Neurology / Neuroscience

11th March
2010
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

About four out of every 10 cells in the brain are so-called oligodendrocytes. These cells produce the all-important myelin that coats nerve tracts, ensuring fast, energy-efficient transmission of nerve impulses…

14th January
2010
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Scientists at the Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease (GIND) have identified the reason a key protein plays a major role in two neurodegenerative diseases…

3rd December
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Glial cells, which help neurons communicate with each other, can leave the central nervous system and cross into the peripheral nervous system to compensate for missing cells, according to new research in the Dec. 2 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience…

3rd December
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Glial cells, which help neurons communicate with each other, can leave the central nervous system and cross into the peripheral nervous system to compensate for missing cells, according to new research in the Dec. 2 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience…

21st November
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Researchers have shown how an experimental drug might restore the function of nerves damaged in spinal cord injuries by preventing short circuits caused when tiny “potassium channels” in the fibers are exposed. The chemical compound also might be developed as a treatment for multiple sclerosis…

21st November
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Researchers have shown how an experimental drug might restore the function of nerves damaged in spinal cord injuries by preventing short circuits caused when tiny “potassium channels” in the fibers are exposed. The chemical compound also might be developed as a treatment for multiple sclerosis…

12th October
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

Researchers the UK found that learning to juggle boosts brain connections by making structural changes in the white matter of the brain. They hope the study will help develop new treatments for diseases such as multiple sclerosis where central nervous system pathways have become degraded.

11th September
2009
written by Multiple Sclerosis News From Medical News Today

The virus responsible for PML (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy), a rare brain disease that typically affects AIDS patients and other individuals with compromised immune systems, has been found to be reactivated in multiple-sclerosis patients being treated with natalizumab (Tysabri). The findings, led by scientists at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), appear in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).