Page 66 - தேசிய நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் நரம்பியல் கோளாறுகள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
This Toronto man is treating a rare neurological disorder with psilocybin mushrooms
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Ohio State scientists make strides with cell therapy to treat ischemic stroke
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Woman, 23, shares experience brain swelling, an unusual COVID-19 complication TODAY 4 days ago Meghan Holohan
When Shelby Ponder became sick over the summer with COVID-19 she felt like she had a very bad case of strep throat. Then she experienced relentless high fevers for two weeks. She started hallucinating and couldn’t sleep, maybe dozing for 30 minutes at a time if she were lucky. It was only later that she learned that post-viral encephalitis contributed to headaches, vision problems and poor sleep.
“I wasn’t cognitively aware enough to even realize what was happening,” Ponder, 23, of Lexington, Kentucky, told TODAY. “Having brain swelling was not even a thought that crossed my mind or that it could really be serious.”
Researchers identify head impact rates in four major high school sports
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UofL and Medtronic collaborate to develop epidural stimulation software for spinal cord injury
Researchers at the University of Louisville made news worldwide in 2018 when two people diagnosed with complete spinal cord injuries recovered the ability to walk thanks to experimental use of a therapy known as epidural stimulation. The news gave hope to people living with complete spinal cord injuries, a diagnosis that historically meant they were unlikely to regain function below their level of injury.
Despite these significant results, use of epidural stimulation outside a research lab setting to restore function for people with spinal cord injury thus far has been hampered by several limitations, including the use of a technology that was designed for patients with chronic, intractable pain - not those with spinal cord injury.