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brain disorders

The team’s overall goal was to be able to compare the amounts of α-synuclein protein contained in extracellular vesicles (right side) relative to α-synuclein contained in total plasma (left side). To achieve the former, they innovated an already validated EV-isolation and analysis process with a critical “protein protection assay.”

Breakthrough in Parkinson’s Disease Detection: New Blood Test Method Shows Promise

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
The octo-patch rig is a specialized microscope allowing neuroscientists to record electrical properties from and map connections between up to eight neurons simultaneously.

Zapping the right brain cells: The path to improved stimulation

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health, Technology
An illustration depicting a human brain with colorful, pulsating waves emanating from different regions

Bursts of Beta Rhythms in the Brain Hold the Key to Understanding Cognition, Scientists Argue

Categories Brain & Behavior
Researchers using non-invasive neuromodulation, a technique that has shown promising results in reducing symptoms of depression, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease.

Breakthrough in Brain Stimulation: Scientists Discover New Way to Modulate Behavior

Categories Brain & Behavior, Technology
Fiber bundles associated with symptom improvement following deep brain stimulation in Parkinson’s disease (green), dystonia (yellow), Tourette’s syndrome (blue),and obsessive-compulsive disorder (red). Courtesy of Barbara Hollunder.

Researchers use deep brain stimulation to map therapeutic targets for four brain disorders

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
brain illustration

MIT Study Reveals Universal Brain Patterns

Categories Brain & Behavior

Brain gain: Europe’s big advances in neuroscience

Categories Bloggers
Neurons. Pixabay

New kind of brain cell rocks neuroscience

Categories Brain & Behavior

Brain disorders trigger search for new clues and cures

Categories Bloggers
Illustration of a brain with a door opening

A New Mechanism for Crossing the Blood–Brain Barrier

Categories Brain & Behavior, Health
The illustration shows the cell types and brain regions affected by six different neurodegenerative diseases: Friedreich's ataxia (purple); Huntington's disease (blue); frontotemporal dementia (yellow); amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as motor neuron disease (MND) or Lou Gehrig's disease (green); Parkinson's disease (orange); and Alzheimer's disease (pink).

Common features among neurodegenerative diseases, opening door to early diagnosis and treatment

Categories Brain & Behavior

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