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Explaining bursts of activity in brains of preterm babies

In a new study published in  eLife  and funded by the National Institute for Health Research and the Medical Research Council, the researchers found that a specific brain region called the insula plays a major role in the generation of the spontaneous neuronal bursts. The researchers say the spontaneous brain activity is essential to strengthen brain connections which will serve as ' scaffolding ' that will then develop further with life experience. Other studies have found that infants whose brains don't display this activity are more likely to develop cerebral palsy or have poor cognitive skills later in life. "While we don't yet know what causes these neuronal bursts, we know that in healthy babies, they are present preterm and disappear at full term. It's a bad sign if they are absent in preterm or present still after full term," said one of the study's lead authors, Dr Lorenzo Fabrizi (UCL Biosciences). "The brain of a preterm baby is ...

Reversing the negative effects of adolescent marijuana use

"What is important about this study is that not only have we identified a specific mechanism in the prefrontal cortex for some of the mental health risks associated with adolescent marijuana use, but we have also identified a mechanism to reverse those risks," said Steven Laviolette, professor at Western's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry. In a study published online today in  Scientific Reports  the researchers demonstrate that adolescent THC exposure modulates the activity of a neurotransmitter called GABA in the prefrontal cortex region of the brain. The team, led by Laviolette and post-doctoral fellow Justine Renard, looked specifically at GABA because of its previously shown clinical association with schizophrenia. "GABA is an inhibitory neurotransmitter and plays a crucial role in regulating the excitatory activity in the frontal cortex, so if you have less GABA, your neuronal systems become hyperactive leading to behavioural changes consistent...

Memory decline after head injury may be prevented by slowing brain cell growth

In the September issue of  Stem Cell Reports , Viji Santhakumar, associate professor in the department of Pharmacology, Physiology and Neuroscience, and her colleagues, challenge the prevailing assumption by scientists in the field that excessive neurogenesis (the birth of new brain cells) after injury is advantageous. "There is an initial increase in birth of new neurons after a brain injury but within weeks, there is a dramatic decrease in the normal rate at which neurons are born, depleting brain cells that under normal circumstances should be there to replace damaged cells and repair the brain's network," said Santhakumar. "The excess new neurons lead to epileptic seizures and could contribute to cognitive decline" In the United States an estimated 1.7milllion people sustain a TBI each year, making the condition a major cause of death and disability. Symptoms can include impaired thinking or memory, personality changes and depression and vision and hea...

Why bad sleep doesn't always lead to depression

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Larger exercise within the ventral striatum, the mind's reward middle, might buffer some people in opposition to the unfavorable psychological well being results of poor sleep. Credit score: Annchen R. Knodt, Duke College Poor sleep is each a threat issue, and a typical symptom, of despair. However not everybody who tosses and turns at evening turns into depressed. People whose brains are extra attuned to rewards could also be shielded from the unfavorable psychological well being results of poor sleep, says a brand new research by Duke College neuroscientists. The researchers discovered that faculty college students with poor high quality sleep have been much less more likely to have signs of despair if additionally they had increased exercise in a reward-sensitive area of the mind. "This helps us start to grasp why some persons are extra more likely to expertise despair once they have issues with sleep," ment...