Many brain diseases—including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson's Disease, ALS, and others—have no cure. However, they can often be treated and the effects managed.
Shorter telomeres are linked to higher risks of stroke, dementia, and depression, but lifestyle factors may help counteract ...
A Personal View published in The Lancet Oncology challenges the long-standing perception of metastatic brain cancer, calling ...
People with shorter protective caps at the end of their chromosomes (called telomeres) may be more likely to develop age-related brain diseases such as stroke, dementia and late-life depression ...
Cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) patients treated with oral drug, REC-994, showed reduction in total cerebral and brainstem lesion volume.
Dancing the Blues Away' Seen in Brain Imaging in People With Parkinson's Disease, New Study Finds Dec. 18, 2024 — Dancing lowers the depression associated with Parkinson's disease, and the ...
Elon Musk wants to merge humans with AI. And his goal of achieving "symbiosis" with artificial intelligence starts with a ...
This type of "somatic expansion" occurs in only the specific types of brain cells that later die in Huntington's disease. Only once a cell's DNA expansion reaches a threshold number of CAGs ...