication adults. Pineapple and papaya have strong digestive enzymes important for digestion. Eat whole foods, move and exercise often and chew your food well. When you do drink coffee in the early morn before exercise, it is a stimulant helping your bowel movement although it is avoided by those who wants to lose stomach fat.

  • If body weight is brought down into control and uric acid levels kept down for some prolonged time, can gout be cured permanently?
  • Why do I get my period every 3 weeks? Is it normal?
  • Why does urine smell burnt?
  • How long does it take for damaged nerves to repair themselves?

  • Once the insulating cover of the nerve is repaired, the nerve generally begins to heal three or four weeks after the injury. Nerves usually grow one inch every month, depending on the patient’s age and other factors. With an injury to a nerve in the arm above the fingertips, it may take up to a year before feeling returns to the fingertips. The feeling of pins and needles in the fingertips is common during the recovery process. While this can be uncomfortable, it usually passes and is a sign of recovery.

    http://orthoinfo.aaos.org/topic….
    —-
    I hurt the tip of my little finger (by bumping it to a cemented wall) yesterday with a small redness by the nail bed. It healed in 12hrs as I massaged it right away (w saliva).

  • What are the differences between smoking cigars and cigarettes?
  • Does eating eggs impede healing? Chinese medicine describes eggs as “fa wu,” that can cause wounds to heal slowly. Surgeons tell patients to not eat eggs, seafood, beef or lamb after surgery. What are the differences between the sources of protein?
  • Eggs are important for healing because they contain 9 essential amino acids, most athletes need it for muscle building and my dad used to drink raw eggs to heal his TB (lungs). Histidine () and Leucine are two of the 9 essential amino acids in eggs. Eggs plus Vitamin B rich foods are happy foods, helping happy hormones in the brain.

    Eggs contain Histidine which is an amino acid that is used to develop and maintain healthy tissues in all parts of the body, particularly the myelin sheaths that coat nerve cells and ensure the transmission of messages from the brain to various parts of the body. It may be useful for treatment of mental disorders as well as certain types of sexual dysfunction. Histidine levels in the body must be balanced to ensure good mental and physical health. High levels of this amino acid have been linked to the presence of psychological disorders such as anxiety and schizophrenia, while low levels of histidine are thought contribute to the development of rheumatoid arthritis and the type of deafness that results from nerve damage. Taking histidine supplements may help relieve symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis.

    Histidine in eggs is important to normal sexual functioning, because it gets converted into histamine, a chemical needed to stimulate sexual arousal. When taken together with vitamin B3 (niacin) and vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), histidine can increase sexual pleasure by boosting histamine levels in the body. Histamine is also needed to help the immune system know when the body is experiencing an allergic reaction, and for the production of gastric juices needed for normal digestion. Research suggests that histidine also acts as a natural detoxifier, protecting against radiation damage, and removing heavy metals from the system. It may even help prevent the onset of AIDS—histidine is crucial to the production of both red and white blood cells. Like other amino acids, histidine is found in many high-protein foods such as raw eggs.

    Leucine in eggs helps regulate blood sugar

    Leucine works with the amino acids isoleucine and Valine to repair muscles, regulate blood sugar, and provide the body with energy. It also increases production of growth hormones, and helps burn visceral fat, which is located in the deepest layers of the body and the least responsive to dieting and exercise.

    Leucine, Isoleucine, and Valine are branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs), and all three of them help promote muscle recovery after exercise. Leucine is the most effective BCAA for preventing muscle loss because it breaks down and is converted to glucose more quickly than isoleucine and valine. Increased glucose supplies prevent the body’s cannibalization of muscle for energy during intense workouts, so it is no surprise that this amino acid supplement is popular among professional body builders. Leucine also promotes the healing of bones, skin, and muscle tissue after traumatic injury, and is often recommended for those recovering from surgery. Because it is so easily converted to glucose, leucine helps to regulate blood sugar; a deficiency of leucine produces symptoms similar to those of hypoglycemia, which may include headaches, dizziness, fatigue, depression, confusion, and irritability.

    Histamine is also essential in defending the body against invasion by potentially disease-causing agents such as bacteria, viruses and other foreign invaders. Histamine is made and stored within white blood cells (leukocytes) such as mast cells in tissues and basophils that circulate in blood. When the immune system is activated in response to foreign material entering the body, histamine is the first “defence chemical”, or more correctly, inflammatory mediator, released in the process called inflammation.

    Foods with High Histamine levels: Long cooked or leftover meat, Most Alcohol (Wine, Beer, Cider, Fermented Drinks), Yeast, Fish that is not immediately gutted after catching, Aged Fish (Canned, Smoked), Tomatos (Fresh or Processed), Pickled, Fermented & Cultured Foods Sauerkraut Pickles, Kimchee, Soy Sauce, Tamari, Miso), Smoked & Cured Meats (Ham, Sausage, Salami), Shell Fish, Red Beans, Nuts, Chocolate, Citrus Fruit, Wheat Based Foods, Vinegar (Salad Dressings, Mustard, Ketchup, Mayonnaise), Spices & Seasonings (Cinnamon, Nutmeg, Hot Peppers, Cloves, Anise, Curry, Chili Powder, Overripe Fruits, Yogurt & Kefir (depends upon the cultures used), Canned Food ( additives & preservatives), Soy Products, Mushrooms, Dried Fruits, Cola, Raw & Undercooked Egg (Whites in particular)

  • Is there a good natural alternative to Ranitidine?
  • How do I treat coarse hair to make it smooth like baby hair?
  • Is it bad to take an antacid everyday?
  • I do not encourage use of Tums.

    Tums: “They do have significant side effects, especially in older patients,” Dr. Logan said. Studies have linked antacids to an increased risk of pneumonia, gastrointestinal infections, antibiotic resistance, severe diarrhea, and possibly osteoporosis. And Tums can also cause B12 deficiency and other hearth issues.

    I will take calcium with magnesium and Vit C/D from whole food sources and supplements with better absorption results. Take your calcium and magnesium in the evening since it will cancel the absorption of iron in the morning.

  • How do reproductive, endocrine, and nervous systems work together?
  • What could cause an low basophil count?
  • I’m 36 years old, and my SGPT level is 131. Is this serious? How can I reduce my SGPT level in a week?
  • Why are alcoholics skinny?
  • What are the possible causes of back pain with white discharge?
  • What would happen to cells without the endoplasmic reticulum?
  • What is the life expectancy of stage 4 lung cancer that has spread to the bones and liver?
  • What happens if you starve yourself during pregnancy?
  • Why do people always ask for boiling water when helping a woman give birth?
  • Can a pap smear detect an early pregnancy?
  • How long does it take for uti go away?
  • What would happen if Trump actually has the beginning signs of Alzheimer’s or dementia and is elected?
  • Can high SGPT and SGOT lead to heart disease?
  • What’s a good analogy to explain the immune system?
  • Is there a link between ecstasy/MDMA and Parkinson’s Disease?
  • Is it true that hair is a natural extension of the nervous system?
  • What chemicals in your brain make you attracted to a person?
  • Why can’t I sleep with an empty stomach?
  • What is the reason for hyper segmented neutrophils in megaloblastic anemia?
  • How can you describe the pain of childbirth?
  • Has anybody calculated how many cigarettes it takes to kill a person, say in 1 year?
  • Why do Alzheimer’s patients love sweets so much?
  • Why are protein bars giving me terrible stomach aches, when I had no problems with them before?
  • What are the causes of swelling legs with pain in the waist down? What are the remedies available in alternate medicine?
  • What are the benefits of eating chicken soup during pregnancy?
  • What will happen if you give up treatments for PCOS?
  • What is lactic acid headache?
  • How do I avoid getting a sore mouth roof when eating a grilled panini?
  • When will Souvenaid become available in Canada and US to treat Alzheimer’s Disease?
  • Does alcohol consumption give you more cellulite?
  • What is the relationship between seratonin and dopamine in the brain?
  • Is their any natural way to prevent pregnancy instead of taking a pill?
  • Is Vicodin an anti-inflammatory? If so, why?
  • After being sick how long will you be immune to a cold until you get it again?
  • Can balsamic vinegar help with gout?
  • Does menstruation carry toxins out of the body?
  • Can antioxidants help with hangovers?
  • Is Xanax considered an opiate?
  • Do antidepressants like Mirtazapine have long-term negative effects on the brain?
  • Why do we grow old if our cells completely regenerate themselves? Does oxygen have something to do with it?
  • What is the difference between molecular genetics and genomics?
  • After drinking Coca Cola and I urinate my kidneys go sore, this has become steadily worse. What is this a sign of?
  • What is the best diet for a woman suffering from PCOS?
  • What type of food increases serotonin levels in your brain?
  • Can Adderall damage to dopamine receptors be repaired?
  • How does MSM help us get rid of cellulite?
  • Can drinking a lot of coffee give someone brain damage?
  • Does eating peanuts affect eczema or psoriasis?
  • Is there a cure for atrial fibrillation?
  • Why do people take breaks from Ritalin?
  • Should I worry about lung cancer at 21 years old?
  • How can I get pregnant in one month?
  • Why does taking a CoQ10 supplement make me so tired?
  • What does it feel like to live in an old age home?
  • Is crab high in good or bad cholesterol?
  • What can a gastrointestinal doctor tell about a person just from the smell of their farts?
  • Is there any scientific evidence that scalp massages increase hair growth?
  • Why did Steve Jobs choose not to effectively treat his cancer?
  • Are short fat women stronger than tall skinny men?
  • Do stimulants (amphetamines, cocaine) cause downregulation of glutamate signalling (in addition to dopamine)?
  • What are some current issues that impact the health and wellness of populations in the US?
  • Is sipping on Powerade good for an upset stomach?
  • How helpful is bupropion for ADD/ADHD?
  • What are the current big debates in epigenetics?
  • I feel like something sharp is stuck inside my throat. What should I do?
  • Are certain parts of the body more inclined to develop tumors? Why?
  • What could be the reasons for post menopausal bleeding and high endometrial thickness?
  • Does drinking warm water reduce cholesterol?
  • What are the best brain training apps?
  • What is the function of the cholesterol molecules in a cell membrane?
Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenu1 Comment on Ask Connie at Quora

MIND Diet modified to kill parasites

mind diet.JPGThe MIND diet recommends:

  • Green leafy vegetables (like spinach and salad greens): at least six servings a week
    Other vegetables: at least one a day
  • Spice: ginger, thyme, oregano, rosemary, other spices
    Nuts: five servings a week
    Berries: two or more servings a week
    Beans: at least three servings a week
    Whole grains: three or more servings a day (soak before cooking)
    Fish: once a week
    Poultry (like chicken or turkey): two times a week
    Olive oil: use it as your main cooking oil.
    Wine: one glass a day

The diet discourages:

  • Red meat: more than four servings a week
    Butter and stick margarine: more than a tablespoon daily
    Cheese: more than one serving a week
    Pastries and sweets: more than five servings a week
    Fried or fast food: more than one serving a week

Modified MIND diet by Connie

  • Avoid 1 glass of red wine every night, switch to 1x per week when you have allergies, skin issues and parasites

Garlic, honey, pumpkin seeds, and papaya seeds are all touted as antiparasitic foods to include in your diet. Some natural practitioners go a step further and recommend a grain-free, sugar-free diet. Others recommend limiting fruit intake in order to further reduce dietary sugars.

To prevent further parasitic infections after cleansing, natural practitioners recommend that you avoid eating raw or under cooked meat and seafood. When traveling internationally, avoid:

  • water that isn’t purified and bottled
  • ice
  • fruits you can’t peel
  • swimming or bathing in freshwater
  • foods prepared by vendors on the street

Why grains can affect us badly

Grains contain proteins, carbohydrates and fats. Many components of grains cause problems to non-herbivore animals and humans including lectins (such as wheat germ agglutinin), saponins, phytates, amylopectin A, gluten, and others. For example, lectins in grains are produced by the plants to kill insects and fungi so that the grain is protected and can serve as seed for new plants. Lectins are also toxic for dogs, cats and humans. They cannot be inactivated with the heat of normal baking or cooking but many can be inactivated by soaking the grains for some days before cooking or by pressure cooking.

Email motherhealth@gmail.com to personalize your diet based on your current health needs. Be added in the list if you are helping lower chronic care cost:

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018August 12, 2019Posted inFood, Menu, nutrition, weight lossTags:dietLeave a comment on MIND Diet modified to kill parasites

Immune Cells May Heal Bleeding Brain After Strokes

Immune Cells May Heal Bleeding Brain After Strokes

Summary: A new study reports immune cells called neutrophils may help the brain recover following intracerebral hemorrhage.

Source: NIH/NINDS.

While immune cells called neutrophils are known to act as infantry in the body’s war on germs, a National Institutes of Health-funded study suggests they can act as medics as well. By studying rodents, researchers showed that instead of attacking germs, some neutrophils may help heal the brain after an intracerebral hemorrhage, a form of stroke caused by ruptured blood vessels. The study suggests that two neutrophil-related proteins may play critical roles in protecting the brain from stroke-induced damage and could be used as treatments for intracerebral hemorrhage.

“Intracerebral hemorrhage is a damaging and often fatal form of stroke for which there are no effective medicines,” said Jaroslaw Aronowski, M.D., Ph.D., professor, department of neurology, at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, and senior author of the study published in Nature Communications. “Our results are a hopeful first step towards developing a treatment for this devastating form of stroke.”

Accounting for 10 to 15 percent of all strokes, intracerebral hemorrhages happen when blood vessels rupture and leak blood into the brain, often leading to death or long-term disability. Chronic high blood pressure is the leading risk factor for these types of strokes. The initial phase of damage appears to be caused by the pressure of blood leaking into the brain. Over time, further damage may be caused by the accumulation of toxic levels of blood products, infiltrating immune cells, and swelling.

Decades of research suggest that neutrophils are some of the earliest immune cells to respond to a hemorrhage, and that they may both harm and heal the brain. In this study, the researchers found that interleukin-27 (IL-27), a protein that controls the activity of immune cells, may shift the role of neutrophils from harming the brain to helping with recovery.

Injections of IL-27 after a hemorrhage helped mice recover. Days after the strokes, the treated mice had better mobility, including walking, limb stretching and navigating holes in a floor. In contrast, injections of an antibody that blocked natural IL-27 activity slowed recovery. The brains of the mice treated with IL-27 also showed less damage. They had less swelling around the hemorrhages and lower levels of iron and the blood protein hemoglobin, both of which are toxic at high levels.

“This study shines a spotlight on the critical role the immune system may play in helping the brain heal after a hemorrhage or stroke and opens new avenues for stroke treatment strategies,” said Jim Koenig, Ph.D., program director at the NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Neutrophils are born in bone marrow and carry chemicals in hundreds of densely filled packets called granules, which look like dark spots under a microscope. Typically, when the body senses bacteria or an injury, neutrophils rush to the invasion site and release germ killing chemicals from the granules. This appears to happen minutes after a hemorrhagic stroke.

In this study, the researchers suggested that after a hemorrhagic stroke the brain secretes high levels of IL-27, which leads to a second wave of neutrophils arriving with granules filled with higher amounts of healing molecules. IL-27 levels were elevated in the brain and blood of the mice an hour after hemorrhages and stayed high for three days, peaking at 24 hours later. Further experiments suggested that brain cells called microglia produced the IL-27 in response to the presence of red blood cells.

Once released, IL-27 molecules appeared to travel to the bones of the mice, infiltrated the marrow, and changed the role newborn neutrophils played in response to a stroke. When the researchers extracted newborn neutrophils from the bones of mice and treated them with IL-27, the chemical raised the activity of genes associated with healing, especially lactoferrin, while reducing the activity of genes associated with killing cells. Conversely, treating mice with an IL-27 neutralizing antibody after a hemorrhage lowered lactoferrin gene activity.

“Our results suggested that IL-27 links the brain to the bones,” said Dr. Aronowski. “We can use these results as a source for ideas for developing potential treatments for hemorrhagic stroke.”

neurons

Finally, the researchers showed the iron binding protein lactoferrin may protect the brain from intracerebral hemorrhagic strokes. Mice and rats injected with lactoferrin 30 minutes after hemorrhages recovered faster and had reduced brain damage as compared to animals given placebos. In one set of experiments, the researchers found that giving mice lactoferrin 24 hours after a stroke was also effective.

“Lactoferrin appears to have a long treatment window,” said Dr. Aronowski. “This means lactoferrin might one day be used to help patients recover from intracerebral hemorrhage.”

Dr. Aronowski’s team is taking the next steps towards testing lactoferrin treatment in patients.

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Funding: This study was supported by grants from NINDS (NS096308, NS090650)

Source: Christopher G. Thomas – NIH/NINDS
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Aronowski lab, University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Neutrophil polarization by IL-27 as a therapeutic target for intracerebral hemorrhage” by Xiurong Zhao, Shun-Ming Ting, Chin-Hsuan Liu, Guanghua Sun, Marian Kruzel, Meaghan Roy-O’Reilly & Jaroslaw Aronowski in Nature Communications. Published online September 19 2017 doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00770-7

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
  • MLA
  • APA
  • CHICAGO
NIH/NINDS “Immune Cells May Heal Bleeding Brain After Strokes.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 20 September 2017.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/immune-cell-stroke-7530/&gt;.

Abstract

Neutrophil polarization by IL-27 as a therapeutic target for intracerebral hemorrhage

Shortly after intracerebral hemorrhage, neutrophils infiltrate the intracerebral hemorrhage-injured brain. Once within the brain, neutrophils degranulate, releasing destructive molecules that may exacerbate brain damage. However, neutrophils also release beneficial molecules, including iron-scavenging lactoferrin that may limit hematoma/iron-mediated brain injury after intracerebral hemorrhage. Here, we show that the immunoregulatory cytokine interleukin-27 is upregulated centrally and peripherally after intracerebral hemorrhage. Data from rodent models indicate that interleukin-27 modifies neutrophil maturation in the bone marrow, suppressing their production of pro-inflammatory/cytotoxic products while increasing their production of beneficial iron-scavenging molecules, including lactoferrin. Finally, interleukin-27 or lactoferrin administration results in reduced edema, enhanced hematoma clearance, and improved neurological outcomes in an animal model of intracerebral hemorrhage. These results suggest that interleukin-27/lactoferrin-mediated modulations of neutrophil function may represent a therapeutically viable concept for the modification of neutrophils toward a “beneficial” phenotype for the treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage.

“Neutrophil polarization by IL-27 as a therapeutic target for intracerebral hemorrhage” by Xiurong Zhao, Shun-Ming Ting, Chin-Hsuan Liu, Guanghua Sun, Marian Kruzel, Meaghan Roy-O’Reilly & Jaroslaw Aronowski in Nature Communications. Published online September 19 2017 doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00770-7

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenuTags:immune system, strokeLeave a comment on Immune Cells May Heal Bleeding Brain After Strokes

Stroke Recovery Improved by Sensory Deprivation

Stroke Recovery Improved by Sensory Deprivation

Summary: A new study, using mouse models, demonstrates sensory deprivation can activate the brain to rewire networks following a stroke. The findings could have major implications for stroke rehabilitation in humans.
Source: WUSTL.

Temporarily shutting off neuronal signals to a healthy part of the brain may aid stroke recovery, according to new research in mice.

The findings, from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, are published Jan. 31 in Science Translational Medicine.

Mice that had experienced strokes were more likely to recover the ability to use a front paw if their whiskers were clipped following a stroke. Trimming the whiskers deprives an area of the mouse’s brain from receiving sensory signals from the animals’ whiskers. And it leaves that area of the brain more plastic – or receptive to rewiring to take on new tasks.

“We may have to rethink how we do stroke rehabilitation,” said senior author Jin-Moo Lee, MD, PhD, the Norman J. Stupp Professor of Neurology at the School of Medicine. “Stroke rehab often focuses on trying to train patients to compensate for disability caused by the stroke, but this strategy has limited effectiveness. Our findings suggest that we may be able to stimulate recovery by temporarily vacating some brain real estate and making that region of the brain more plastic. One way to do that might be by immobilizing a healthy limb.”

About 450,000 people survive strokes every year. Because the brain is adaptable, people typically recover a limited amount of function naturally. For example, a person who is unable to move his arm the day after a stroke sometimes can wiggle his fingers a week later. Brain imaging on such people shows that control of the fingers shifts from the stroke-damaged area of the brain to a neighboring undamaged area, a process known as remapping. How thoroughly a person recovers correlates with how well his or her brain rewires and moves functions from injured to uninjured areas.

But this adaptability also means there’s a constant battle for control over the brain’s real estate. Normally, if neuronal signaling to one area gets cut off – by sensory deprivation or limb amputation, say – neighboring functions will spread into that unused area.

Lee, first author Andrew Kraft, an MD/PhD student at Washington University, and colleagues reasoned that shutting off signals to an uninjured area near the site of stroke damage would promote remapping into that area by generating vacant real estate.

The researchers triggered, in mice, a stroke in the part of the brain that controls the right forepaw. Then, they trimmed whiskers in half of the mice to induce sensory deprivation in a brain region near the stroke and left the whiskers of the other mice intact. Mice rely on their whiskers, which are rich with nerve endings, to sense the location of objects in their environment.

The researchers measured recovery by comparing right and left forepaw use. Immediately after the strokes, both groups of mice favored their left forepaws. But by four weeks after the strokes, those with clipped whiskers had begun using their right forepaws again, and by eight weeks, they were back to using both equally. In contrast, mice whose whiskers were not clipped showed no improvement at four weeks and only partial recovery at eight weeks.

The researchers then mapped the mice’s brains to find the exact area that controlled the right forepaw. In each mouse with trimmed whiskers, the locus of forepaw control had taken over part of the area that usually receives whisker sensation. In the mice with intact whiskers, the locus of forepaw control had moved to any of several spots adjoining the site of injury.

The researchers kept the mice’s whiskers trimmed for eight weeks, until they had fully recovered from the strokes and were back to using both forepaws equally. Then, they allowed the whiskers to grow back. Four weeks later, whisker control had reclaimed part of its former real estate in the brain. Still, forepaw control remained in a corner of the area. The mice continued to have full use of their paws.

brain scans

Lee and colleagues do not know whether allowing the forepaw to take over part of the area normally devoted to governing whisker movement caused the mice to lose some control over their whiskers. But it is possible for a brain function to reach into another function’s territory without any apparent ill effects, they said.

“The part of the brain that controls fine finger movements is unusually large in musicians, and the part for navigation is enlarged in taxi drivers,” Lee said. “Developing those skills doesn’t cause musicians and taxi drivers to lose any other abilities. They are probably just using their brains more efficiently.”

The neurological areas that govern the parts of the body are mapped out in the brain in the same order they exist in reality: The part of the brain that directs the arm is next to the area that controls the shoulder, and so on. If brain injury causes a person to lose control of her arm, then immobilizing her shoulder would shut off neuronal signaling to the adjacent brain area, opening up space for remapping.

“Maybe we need to start thinking about improving outcomes by enhancing plasticity in targeted regions of the brain,” Lee said. “This study shows that it’s possible to do that, and it could lead to improved recovery.”

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Funding: Funding provided by National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association.

Source: Judy Martin Finch – WUSTL
Publisher: Organized by NeuroscienceNews.com.
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to WUSTL.
Video Source: Video credited to Washington University School of Medicine.
Original Research: Abstract in Science Translational Medicine.
doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.aag1328

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
  • MLA
  • APA
  • CHICAGO
WUSTL “Stroke Recovery Improved by Sensory Deprivation.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 1 February 2018.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/stoke-sensory-deprivation-8413/&gt;.

Abstract

Sensory deprivation after focal ischemia in mice accelerates brain remapping and improves functional recovery through Arc-dependent synaptic plasticity

Recovery after stroke, a major cause of adult disability, is often unpredictable and incomplete. Behavioral recovery is associated with functional reorganization (remapping) in perilesional regions, suggesting that promoting this process might be an effective strategy to enhance recovery. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying remapping after brain injury and the consequences of its modulation are poorly understood. Focal sensory loss or deprivation has been shown to induce remapping in the corresponding brain areas through activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein (Arc)–mediated synaptic plasticity. We show that targeted sensory deprivation via whisker trimming in mice after induction of ischemic stroke in the somatosensory cortex representing forepaw accelerates remapping into the whisker barrel cortex and improves sensorimotor recovery. These improvements persisted even after focal sensory deprivation ended (whiskers allowed to regrow). Mice deficient in Arc, a gene critical for activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, failed to remap or recover sensorimotor function. These results indicate that post-stroke remapping occurs through Arc-mediated synaptic plasticity and is required for behavioral recovery. Furthermore, our findings suggest that enhancing perilesional cortical plasticity via focal sensory deprivation improves recovery after ischemic stroke in mice.

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Stroke Recovery Improved by Sensory Deprivation

Draining the swamp in the WH

Has Trump drained the swamp in Washington? – POLITICO

https://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/19/trump-drain-swamp-promises-243924

Oct 19, 2017 – Shortly before Election Day last year, Donald Trump rolled out a package of ethics reforms that he promised to implement as president, using for the first time a now-famous phrase: “drain the swamp.” A year later and nearly nine months into his presidency, Trump has failed to deliver on most of those …

This SOTU, Trump can move to drain the swamp for good | TheHill

thehill.com/opinion/…/369187-this-sotu-trump-can-move-to-drain-the-swamp-for-go…

Jan 30, 2018 – Nearly a year has passed since Donald Trump strode into Washington with the confidence of a conqueror and famously declared he would “drain the swamp.” The president must now wonder if he’s knee deep in the big muddy. His administration is mired in chaos. Key appointments are unfilled. Lawyers …

Trump Has Filled, Not Drained, the Swamp – The Atlantic

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/09/meet-the-new-swamp/540540/

Sep 21, 2017 – There is no campaign promise that Donald Trump has failed to honor more flagrantly than his oft repeated pledge to “drain the swamp” in Washington, D.C. He has violated the letter of his promise and trampled all over its spirit. His supporters ought to be furious. But few perceive the scale of his betrayal or …

Drain the Swamp, One Year Later: Is Trump Draining or Drowning?

http://www.newsweek.com/trump-white-house-has-become-swamp-he-promised-drain-686&#8230;

Oct 16, 2017 – Trump promised to “drain the swamp” at a rally that day in Green Bay, Wisconsin, the first time he did so during the campaign. He did it the next day, October 18, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In Fletcher, North Carolina, he called Clinton “the most corrupt person ever to seek the office of the Presidency.

President Trump Said He’d ‘Drain The Swamp’ In Washington If … – NPR

https://www.npr.org/…/trumps-efforts-to-drain-the-swamp-lagging-behind-his-campaign&#8230;

Apr 26, 2017 – President Trump’s campaign rallies were defined by three slogans, three syllables each, which the candidate led the crowd in chanting: “Build the wall,” condemning illegal immigration; “Lock her up,” attacking Democratic rival Hillary Clinton; and “Drain the swamp,” all about cleaning up Washington.

Trump’s Administration Hasn’t Drained the Swamp — It’s Become It

https://www.nbcnews.com/…/trump-s-administration-hasn-t-drained-swamp-it-s-beco&#8230;

Oct 24, 2017 – Trump’s Mar-a-Lago trips, coupled with Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s financial scandals, reveal a larger problem.

Trump Suggests Bringing Back Pork After ‘Drain the Swamp …

https://www.bloomberg.com/…/trump-suggests-bringing-back-pork-after-drain-the-sw&#8230;

Jan 9, 2018 – President Donald Trump, who came to Washington vowing to “drain the swamp,” mused Tuesday about lifting the ban on congressional earmarks, the practice of larding legislation with pork-barrel payoffs. Earmarks, which are provisions in legislation channeling federal funding to specific projects, have …

Can Trump really drain ‘the swamp’ in Washington DC? | News | Al …

Video for drain the swamp for trump▶ 2:28
http://www.aljazeera.com/…/trump-drain-the-swamp-washington-dc-18022&#8230;
Feb 20, 2018

More than a year has passed since Donald Trump promised to “drain the swamp“, but many question …

5 ways Donald Trump has failed to ‘drain the swamp’ – Yahoo

https://www.yahoo.com/…/5-ways-donald-trump-failed-drain-swamp-100013259.htm&#8230;

Dec 22, 2017 – In the waning days of the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump repurposed a well-worn catchphrase at a Wisconsin rally that not only resonated with his base of supporters but seemed to sum up his outsider White House bid: “Drain the swamp.” One year into his first term, however,Trump’s pledge to …

Donald Trump Cabinet: Is He Really Draining the Swamp?

time.com/donald-trump-drain-swamp/

In mid-October, Donald Trump unveiled a major campaign slogans: “Drain the swamp.” “It’s become the hottest expression,” he said at a rally in New Hampshire.“If we win on November 8th, we are going to Washington, D.C.—when we win, OK—and we are going to drain the swamp.” Trump used the term …

Trump Made the Swamp Worse. Here’s How to Drain It. – The New …

https://www.nytimes.com/…/trump-made-the-swamp-worse-heres-how-to-drain-it.html

Donald Trump’s pledges to “drain the swamp” of corruption in Washington attest to his genius for unintentional irony. Nepotism, egregious conflicts of interest, flights on the public dime to see Wimbledon and the eclipse — the Beltway wetlands are now wilder and murkier than ever. It would be a mistake, …

The ‘Swamp’ Donald Trump Promised to ‘Drain’ Is Growing Again

http://www.newsweek.com/2017/02/17/donald-trump-drain-swamp-lobbyists-553809.html

Stupefaction and confusion are giving way to hard-nosed capitalism as K Street realizes all the business opportunities to be had. As part of his populist appeal, Trump promised to drain the fetid “swamp” along the Potomac, an incestuous bog teeming with powerful politicians and moneyed interests, and to …

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Draining the swamp in the WH

Genetic Marker for Stroke and Cardiovascular Disease – Folate and Vit B12 pathways

Researchers Discover Underlying Genetic Marker for Stroke and Cardiovascular Disease

NIH-funded findings point to new potential strategies for disease prevention and treatment.

Scientists studying the genomes of nearly 5,000 people have pinpointed a genetic variant tied to an increased risk for stroke, and have also uncovered new details about an important metabolic pathway that plays a major role in several common diseases. Together, their findings may provide new clues to underlying genetic and biochemical influences in the development of stroke and cardiovascular disease, and may also help lead to new treatment strategies.

“Our findings have the potential to identify new targets in the prevention and treatment of stroke, cardiovascular disease and many other common diseases,” said Stephen R. Williams, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Virginia Cardiovascular Research Center and the University of Virginia Center for Public Health Genomics, Charlottesville.

Dr. Williams, Michele Sale, Ph.D., associate professor of medicine, Brad Worrall, M.D., professor of neurology and public health sciences, all at the University of Virginia, and their team reported their findings March 20, 2014 in PLoS Genetics. The investigators were supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) Genomics and Randomized Trials Network (GARNET) program.

This image shows a group of people with GTCA written above them.

Researchers supported by NHGRI’s Genomics and Randomized Trials Network (GARNET) program, who have been studying the genomes of nearly 5,000 people, have pinpointed a genetic variant tied to increased risk for stoke and cardiovascular disease. Credit Jonathan Bailey, NHGRI.

Stroke is the fourth leading cause of death and a major cause of adult disability in this country, yet its underlying genetics have been difficult to understand. Numerous genetic and environmental factors can contribute to a person having a stroke. “Our goals were to break down the risk factors for stroke,” Dr. Williams said.

The researchers focused on one particular biochemical pathway called the folate one-carbon metabolism (FOCM) pathway. They knew that abnormally high blood levels of the amino acid homocysteine are associated with an increased risk of common diseases such as stroke, cardiovascular disease and dementia. Homocysteine is a breakdown product of methionine, which is part of the FOCM pathway. The same pathway can affect many important cellular processes, including the methylation of proteins, DNA and RNA. DNA methylation is a mechanism that cells use to control which genes are turned on and off, and when.

But clinical trials of homocysteine-lowering therapies have not prevented disease, and the genetics underlying high homocysteine levels – and methionine metabolism gone awry – are not well defined.

Dr. Williams and his colleagues conducted genome-wide association studies of participants from two large long-term projects: the Vitamin Intervention for Stroke Prevention (VISP), a trial looking at ways to prevent a second ischemic stroke, and the Framingham Heart Study (FHS), which has followed the cardiovascular health and disease in a general population for decades. They also measured methionine metabolism – the ability to convert methionine to homocysteine – in both groups. In all, they studied 2,100 VISP participants and 2,710 FHS subjects.

In a genome-wide association study, researchers scan the genome to identify specific genomic variants associated with a disease. In this case, the scientists were trying to identify variants associated with a trait – the ability to metabolize methionine into homocysteine.

Investigators identified variants in five genes in the FOCM pathway that were associated with differences in a person’s ability to convert methionine to homocysteine. They found that among the five genes, one – the ALDH1L1 gene – was also strongly associated with stroke in the Framingham study. When the gene is not working properly, it has been associated with a breakdown in a normal cellular process called programmed cell death, and cancer cell survival.

They also made important discoveries about the methionine-homocysteine process. “GNMT produces a protein that converts methionine to homocysteine. Of the five genes that we identified, it was the one most significantly associated with this process,” Dr. Williams said. “The analyses suggest that differences in GNMT are the major drivers behind the differences in methionine metabolism in humans.”

“It’s striking that the genes are in the same pathway, so we know that the genomic variants affecting that pathway contribute to the variability in disease and risk that we’re seeing,” he said. “We may have found how genetic information controls the regulation of GNMT.”

The group determined that the five genes accounted for 6 percent of the difference in individuals’ ability to process methionine into homocysteine among those in the VISP trial. The genes also accounted for 13 percent of the difference in those participants in the FHS, a remarkable result given the complex nature of methionine metabolism and its impact on cerebrovascular risk. In many complex diseases, genomic variants often account for less than 5 percent of such differences.

“This is a great example of the kinds of successful research efforts coming out of the GARNET program,” said program director Ebony Madden, Ph.D. “GARNET scientists aim to identify variants that affect treatment response by doing association studies in randomized trials. These results show that variants in genes are associated with the differences in homocysteine levels in individuals.”

The association of the ALDH1L1 gene variant with stroke is just one example of how the findings may potentially lead to new prevention efforts, and help develop new targets for treating stroke and heart disease, Dr. Williams said.

“As genome sequencing becomes more widespread, clinicians may be able to determine if a person’s risk for abnormally high levels of homocysteine is elevated,” he said. “Changes could be made to an individual’s diet because of a greater risk for stroke and cardiovascular disease.”

The investigators plan to study the other four genes in the pathway to try to better understand their potential roles in stroke and cardiovascular disease risk.

NOTES ABOUT THIS GENETICS RESEARCH

In addition to NHGRI, the research was supported by funds from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the National Institute on Aging and the Robert Dawson Evans Endowment of the Department of Medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.

The National Human Genome Research Institute is one of the 27 institutes and centers at the National Institutes of Health. The NHGRI Extramural Research Program supports grants for research and training and career development at sites nationwide.

Contact: Press Office – National Human Genome Research Institute/NIH
Source:National Human Genome Research Institute/NIH press release.


 

Methionine

Although mammals cannot synthesize methionine, they can still use it in a variety of biochemical pathways:

Catabolism

Methionine is converted to S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) by (1) methionine adenosyltransferase.

SAM serves as a methyl-donor in many (2) methyltransferase reactions, and is converted to S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH).

(3) Adenosylhomocysteinase converts SAH to homocysteine.

There are two fates of homocysteine: it can be used to regenerate methionine, or to form cysteine.

Regeneration

Methionine can be regenerated from homocysteine via (4) methionine synthase in a reaction that requires Vitamin B12 as a cofactor.

Homocysteine can also be remethylated using glycine betaine (NNN-trimethyl glycine, TMG) to methionine via the enzyme betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (E.C.2.1.1.5, BHMT). BHMT makes up to 1.5% of all the soluble protein of the liver, and recent evidence suggests that it may have a greater influence on methionine and homocysteine homeostasis than methionine synthase.

Reverse-transulfurylation pathway: conversion to cysteine[edit]

Homocysteine can be converted to cysteine.

  • (5) Cystathionine-β-synthase (a PLP-dependent enzyme) combines homocysteine and serine to produce cystathionine. Instead of degrading cystathionine via cystathionine-β-lyase, as in the biosynthetic pathway, cystathionine is broken down to cysteine and α-ketobutyrate via (6) cystathionine-γ-lyase.
  • (7) The enzyme α-ketoacid dehydrogenase converts α-ketobutyrate to propionyl-CoA, which is metabolized to succinyl-CoA in a three-step process (see propionyl-CoA for pathway).

Ethylene synthesis

This amino acid is also used by plants for synthesis of ethylene. The process is known as the Yang Cycle or the methionine cycle.

The Yang cycle

Chemical synthesis

Racemic methionine can be synthesized from diethyl sodium phthalimidomalonate by alkylation with chloroethylmethylsulfide (ClCH2CH2SCH3) followed by hydrolysis and decarboxylation.[17]

Human nutrition

Requirements

The Food and Nutrition Board (FNB) of the U.S. Institute of Medicine set Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for essential amino acids in 2002. For methionine combined with cysteine, for adults 19 years and older, 19 mg/kg body weight/day.[18]

Dietary sources

Food sources of Methionine[19]
Food g/100g
Egg, white, dried, powder, glucose reduced 3.204
Sesame seeds flour (low fat) 1.656
Egg, whole, dried 1.477
Cheese, Parmesan, shredded 1.114
Brazil nuts 1.008
Soy protein concentrate 0.814
Chicken, broilers or fryers, roasted 0.801
Fish, tuna, light, canned in water, drained solids 0.755
Beef, cured, dried 0.749
Bacon 0.593
Beef, ground, 95% lean meat / 5% fat, raw 0.565
Pork, ground, 96% lean / 4% fat, raw 0.564
Wheat germ 0.456
Oat 0.312
Peanuts 0.309
Chickpea 0.253
Corn, yellow 0.197
Almonds 0.151
Beans, pinto, cooked 0.117
Lentils, cooked 0.077
Rice, brown, medium-grain, cooked 0.052

High levels of methionine can be found in eggs, sesame seeds, Brazil nuts, fish, meats and some other plant seeds; methionine is also found in cereal grains. Most fruits and vegetables contain very little of it. Most legumes are also low in methionine. However, it is the combination of methionine and lysine which is considered for completeness of a protein.[20] Racemic methionine is sometimes added as an ingredient to pet foods.[21]

Restriction

There is scientific evidence that restricting methionine consumption can increase lifespans in fruit flies.[22]

A 2005 study showed methionine restriction without energy restriction extends mouse lifespan.[23]

A study published in Nature showed adding just the essential amino acid methionine to the diet of fruit fliesunder dietary restriction, including restriction of essential amino acids (EAAs), restored fertility without reducing the longer lifespans that are typical of dietary restriction, leading the researchers to determine that methionine “acts in combination with one or more other EAAs to shorten lifespan.”[22][24][25] Restoring methionine to the diet of mice on a dietary restriction regimen blocks many acute benefits of dietary restriction, a process that may be mediated by increased production of hydrogen sulfide.[26]

Several studies showed that methionine restriction also inhibits aging-related disease processes in mice[27][28] and inhibits colon carcinogenesis in rats.[29] In humans, methionine restriction through dietary modification could be achieved through a vegan diet. Veganism being a completely plant based diet is typically very low in methionine, however certain nuts and legumes may provide higher levels.[30]

A 2009 study on rats showed “methionine supplementation in the diet specifically increases mitochondrial ROS production and mitochondrial DNA oxidative damage in rat liver mitochondria offering a plausible mechanism for its hepatotoxicity“.[31]

However, since methionine is an essential amino acid, it cannot be entirely removed from animals’ diets without disease or death occurring over time[citation needed]. For example, rats fed a diet without methionine and choline developed steatohepatitis (fatty liver), anemia and lost two thirds of their body weight over 5 weeks. Administration of methionine ameliorated the pathological consequences of methionine deprivation.[32] Short-term removal of only methionine from the diet can reverse diet-induced obesity and promotes insulin sensitivity in mice.[33]

Methionine might also be essential to reversing damaging methylation of glucocorticoid receptors caused by repeated stress exposures, with implications for depression.[34]

Health

Loss of methionine has been linked to senile greying of hair. Its lack leads to a buildup of hydrogen peroxide in hair follicles, a reduction in tyrosinase effectiveness, and a gradual loss of hair color.[35]

Methionine is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of cysteine, carnitine, taurine, lecithin, phosphatidylcholine, and other phospholipids. Improper conversion of methionine can lead to atherosclerosis.[

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 2, 2018March 2, 2018Posted inMenuTags:anti-aging, CVD, folate, folic acid, gray hair, heart attack, metionine, stroke, Vitamin B12Leave a comment on Genetic Marker for Stroke and Cardiovascular Disease – Folate and Vit B12 pathways

Connection between light sensitive nerve cells in eyes and brain that regulate mood

the lc

TINY BRAIN REGION RESPONSIBLE FOR STRENGTHENING IMPORTANT MEMORIES UNDER STRESS

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSFEBRUARY 14, 2018
Researchers implicate the locus coeruleus in storing memories of stressful events.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROSCIENCE6 MIN READ
Image shows a DNA strand.

MANIPULATING A SINGLE GENE DEFINES A NEW PATHWAY TO ANXIETY

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSAUGUST 24, 2017
According to a new PLOS Biology study, removing the Lef1 gene in mice and zebrafish disrupts the development of hypothalamus neurons that affects anxiety. … READ MORE…
FEATUREDGENETICSOPEN NEUROSCIENCE ARTICLESPSYCHOLOGY6 MIN READ
Image shows woman holding her head and wearing a mask.

EXPOSURE TO LIGHT CAUSES EMOTIONAL AND PHYSICAL RESPONSES IN MIGRAINE SUFFERERS

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSJUNE 26, 2017
A new study reveals a connection between light sensitive nerve cells in the eyes and areas of the brain that regulate mood. The findings may help explain how light can induce some of the negative emotions that often accompany migraines.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROLOGYPSYCHOLOGY6 MIN READ
Image shows a the location of the substantia nigra in the brain.

SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY MAY CHANGE TREATMENT OF PARKINSON’S

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSMARCH 23, 2017
A neuroimaging study reports dopamine activity does not reflect the number of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra of people with Parkinson’s disease.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROLOGY4 MIN READ
Image shows a woman with red hair.

RED HAIR GENE VARIANT MAY UNDERLIE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PARKINSON’S AND MELANOMA

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSMARCH 2, 2017
Mice that carry a gene associated with red hair have reduced production of dopamine in the substantia nigra and are more susceptible to toxins that can damage these dopaminergic neurons.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDGENETICSNEUROLOGYNEUROSCIENCE7 MIN READ
Image shows the distribution of cocaine in the fish eyes.

COCAINE ACCUMULATION IN FISH EYES

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSOCTOBER 1, 2016
A new imaging technique has revealed cocaine accumulation in the eyes of zebrafish.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROSCIENCE6 MIN READ
Image of a woman's eye.

PARKINSON’S DRUG COULD HELP SAVE SIGHT

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSNOVEMBER 9, 2015
A new study reports L-DOPA may be able to delay or prevent macular degeneration associated with aging.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROLOGYOPEN NEUROSCIENCE ARTICLES5 MIN READ
Image shows amyloid beta attacking a cell.

YEAST PROTEIN COULD OFFER CLUES TO HOW ALZHEIMER’S PLAQUES FORM IN THE BRAIN

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSSEPTEMBER 24, 2015
Understanding how yeast cells construct and destroy amyloid like structures could help researchers develop new drugs that destroy amyloid beta in Alzheimer’s disease, a new study reports.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROLOGY6 MIN READ
This shows brain slice from an alzheimer's patient.

LOW VITAMIN D LEVELS ASSOCIATED WITH COGNITIVE DECLINE AND ALZHEIMER’S IN OLDER PEOPLE

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSSEPTEMBER 14, 2015
According to a new study, vitamin D deficiency in elderly people is highly correlated with accelerated cognitive decline and memory loss, two symptoms associated with Alzheimer’s disease.… READ MORE…
FEATUREDNEUROLOGYOPEN NEUROSCIENCE ARTICLES7 MIN READ

MOLECULAR DUO DICTATE WEIGHT AND ENERGY LEVELS

NEUROSCIENCE NEWSFEBRUARY 28, 2012
Yale University researchers have discovered a key cellular mechanism that may help the brain control how much we eat, what we weigh, and how much energy we have… READ MORE…
Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018March 1, 2018Posted inMenuTags:Alzheimer's, brain, cognitive, cognitive impairment, connection, decline, depression, eat, Energy, eyes, light, mood, Vitamin D, weightLeave a comment on Connection between light sensitive nerve cells in eyes and brain that regulate mood

Less melanin in white people leads to less folate for blood production

via Less melanin in white people leads to less folate for blood production

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Less melanin in white people leads to less folate for blood production

Less melanin in white people leads to less folate for blood production

Less melanin in white leads to less folate and more melanin in dark colored skin people affects Vitamin D and Calcium absorption

White people must get sunshine to help in folate absorption (folic acid – important nutrient for the blood ) while dark-colored skin people must eat whole foods rich in Vitamin D3 , calcium , omega 3 , Vitamin K2 and magnesium to protect them from diseases related to the heart and circulation/vascular system.

As a result, depression is prevalent among whites while circulatory health issues are common among dark colored skin.

See your doctor for more preventive measures.

Connie Dello Buono

The color of skin is influenced by a number of pigments, including melanin, carotene, and hemoglobin. Recall that melanin is produced by cells called melanocytes, which are found scattered throughout the stratum basale of the epidermis. The melanin is transferred into the keratinocytes via a cellular organelle called a melanosome (Figure 5.7).

This figure consists of two diagrams side by side. The right diagram shows development of light colored skin; the left shows development of dark-colored skin. In both, a brown melanocyte sits at the border between the dermis and epidermis. The melanocyte has a large nucleus and six finger-like extensions. These reach between cells of the stratum basalis. Sections of the extensions detach and travel through the skins. These are melanosomes. In the left diagram, both the melanocyte and melanosomes contain melanin particles, shown as dark dots. Melanosomes travel upwards to outer skin layers, releasing melanin. As a result, keratinocytes in the left diagram contain several melanin particles that darken skin color. In light colored skin, the melanocyte contains no melanin. It still releases melanosomes into upper layers of the skin; however, these melanosomes contain no melanin. Therefore, the skin does not darken and remains light.
Figure 5.7. Skin Pigmentation
The relative coloration of the skin depends of the amount of melanin produced by melanocytes in the stratum basale and taken up by keratinocytes.

Melanin occurs in two primary forms. Eumelanin exists as black and brown, whereas pheomelanin provides a red color. Dark-skinned individuals produce more melanin than those with pale skin. Exposure to the UV rays of the sun or a tanning salon causes melanin to be manufactured and built up in keratinocytes, as sun exposure stimulates keratinocytes to secrete chemicals that stimulate melanocytes.

The accumulation of melanin in keratinocytes results in the darkening of the skin, or a tan. This increased melanin accumulation protects the DNA of epidermal cells from UV ray damage and the breakdown of folic acid, a nutrient necessary for our health and well-being.

In contrast, too much melanin can interfere with the production of vitamin D, an important nutrient involved in calcium absorption.

Thus, the amount of melanin present in our skin is dependent on a balance between available sunlight and folic acid destruction, and protection from UV radiation and vitamin D production.

It requires about 10 days after initial sun exposure for melanin synthesis to peak, which is why pale-skinned individuals tend to suffer sunburns of the epidermis initially. Dark-skinned individuals can also get sunburns, but are more protected than are pale-skinned individuals. Melanosomes are temporary structures that are eventually destroyed by fusion with lysosomes; this fact, along with melanin-filled keratinocytes in the stratum corneum sloughing off, makes tanning impermanent.

Too much sun exposure can eventually lead to wrinkling due to the destruction of the cellular structure of the skin, and in severe cases, can cause sufficient DNA damage to result in skin cancer.

When there is an irregular accumulation of melanocytes in the skin, freckles appear. Moles are larger masses of melanocytes, and although most are benign, they should be monitored for changes that might indicate the presence of cancer (Figure 5.8).

Five photos of moles. The three upper photos show moles that are small, flat, and dark brown. The bottom left photo shows a dark black mole that is raised above the skin. The bottom right photo shows a large, raised, reddish mole with protruding hairs.
Figure 5.8. Moles
Moles range from benign accumulations of melanocytes to melanomas. These structures populate the landscape of our skin. (credit: the National Cancer Institute)
 
 

SKIN DISCOLORATION

The first thing a clinician sees is the skin, and so the examination of the skin should be part of any thorough physical examination. Most skin disorders are relatively benign, but a few, including melanomas, can be fatal if untreated. A couple of the more noticeable disorders, albinism and vitiligo, affect the appearance of the skin and its accessory organs. Although neither is fatal, it would be hard to claim that they are benign, at least to the individuals so afflicted.

Albinism is a genetic disorder that affects (completely or partially) the coloring of skin, hair, and eyes. The defect is primarily due to the inability of melanocytes to produce melanin. Individuals with albinism tend to appear white or very pale due to the lack of melanin in their skin and hair. Recall that melanin helps protect the skin from the harmful effects of UV radiation. Individuals with albinism tend to need more protection from UV radiation, as they are more prone to sunburns and skin cancer. They also tend to be more sensitive to light and have vision problems due to the lack of pigmentation on the retinal wall. Treatment of this disorder usually involves addressing the symptoms, such as limiting UV light exposure to the skin and eyes.

In vitiligo, the melanocytes in certain areas lose their ability to produce melanin, possibly due to an autoimmune reaction. This leads to a loss of color in patches (Figure 5.9). Neither albinism nor vitiligo directly affects the lifespan of an individual.

This photo shows the back of a man’s neck. There is a large, discolored patch of skin at the base of his hairline. The discolored area extends over the ears onto the cheeks, toward the front of the face. The man’s head and facial hair are mostly gray, but white patches of hair are seen above the discolored skin.
Figure 5.9. Vitiligo
Individuals with vitiligo experience depigmentation that results in lighter colored patches of skin. The condition is especially noticeable on darker skin. (credit: Klaus D. Peter)
 

Other changes in the appearance of skin coloration can be indicative of diseases associated with other body systems. Liver disease or liver cancer can cause the accumulation of bile and the yellow pigment bilirubin, leading to the skin appearing yellow or jaundiced (jaune is the French word for “yellow”). Tumors of the pituitary gland can result in the secretion of large amounts of melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH), which results in a darkening of the skin. Similarly, Addison’s disease can stimulate the release of excess amounts of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which can give the skin a deep bronze color.

A sudden drop in oxygenation can affect skin color, causing the skin to initially turn pale (white), a condition called pallor. With a prolonged reduction in oxygen levels, dark red deoxyhemoglobin becomes dominant in the blood, making the skin appear blue, a condition referred to as cyanosis (kyanos is the Greek word for “blue”).

This happens when the oxygen supply is restricted, as when someone is experiencing difficulty in breathing because of asthma or a heart attack. However, in these cases the effect on skin color has nothing do with the skin’s pigmentation.

INTERACTIVE LINK

This ABC video follows the story of a pair of fraternal African-American twins, one of whom is albino. Watch this video to learn about the challenges these children and their family face. Which ethnicities do you think are exempt from the possibility of albinism?

Calcium and magnesium balance 60:40 ratio

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018July 17, 2019Posted inanti-aging, MenuTags:black, blood, calcium, dark colored skin, folate, HEART, Magnesium, melanin, Vitamin D, white1 Comment on Less melanin in white people leads to less folate for blood production

Top aging and health hacks 3-1-2018

View
Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
View
DMSO, hydrogen peroxide and Vit C fight cancer cells
View
Home page / Archives
View
Signs of the preactive/ active phase of dying and medications for terminally ill
View
Non pasteurized beers have more health benefits
View
MEDICATIONS TO AVOID that worse PD (Parkinson’s disease)
View
Foods to eat and avoid when you have Gout and leg pains
View
Can Gout be cured permanently?
View
Nitric Oxide Dump Exercise with nose breathing to lower blood pressure and thin blood
View
Apple cider vinegar kills parasites, cleansing to the liver and prevents stroke
View
Fatigue and Red (bloodshot) eyes from WebMD
View
Avoid chronic bronchitis with green apple, onions, garlic, vinegar and rest
View
5
About Connie
View
Philippines Coconut Wine -Tuba
View
16 Tips On How To Treat HPV Naturally And Effectively At Home
View
What’s a good analogy to explain the immune system?
View
Detox your lungs from air pollution and metal toxins and for early lung cancer
View
Browning or caramelized sugar is a carcinogen
View
About Connie
View
Mullein herb for lung and breast health – COPD signs, symptoms and diagnosis
View
Menu for the healthy plus kitchen tips
View
Coconut oil, ground ginger, ground cayenne pepper, ground turmeric, grapeseed oil as anti-arthritis balm for pain relief
View
Parkinson and Exercises
View
Increase the body’s oxygen carrying capacity with exercise, EPO and whole foods
View
4
Cooked your greens rich in oxalates to prevent kidney stones
View
3
Eat protein-rich food when drinking alcohol to protect your stomach
View
3
Mineral Nutrients Balance
View
3
Caregivers and caregiving agencies helping seniors, be added in our list
View
3
miRNA inherited disease, DNA repair, cancer, alcoholism, obesity,heart disease
View
3
Inability of the muscle to transport sugar into the muscle cell is what leads to higher blood sugar levels
View
3
Cooked your greens rich in oxalates to prevent kidney stones
View
3
Toxicology test for pregnant women
View
3
Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
View
3
Can balsamic vinegar help with gout?
View
3
Connie answered 1261 questions at Quora.com
View
3
Boron fights radiation by Dr Mercola
View
3
Guava and water apple to fight diabetes
View
2
Lung cancer in the Philippines
View
2
Gastroparesis, Betain HCL, diabetes and stomach health
View
2
Vagus nerve stimulation thru breathing, laughs and yoga
View
2
Most air polluted cities in California
View
2
Philippines president Dutarte asked each town to prepare a list of drug users and pushers
View
2
What will happen if a person accidentally drinks kerosene/petrol/diesel?
View
2
Leaky gut, leaky brain, eat your garlic and pickles by C Guthrie
View
2
Growth hormone DHEA increases libido/anti-aging
View
2
Fasting, sun bathing ,Vit C, Lysine, turmeric, green tea, carrots and raw food diet to reduce tumor size
View
2
Dark purple berries or Black currant juice and eggs for upping up sex drive
View
2
Mineral Nutrients Balance
View
2
Connie answered 1261 questions at Quora.com
View
2
Cayenne pepper fights cancer
View
2
Cayenne pepper fights cancer
View
2
Exercise Pill Boosts Endurance, Promotes Burning of Fat
View
2
Can Adderall damage to dopamine receptors be repaired?
View
2
How important is the thymus gland in keeping your body free from diseases?
View
2
Resveratrol and calorie restriction activates SIRT1 , anti-aging gene
View
2
Fruits and leaves of Figs as anti-cancer
View
2
Link between liver disease and heart problems
View
2
Acetylcholine/Choline Deficiency in Chronic Illness – eat soft boiled eggs
View
2
24-hr lip stain for powerful lips
View
2
Your own health food store with free Bahamas trip – Valentine sales
View
2
Top 6400 topics at this site in 2017
View
2
DISCOVERY SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON MARIJUANA’S ANXIETY RELIEF EFFECTS
View
1
Starve cancer cells with low cal ketogenic diet
View
1
Immune system, bone marrow, anti-cancer, shark oil
View
1
Dementia = Low blood pressure + low potassium + diabetes + sleep cycle
View
1
Anti-aging Vitamin B3, Niacin
View
1
Epigenetics in Adipose Tissue, Obesity, Weight Loss, and Diabetes
View
1
Shingles Natural Treatments
View
1
Novel Type of Cell Death in Huntington’s Disease May Lead to Effective New Therapies
View
1
Fenugreek, for diabetes/lactating moms/to boost testosterone
View
1
$500 bonus for Uber driving and now accepting tips in the app
View
1
Root Canal and Implants by Dr Mercola
View
1
Inhaled fungus from a bagpipe
View
1
Gut Busting: How Gaseous Substances in the Body Affect Psyche and Behavior
View
1
Psychological Wounds of Conflict: The Impact of War to children, young adults and soldiers
View
1
Dry mouth and bad breath by Dr Mercola
View
1
Can methamphetamine bring on the menstrual cycle?
View
1
Rheumatoid Arthritis and drugs by Dr Mercola
View
1
Cash flow analysis worksheet template
View
1
Dr Mercola’s book – Fat for Fuel
View
1
Sign the petition: Elect the president by national popular vote
View
1
Surviving prostate cancer by Dr Mercola
View
1
How does a CBC test for a leukemia patient usually look like?
View
1
Restore your vision naturally y Dr. Mercola
View
1
Digestive enzymes help in healing fractures, preventing kidney stones and heart disease and more
View
1
Brain detox, eyes,
View
1
Have a land in the bay area for $30-50k modular home
View
1
If You Get the Chills From Music, you have ability to feel intense emotions
View
1
Chicken Adobo from the Philippines
View
1
State individual income taxes
View
1
Digestive enzymes help in healing fractures, preventing kidney stones and heart disease and more
View
1
How the brain helps us to learn and make decisions, attention and learning
View
1
I love popmoney.com to receive and send money via email or smart phone
View
1
$500 bonus for Uber driving and California Laws
View
1
$2.58B Digital Health Funding
View
1
Warfarin, NSAID, Magnesium, Atrial Fibrillation, Dementia
View
1
Aging, Immune system, Thymosin hormones, and Vitamin D supplementation
View
1
4 longevity genes: Myc, Oct 3/4 , Sox 2 and Klf4
View
1
5x more antioxidants in Okinawan diet of sweet potatoes and low calorie diet
View
1
Mueller and Trump: Born to wealth, raised to lead. Then, sharply different choices.
View
1
Our brain uses prior knowledge – link between Hallucinations and Dopamine
View
1
Cancer from toxins, inhaled, small metal dusts, lack of sleep and our brain
View
1
Non medical home care with wearable for smart home monitoring
View
1
Alzheimer’s disease prevention with Vit D, Vit C and low histamine foods or raw/whole foods
View
1
Nitric Oxide for strong blood vessels’ cells , up with exercise, melons, cucumber, Vit C, E, amino acid – L-arginine, L-citrulline
View
1
Learn a new dance, movement , language to grow new brain cells
View
1
Top aging and health hacks 2-28-2018
View
1
Drug-Induced Urinary Incontinence
View
1
Study links gut-homing protein levels with HIV infection risk, disease progression
View
1
Virus , Vitamin A, B , D and C and why some people die from the Flu
View
1
Foul smell of poops indicative of metabolic disorders or virus
View
1
Start dating, stop swiping and texting
View
1
Whole foods prevent inflammation
View
1
Zinc, copper and magnesium to fight diabetes and neurodegeneration
View
1
Thyme herb for toe fungus (guava and comfrey leaves and others)
View
1
About fingerprinting, IHSS and worker’s comp in California for home care
View
1
That time Trump watched a man bleed to death and did nothing but run away
View
1
Reasons for not having a health insurance
View
1
Take care of your Thyroid gland, 240% increase in Thyroid cancer among women
View
1
The diabetes pandemic suggests unmet needs for ‘CKD with diabetes
View
1
Top aging and health posts during the last 90 days
View
1
Top health and aging hacks 2-27-2018
View
1
Roman Coriander, Fennel flower or Black Cumin Seed Oil as an anti-tumor, anti-gastritis and anti-convulsant oil
View
1
Lectins in lentils and other plants
View
1
Iodine prevents cancer growth; up avocado and reduce caffeine intake to prevent Thyroid cancer
View
1
Disease condition and odor symptom
View
1
Playing in the Dirt As A Kid Makes Later Life Chronic Disease Less Likely
View
1
Cancer healed with enzyme therapy – many stories
View
1
Shark oil for your skin, wound healing and overall health
View
1
Anti-aging steroids, pregnenolone, progesterone and DHEA
View
1
Uncaria Tomentosa (“Cat’s Claw”); Anti Malaria
View
1
Vitamin B5 – Panthothenate – for Schizophrenia
View
1
Understanding Glaucoma: Epidemiology and Pathophysiology
Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018March 1, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Top aging and health hacks 3-1-2018

Most air polluted cities in California

By Ozone By Year Round Particle Pollution By Short-Term Particle Pollution
#1: Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA
#2: Bakersfield, CA
#3: Fresno-Madera, CA
#4: Visalia-Porterville-Hanford, CA
#5: Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ
#6: Modesto-Merced, CA
#7: San Diego-Carlsbad, CA
#8: Sacramento-Roseville, CA
#9: New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA
#10: Las Vegas-Henderson, NV-AZ
#11: Denver-Aurora, CO
#12: Houston-The Woodlands, TX
#13: Dallas-Fort Worth, TX-OK
#14: El Centro, CA
#15: Fort Collins, CO
#16: El Paso-Las Cruces, TX-NM
#17: Redding-Red Bluff, CA
#18: San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA
#19: San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX
#20: Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem, UT
#21: Hartford-West Hartford, CT
#22: Baton Rouge, LA
#22: Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD
#24: Sheboygan, WI
#25: Chico, CA
#1: Visalia-Porterville-Hanford, CA
#2: Bakersfield, CA
#3: Fresno-Madera, CA
#4: San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA
#5: Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA
#6: Modesto-Merced, CA
#7: El Centro, CA
#8: Pittsburgh-New Castle-Weirton, PA-OH-WV
#9: Cleveland-Akron-Canton, OH
#10: San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles-Arroyo Grande, CA
#11: Medford-Grants Pass, OR
#11: Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD
#13: Indianapolis-Carmel-Muncie, IN
#13: Johnstown-Somerset, PA
#13: Louisville-Jefferson County-Elizabethtown-Madison, KY-IN
#16: Houston-The Woodlands, TX
#17: Fairbanks, AK
#18: Detroit-Warren-Ann Arbor, MI
#18: Altoona, PA
#20: Cincinnati-Wilmington-Maysville, OH-KY-IN
#20: Lancaster, PA
#22: Harrisburg-York-Lebanon, PA
#22: Birmingham-Hoover-Talladega, AL
#22: New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA
#25: Erie-Meadville, PA
#1: Bakersfield, CA
#2: Fresno-Madera, CA
#2: Visalia-Porterville-Hanford, CA
#4: Modesto-Merced, CA
#5: Fairbanks, AK
#6: San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA
#7: Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem, UT
#8: Logan, UT-ID
#9: Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA
#10: Reno-Carson City-Fernley, NV
#11: El Centro, CA
#12: Lancaster, PA
#13: Missoula, MT
#14: Sacramento-Roseville, CA
#14: Anchorage, AK
#16: Yakima, WA
#17: Seattle-Tacoma, WA
#17: Pittsburgh-New Castle-Weirton, PA-OH-WV
#19: Medford-Grants Pass, OR
#20: Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD
Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018March 1, 2018Posted inMenuTags:air pollution, california, cities, lung cancer, radonLeave a comment on Most air polluted cities in California

Connie answered 1261 questions at Quora.com

via Connie answered 1261 questions at Quora.com

Posted byconnie dello buonoMarch 1, 2018Posted inMenuLeave a comment on Connie answered 1261 questions at Quora.com

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 115 116 117 118 119 … 850 Older posts
image 30

Contact to request for caregiver, free senior safe your home consult, free assessment of home care needs, free tips on caring for your parents at home, avoid emergencies, have consistent home care and more.

Reach Us

  • +14088541883
  • +4088541883
  • motherhealth@gmail.com
  • 1273 Sandia Ave Sunnyvale CA 94089

Company

  • Caregivers
  • Senior
  • Blogs
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Marketplace
  • Book an Appointment
  • Caregivers
  • Senior
  • Blogs
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Marketplace
  • Book an Appointment

Follow Us

Facebook Linkedin Twitter

Copyright © 2026 KRM Digital Solutions

 

Loading Comments...