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… associated with arousal changes during both wake and sleep. AMRI Research Aims Objectives AMRI's current research … cortex can a vein drain? Downstream dilution of activation-related cerebral blood oxygenation changes. … in high-field MRI of the brain. Neuroimage 2012 59:3967-75 Z Liu, JA de Zwart, P van Gelderen, LW Kuo, JH Duyn …
NINDS has gathered a list of currently available public resources that are, or can be made, freely accessible to the scientific community and beyond. These are in addition to the …
… 1992 Jan;42(1):235-40. PMID: 1370863 (Harrington Neurological Research Fund; University of Massachusetts) …
A. Identify basic mechanisms of seizure generation (ictogenesis) that will lead to the development of cures.
Background:
Understanding how seizures begin and end in the brain gives researchers opportunities to develop drugs or other treatments that can act before seizures begin, or stop them as soon as they start.
Summary of advances:
A number of recent investigations into the biological mechanisms that cause seizures have focused on using electrophysiological and computational methods to understand which…
Associate Scientist, Molecular Neurobiology Section
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Division of Intramural Research
Contact
whitney.heavner@nih.gov…
… The mission of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) is to seek fundamental knowledge … to help inform the Strategic Plan. Read about Process 75 Years of Advancing Neuroscience The National Institute of … to End Addiction Long-term℠ Initiative Alzheimer's Disease-Related Dementias Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery …
… damage to the brain. This damage often starts without symptoms, gradually increasing your risk of stroke, dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease. That’s why the science shows that … Cognitive decline and memory problems, including early signs of dementia. Diffuse white matter disease, seen on MRI …
Amy Bany Adams, Ph.D. Acting Director of NINDS
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OverviewThe National Institutes of Health (NIH…
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¿Qué son los tumores del cerebro y la médula espinal?Un tumor es una masa sólida que se forma cuando las células anormales se agrupan. Los tumores se desarrollan cuando ocurre un problema en los genes que controlan el crecimiento celular, lo que permite que las células crezcan y se dividan sin control. Los tumores pueden formarse en cualquier parte del cuerpo, incluido el cerebro y la médula espinal–el conjunto de nervios y fibras nerviosas que envía y recibe señales del cerebro. El cerebro y la médula espinal…