Popular Articles

Individual Primates Display Variation In General Intelligence
Scientists at Harvard University have shown, for the first time, that intelligence varies among individual monkeys within a species - in this case, the cotton-top tamarin.

Stand Up To Cancer Funds Joint Effort By M. D. Anderson, Harvard, Memorial-Sloan-Kettering
A Dream Team of leading cancer researchers will accelerate development of drugs to attack a mutated molecular pathway that fuels endometrial, breast and ovarian cancers, funded by a three-year $15 million grant awarded today by Stand Up To Cancer.
News of the day
Life Sciences Sector Applauds Office For Life Sciences "Life Sciences Blueprint" As A Major Milestone Towards Securing The Future Of The UK Industry
The UK"s life sciences trade associations - the Association of British Healthcare Industries (ABHI), the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI), the BioIndustry Association (BIA) and the British In Vitro Diagnostic Association (BIVDA) - believe the package of measures announced today by the Office for Life Sciences in its "Life Sciences Blueprint" provide an excellent basis for firmly securing the future of the life sciences sector and re-establishing the UK"s global competitive position.
Mental Health

Mimic-effect: Video Therapy Helps Stroke Patients

Video therapy, through which certain brain sectors are activated by visual stimuli, can help restore movement in patients suffering stroke-induced paralysis. That conclusion is part of a current study that researchers from Konstanz, Freiburg and Magdeburg, Germany, are presenting at the current meeting of the European Neurological Society (ENS) in Milan, Italy. This major meeting in European neurology gathers more than 2,900 experts from all over the world. The role played by brain mirror neurons is central in this context. "The application of the mirror neuron system has extended into the field of stroke rehabilitation through mirror- or video-therapy," explained Professor Christian Dettmers (Konstanz). "By observing motion sequences stroke patients should overcome their paralysis more rapidly than with physiotherapy alone. Current literature has demonstrated that action observation exclusively or predominantly stimulates the non-affected hemisphere." The current German study, in which eight right hemispheric and eight left hemispheric stroke patients with hand pareses participated, shows that the mimic-effect goes beyond this, as verified by functional magnetic resonance imaging. "Cortical activation encompassed a symmetrical bilateral pattern: the affected hemispheres were stimulated to the same degree as the non-affected hemisphere. Our data clearly support applicability of video-therapy in stroke patients," Professor Dettmers concludes. Abstract: ENS abstract O85: Nedelko et al, Action observation and imagery conducted with stroke patients stimulate both hemispheres: the affected and non-affected. European Neurological Society


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):