WELCOME TO OUR PARKINSON'S PLACE!
I HAVE PARKINSON'S DISEASES AND THOUGHT IT WOULD BE NICE TO HAVE A PLACE WHERE THE CONTENTS OF UPDATED NEWS IS FOUND IN ONE PLACE. THAT IS WHY I BEGAN THIS BLOG.
I COPY NEWS ARTICLES PERTAINING TO RESEARCH, NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR PARKINSON'S DISEASE, DEMENTIA, THE BRAIN, DEPRESSION AND PARKINSON'S WITH DYSTONIA. I ALSO POST ABOUT FUNDRAISING FOR PARKINSON'S DISEASE AND EVENTS. I TRY TO BE UP-TO-DATE AS POSSIBLE.
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Saturday, July 2, 2016
Brain Foods Infographic
Exercise Makes You Smarter
Friday, July 1, 2016
Seeing the brain in a new light: neurons respond to pulses of different colours
Nayef Al-Rodhan
Honorary Fellow, St. Antony’s College at Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom
June 23, 2016
Seeing the brain in a new light: neurons respond to pulses of different colors
Brains—even relatively simple ones like those in mice—are daunting in their complexity. Neuroscientists and psychologists can observe how brains respond to various kinds of stimuli, and they have even mapped how genes are expressedthroughout the brain. But with no way to control when individual neurons and other kinds of brain cells turn on and off, researchers found it very difficult to explain how brains do what they do, at least not in the detail needed to thoroughly understand—and eventually cure—conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and major depression.
Scientists tried using electrodes to record neuronal activity, and that works to some extent. But it is a crude and imprecise method because electrodes stimulate every neuron nearby and cannot distinguish among different kinds of brain cells.
A breakthrough came in 2005, when neurogeneticists demonstrated a way to use genetic engineering to make neurons respond to particular colors of light. The technique, known as optogenetics, built on research done in the 1970s on pigment proteins, known collectively as rhodopsins and encoded by the opsin gene family. These proteins work like light-activated ion pumps. Microbes, lacking eyes, use rhodopsins to help extract energy and information from incoming light.
By inserting one or more opsin genes into particular neurons in mice, biologists are now able to use visible light to turn specific neurons on or off at will. Over the years, scientists have tailored versions of these proteins that respond to distinct colors, ranging from deep red to green to yellow to blue. By putting different genes into different cells, they use pulses of light of various colors to activate one neuron and then several of its neighbours in a precisely timed sequence.
That is a crucial advance because in living brains, timing is everything. A signal issued at one moment may have the complete opposite effect from the same signal sent out a few milliseconds later.
The invention of optogenetics greatly accelerated the pace of progress in brain science. But experimenters were limited by the difficulty of delivering light deep into brain tissue. Now ultrathin, flexible microchips, each one hardly bigger than a neuron, are being tested as injectable devices to put nerves under wireless control. They can be inserted deep into a brain with minimal damage to overlying tissue.
Optogenetics has already opened new doors to brain disorders, including tremors in Parkinson’s disease, chronic pain, vision damage and depression. The neurochemistry of the brain is clearly important for some brain conditions, which is why drugs can help improve symptoms—up to a point. But where the high-speed electrical circuitry of the brain is also disturbed, optogenetic research, especially when enhanced by emerging wireless microchip technology, could offer new routes to treatment. Recent research suggests, for example, that in some cases non-invasive light therapy that shuts down specific neurons can treat chronic pain, providing a welcome alternative to opoids.
With mental disorders affecting one in four people globally and psychiatric diseases a leading source of disability, the better understanding of the brain that advanced optogenetics will provide cannot come soon enough.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/06/optogenetics/
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Time to talk Parkinson’s as event brings together experts and patients
Parkinson’s patients are being invited to have their say as those leading the fight against the condition discuss their work.
Everyone with Parkinson’s is different and this will give people the chance to have an informal chat about their treatment and experiences.
Christine Proctorhttp://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/health/time-to-talk-parkinson-s-as-event-brings-together-experts-and-patients-1-7993480?Santa Rosa boxing class helps Parkinson's patients cope with symptoms
Pat Copass age 72
As Elvis Presley’s lively “Jailhouse Rock” plays in the background, Pat Copass doggedly swings her boxing gloves left, then right, again and again, each jab seemingly timed to the rock ’n’ roll music.
The 72-year-old Oakmont resident never imagined herself as a boxer, but there she is, a petite warrior striking punches in her personal battle with Parkinson’s disease.
She is one of a dozen people who attend Rock Steady Boxing classes at CKS Martial Arts in Santa Rosa, where participants rally to fight against the progressive neurological disorder that afflicts more than 1 million Americans, most famously actor Michael J. Fox and the late heavyweight champion of the world, Muhammad Ali.
“We’re fighting the battle of our lives with boxing gloves,” said Howard Simpson, 81, also of Oakmont. A retired airline pilot. Simpson was diagnosed with Parkinson’s 10 years ago. He’s been with Rock Steady Boxing since its start in Santa Rosa last fall.
Developed in Indianapolis in 2006 by a former county prosecutor with early-onset Parkinson’s and a boxer friend, the nonprofit program is designed to empower people who have the disease. Rock Steady Boxing provides both a supportive, fun environment and non-contact boxing moves to lessen symptoms, which often include tremors, stiffness and slowed movement.
Simpson noticed improvement from the start.
“Just walking around, I’m not as dizzy as I used to be. I haven’t fallen and I consider that an achievement,” he said.
A semi-retired elder-care adviser who runs a business called Aging Communications, Copass says she sheds her diagnosis when she steps into the downtown martial arts studio,. There, rock ’n’ roll oldies set an energetic mood as coaches shout encouragement and direction over the music.
“I don’t feel like a Parkinson’s person,” she said after a recent workout. “My symptoms are gone (at the gym).”
She usually attends three 45-minute sessions per week, gaining and sharing enthusiasm with classmates from their late 40s to their 80s.
“When I miss it, I notice it,” said Copass, who was diagnosed more than two years ago.
Various drills – some done with boxing gloves, others without – are designed to combat specific symptoms. Punching helps steady tremors, sparring benefits coordination. Teams of two and three toss and catch tennis balls for hand-eye coordination.
During exercises raising one knee and then the other, the group alternately counts repetitions of 10 in English, Spanish, French, Italian and Japanese, varying languages for fun.
Quick footwork also helps with balance and coordination, each participant moving at his or her pace and ability throughout the sessions.
The modified boxing techniques condition bodies for agility, muscular endurance and overall strength, while improving outlook and optimism.
“It’s a great morale boost,” said Greg Hessig, 42, an occupational therapist at Memorial Hospital in Santa Rosa who brought the program to the local martial arts studio where he works out.
“They’re not going to sit down and succumb to this. They’re going to fight back,” he said.
Copass and Simpson say there’s power in numbers; just knowing they are not alone battling Parkinson’s is beneficial. Working out as a group unites them in their cause.
“We genuinely, genuinely care about one another,” Copass said.
Hessig approached CKS owner Hector Solis, 43, after recognizing the hospital wasn’t a suitable setting for Rock Steady Boxing. The studio’s boxing ring, speed bags, punching bags and encouraging signage “No Guts, No Glory” help set a mood a hospital cannot duplicate.
“A hospital environment isn’t really a boxing environment,” said Hessig, who is familiar with Parkinson’s both personally and professionally. He works with clients with Parkinson’s, and his grandfather had the disorder, as does Hessig’s father.
Boxing coach in Indiana and is a strong proponent of the program’s physical and psychological benefits.
Research, Hessig said, indicates the high-intensity exercise program shows promising results. While there is no cure for the condition, the workouts enhance the uptake of dopamine by the brain and reportedly slow its progression.
The rigorous sessions push participants to challenge their abilities, with Hessig and Solis serving as demanding (yet kindly) drill sergeants.
“Go with the rhythm, go with the rhythm, come on, come on,” Solis encourages participants as they swing boxing gloves at standing fitness bags.
“Really good, really good, really good,” he praises the group.
Copass says the program motivates her to try her best. “I’ve had excuses all my life not to go to the gym, but this is different. It’s the only exercise I’ve ever done I love,” she said. “I feel so empowered. I put that glove on and I feel I can take care of the world.”
Solis said participants support one another and are particularly encouraged by the progress of those with more advanced stages of Parkinson’s.
“The camaraderie is definitely one of the big points,” he said. “They’re getting energy from one another. They kind of push each other in a very positive way.”
That sense of shared experience is evident even from the sidelines, where several spouses watch the workouts.
Diana Santi travels from San Rafael three times a week with her husband, retired electrical technician Ivano Santi. She’s noticed a positive change in her husband since he started the program last fall.
It was a blow to the couple when he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s two years ago. Now, at 74, Ivano Santi is benefiting from the hope he finds every time he attends Rock Steady Boxing.
“I think he’s more sure of himself,” his wife said. “Before he wasn’t and now he is. The camaraderie with everyone is something else.”
The couple is on the road a minimum of 45 minutes just to reach the martial arts studio, but insist it is time well spent. Returning home after the first session, Ivano Santi told his wife, “When I was there, nothing hurt, nothing bothered me.”
From that point forward, the distance from Marin wasn’t an issue.
For more information about Rock Steady Boxing, call 540-0185 or visit cksmartialarts.com or rocksteadyboxing.org. Local classes are $80 per month.
Contact Towns Correspondent Dianne Reber Hart at sonomatowns@gmail.com.
http://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/5731803-181/at-rock-steady-boxing-classes?artslide=1
Surprising number of businesses selling unapproved stem cell 'treatments' in the US
- Clinics advertising stem cell interventions cluster in particular states. They are most likely to be found in California (113 clinics), Florida (104), Texas (71), Colorado (37), Arizona (36), and New York (21).
- Beverly Hills is home to 18 clinics, more than any other city in the nation, followed by New York (14 clinics), San Antonio (13), Los Angeles (12), Austin (11), Scottsdale (11), and Phoenix (10).
- Of the stem cell procedures that are marketed, 61% of businesses offer fat-derived stem cell interventions and 48% offer bone-marrow-based treatments. Advertisements for induced pluripotent stem cells (1 business), embryonic stem cells (1 business), and xenogeneic products (2 businesses) are rare.
- Over 300 of the businesses market interventions for orthopedic issues. Other advertised conditions include pain (150 businesses), sports injuries (90), neurological diseases (80), and immune disorders (75).
Researchers discover surprising mismatch on either side of dopaminergic synapses
http://www.news-medical.net/news/20160701/Researchers-discover-surprising-mismatch-on-either-side-of-dopaminergic-synapses.aspx
Researchers develop new technology to capture images of the brain
How brain implants can let paralysed people move again
Modelling the muscles
Reading the brain
FoxFeed Blog Three Team Fox Members are Swimming toward a Cure
July 01, 2016
Team Fox Swim Team members (Left to right - Michael, Alon, Aj)
Team Parkinson's is coming to Spokane!
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