NASA studies pilot cognition United Press International - 23 minutes ago ... near infrared spectroscopy and other imaging technology to measure blood flow in the brain's cortex and the concentration of oxygen in the blood. ...
Link between depression in the elderly and brain lesions Destination Sant?, France - Of course the appearance of such lesions ? as a result of poor blood flow ? is entirely normal with age but it is their extent that appears to increase the ...
The world is a vampire Philippine Star, Philippines - Nov 29, 2008 Sixty pages was as much as I could suck out of Stephenie Meyer?s Twilight before it had drawn most of the blood that was supposed to flow to my brain. ...
Stay healthy and happy throughout the holiday season Delmarva Daily Times, MD - Regular exercise does more than keep you healthy, it also improves blood flow through the brain, helping to flush waste products that can cause a foggy ...
Victim of 2006 Cat Tracker bus accident still recovering Kansas City Star, MO - Nov 28, 2008 ... Chris' skull was removed to allow his brain to continue swelling and begin to heal itself. The skull portion was put in his abdomen to allow blood flow...
What happened to Mukasey? CNN Political Ticker - Nov 22, 2008 It could be because of inadequate blood flow to the brain or sometimes bleeding within the brain itself, as was the case in late 2006 with Sen. Tim Johnson. ...
Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: blood flow + brain + blood Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)
Getting to the heart of ED is crucial Park Ridge Herald Advocate, IL - But, since the arteries that supply blood to the penis are generally smaller than the arteries that supply blood to heart and brain, blockages to the penis ...
Brain scientist?s book a stroke of suffering and genius Worcester Telegram, MA - She was undergoing a massive hemorrhage in the left hemisphere of her brain. A ruptured artery was trickling blood into her left cerebral cortex, ...
Stolen crude oil Vs blood diamonds (I) Triumph, Nigeria - Like what is now known as ?blood diamond?, stolen crude also aids corruption and violence and can provoke war,? (President UMYA, Monday, July 7, ...
Brain Aerobics Could Be Key to Famous Heart Doctor?s Longevity ... Free Press Release Center (press release), Canada - Just like physical exercise increases blood flow and oxygen to the muscles, mental exercise increases blood and oxygen to the brain, thereby improving ...
Free heart screening for Akron residents WKYC-TV, OH - Blood clots can clog vessels and block blood flow to the heart or brain. Weakened blood vessels can burst, causing bleeding inside the body. ...
Gastrointestinal bleeding after stroke may be fatal Hindu, India - The most common type of stroke, ischemic strokes occur when blood flow to the brain is reduced or blocked. Of those, 829 people died during their hospital ...
Company banking on better blood-flow data Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Jul 20, 2008 So he turned to computer technology to provide more objective information about blood flow. By extracting precise measurements of vessels from data obtained ...
Dynamic magnetic resonance imaging of human brain activity during primary sensory stimulation. - KK Kwong, JW Belliveau, DA Chesler, IE Goldberg, … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 1992 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov ... [PubMed]; Fox PT, Raichle ME. Stimulus rate determines regional brainblood flow in striate cortex. Ann Neurol. 1985 Mar;17(3):303?305. ...
Brain magnetic resonance imaging with contrast dependent on blood oxygenation - S Ogawa, TM Lee, AR Kay, DW Tank - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 1990 - JSTOR ... 9872, December 1990 Biophysics Brain magnetic resonance imaging with contrast dependent
on blood oxygenation (cerebral bloodflow/brain metabolism/oxygenation ...
Cerebral blood flow in dementia - VC Hachinski, LD Iliff, E Zilhka, GH Du Boulay, VL … - Archives of Neurology, 1975 - Am Med Assoc ... Cerebral bloodflow per 100 gm brain per minute was normal in the primary
degenerative group but low in the multi-infarct group. ...
Astrocytes play a direct role in controlling blood flow in the brain
Researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center demonstrated that star-shaped brain cells known as astrocytes play a direct role in controlling blood flow in the brain, a crucial process that allows parts of the brain to burst into activity when needed.
The finding is intriguing for a disease like Alzheimer's, which has long been considered a disease of brain cells known as neurons, and certainly not astrocytes.
" For many years, astrocytes have been considered mainly as housekeeping cells that help nourish and maintain a healthy environment for neurons. But it's turning out that astrocytes may play a central role in many human diseases," said Maiken Nedergaard.
" In a disease like Alzheimer's, for instance, perhaps it's the astrocytes themselves that are damaged first," she said. " It may be that for whatever reason, astrocytes are not doing their job properly, and then blood flow decreases. This could lead to the death of the neurons, which would starve from a lack of nutrients, since the neurons depend on the astrocytes for their survival."
Most scientists have assumed that the more blood that flows to a particular part of the brain, the more activity on the part of neurons, the nerve cells that send electrical signals that are widely considered to be " brain activity." The assumption that more blood flow equals more active neurons forms the basis for interpretation of sophisticated brain imaging techniques such as PET scans and functional MRI scans.
The group led by Nedergaard and Takahiro Takano, the first author of the paper, has thrown doubt on the assumption by showing that astrocytes are important players in the process too. Studies by the team in mice show that signaling from astrocytes causes arteries in the brain to expand, bringing about an increase in blood flow.
" When we measure blood flow," said Nedergaard, "it may be that we are not measuring the activity of neurons so much as that of astrocytes."
The idea creates a "chicken or egg" type question in patients with conditions like Alzheimer's or traumatic brain injury where blood flow to parts of the brain plummets.
In Alzheimer's it's known that neurons sicken and die over a period of years.
To diagnose the disease, doctors often order a brain scan. When the test shows lessened blood flow, doctors assume that there must be less of a demand for blood, and so significant numbers of neurons in that brain region must have died. While that still may be true, Nedergaard said, the new results muddy the picture, calling into question any straightforward link between the health of neurons and blood flow.
Nedergaard said that while it is new to find that astrocytes can regulate blood flow, the finding shouldn't be entirely surprising. She said that astrocytes physically touch both synapses and blood vessels. In fact, " footprint s" of astrocytes are literally all over blood vessels in the brain: Portions of astrocytes known as "astrocytic endfeet" wrap around nearly all the blood vessels in the brain.
Previously a few scientists have looked at slices of brain tissue and come up with hints that astrocytes might regulate blood flow in brain tissue.
The current research, funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, relies on a laser system developed by Nedergaard to study the activity of astrocytes in living organisms.
The team used a fluorescent dye to light up the blood vessels, then put a special form of the chemical calcium into astrocytes. They used one laser to activate the calcium, and another laser to monitor how astrocytes processed the chemical.
They found that astrocytes caused blood vessels to dilate.
Source: University of Rochester Medical Center Nature Neuroscience, 2006