Archive for neuroscience
Brain juice and stem cells: Revisiting an ancient view of cerebrospinal fluid
Christopher Walsh, MD, PhD, is chief of Genetics and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator at Children’s Hospital Boston, where his research focuses on genes that regulate the development and function of the human cerebral cortex. Mutations in these genes are known to cause autism and epilepsy, as well as intellectual disabilities and other learning ... Read More about Brain juice and stem cells: Revisiting an ancient view of cerebrospinal fluid
Tagged: neuroscience, proteomics, stem cells
Neurogenetic disorders: Dreaming the impossible dream
People with autism and most other disorders of brain development have never had medications to treat their core behavioral and cognitive symptoms. The best they can get are drugs targeting secondary problems, like irritability or aggression. But now, a new wave of clinical trials aims to change this. In the last decade, scientists have discovered ... Read More about Neurogenetic disorders: Dreaming the impossible dream
Alzheimer’s drugs for “lazy eye”?
When my parents told me I should walk around with my right eye patched like a pirate—on regular days, not just Halloween—I wondered if they were joking. They weren’t: those really were the doctor’s orders. As a child, I had amblyopia, or “lazy eye”: my left eye had much poorer vision than my right eye. The ... Read More about Alzheimer’s drugs for “lazy eye”?
Tagged: amblyopia, neuroscience, strabismus