padolsey 5 hours ago

My understanding was that strokes caused brain cell death, and that there was no coming back from that, but my neurologists would speak of 'bruised' brain cells, and that after weeks or months or even years you can see recovered function. UCLA's work here is targeting this disconnection and the lost rhythm in the surviving, distant networks. However there is, as yet, NO concievable intervention that could recover function from cell death at that center of the infarct.

  • foota 4 hours ago

    One wonders if someday we might be able to resurrect the neural network from dead cells by somehow reviving the connections between neurons. I imagine that the connections stay, but become dormant when the neuron dies.

    • steve_taylor 3 hours ago

      Perhaps, but I think that by the time we're that far advanced, strokes will be entirely preventable.

      • OneDeuxTriSeiGo 3 hours ago

        Strokes will never be preventable. You can mitigate them but a stroke isn't really a disease. It's a symptom.

        An ischemic stroke (i.e. stroke due to a clot) caused by vascular or cardiac issues can be mitigated. A cryptogenic stroke however is idiopathic and therefore has no understood cause. These types of strokes make up 30-40% of all strokes. Unless we figure out their cause, there's no way to really prevent them.

        But then there's also hemorrhagic strokes which are an entirely separate category that has causes and mitigations more or less diametrically opposed to those for ischemic strokes.

        And of course those are just your broad painted categories and they are generally looked at as the start of a medical emergency but strokes happen all the time as a consequence of other medical emergencies.

        Even if you could perfectly prevent strokes in generally healthy populations, those same people may still end up suffering from a stroke during a surgery or during/after a major accident or injury. No amount of preventative medication can prevent someone suffering a stroke caused by a brain bleed after a car accident. Likewise for someone with a crush injury, internal bleeding, or broken bones that end up throwing a clot which makes it into the brain.

        So any advancement in halting and reversing damage from a stroke will be a massive boon for emergency medicine until the end of time. Unless of course we somehow find a way to cure/render humans immune to blunt force trauma or lacerations.

    • asdff 3 hours ago

      There is nothing to resurrect. They get digested by the microglia.

      • foota 33 minutes ago

        Ah, I didn't know that existed. TIL

  • asdff 3 hours ago

    There are people who are missing huge percentages of their brain from injury or other issues and lead a seemingly normal life.

    https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/as-it-happens-thursday-...

    • throwup238 1 hour ago

      The original paper did not say that a huge percentage of their brain was missing [1], that was the journalist's flourish based on their own misunderstanding.

      Tissue can be compressed, stretched, reorganized, or displaced especially to compensate for a congenital condition - the patient's brain had a lifetime to adapt to hydrocephalus, which pushed on the other brain tissue. The gray cortical shell is clearly visible in those images and their volume on a scan is not representative of neuron count or synaptic capacity.

      There are far more dramatic cases of brain damage and neuroplasticity that reorganizes major functions, but there are a lot of caveats.

      [1] https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6...

  • jmalicki 1 hour ago

    This talks about connections.

    My understanding is that while brain cell death (outside of the hippocampus, at least) cannot regenerate, the connections and networks can.

    But neurons regenerating connections between each other is, afaik, been pretty mainstream for awhile. The brain can't generate new cells, but it can rewire the connections between them, is what I understand. From reading the article, it seems to only claim rewiring connections, not regenerating cells.

    There are a ton of upcoming drugs that help stimulating rewiring, for instance:

    https://www.nia.nih.gov/news/new-drug-candidate-targeting-sy...

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8190578/

    https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/324410

    etc.

MattCruikshank 7 hours ago

If you've read Ted Chiang's "Understand," you'll understand why this headline made my eyes pop out. For those who haven't, it's in the "Stories of Your Life and Others" collection, which includes the short story that the film Arrival was based on.

  • TheGRS 7 hours ago

    I just read this a few months ago and it was my first thought as well! Like Flowers for Algernon taken to its extremes.

  • jadbox 6 hours ago

    I'm a big fan of Ted Chiang's "Understand" short story, but I think your way over hyping the study there: more neuron growth does not even generally translate to higher intelligence and can often introduce a variety of degenerative effects because pathways are not being grown a an organized systematic way through natural process of experience adaptation.

kleton 6 hours ago
benoau 10 hours ago

> “The goal is to have a medicine that stroke patients can take that produces the effects of rehabilitation,” said Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael, the study’s lead author and professor and chair of UCLA Neurology. “Rehabilitation after stroke is limited in its actual effects because most patients cannot sustain the rehab intensity needed for stroke recovery.

Sounds truly amazing, I have known two people who had severe strokes - one's PT was contingent on triaging resources to whoever was likely to recover more, another simply hated PT and speech therapy and often refused to participate or do the exercises. Even if it didn't help recovery a medicine like this would have reduced the stress of everyone involved.

nose 5 hours ago

Could this treatment also help with other neurodegenerative diseases?

0xWTF 8 hours ago

... in male mice.

I think savvy universities want PIs who are savvy enough to realize that the point of these is to boost measurable visibility like citation count and h-index, so the headline of a news release boosting the article doesn't matter. They can always blame a copy editor for the headlines. It could read "world peace solved with moon juice." The provost would only care if it generated negative feedback. So it's the PR department's job to juice it as much as possible without getting blowback.

  • somewhatgoated 8 hours ago

    Isn’t that where all drugs start out? But yea the headline doesnt tell the full story

    • cwillu 4 hours ago

      “…in mice” isn't a criticism of the science, it's a criticism of the popularization.

nubg 7 hours ago

How do they test this on mice? Do they trigger brain seizures in them?

  • Traubenfuchs 6 hours ago

    Many different techniques for different types of stroke:

    We can block certain arteries mechanically by inserting a tool, inject photosensitive agent then cause a targeted clot with a laser, inject clotting agent, choke, inject blood vessel dissolving agent and re-inject its own blood.

    I understand why we research this but I just could not do it.

trhway 5 hours ago

> This type of neuron helps generate a brain rhythm, termed a gamma oscillation, which links neurons together so that they form coordinated networks to produce a behavior, such as movement. Stroke causes the brain to lose gamma oscillations. Successful physical rehabilitation in both laboratory mice and humans brought gamma oscillations back into the brain and, in the mouse model, repaired the lost connections of parvalbumin neurons.

>Carmichael and the team then identified two candidate drugs that might produce gamma oscillations after stroke. These drugs specifically work to excite parvalbumin neurons.

Asking while being total layperson here - can we generate those gamma oscillations by an [may be implanted] electronic device?

Edit: and google search to help, judging by the dates seems to be a pretty fresh field :

https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/jou...

"... by pairing robotic rehabilitation with a clinical-like noninvasive 40 Hz transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation, we achieved similar motor improvements mediated by the effective restoring of movement-related gamma band power, improvement of PV-IN maladaptive network dynamics, and increased PV-IN connections in premotor cortex. "

It also sounds like getting an exoskeleton for such patients can be helpful not only to perform immediate tasks, it also can be a part of the restoring process.

mlmonkey 8 hours ago

Are there any supplements that can work for neurogenesis? I've heard Lions Mane extract can do this, but I'm not sure. Anybody know of anything?

  • dirtbagskier 8 hours ago

    Cardiovascular exercise and strength training. Both are thought to contribute to neurogenesis, even in healthy people

  • throwforfeds 8 hours ago

    There's (minimal) research on psilocybin doing just that. One of the tragedies of prohibition is that we just weren't able to study these psychedelic compounds easily for 50+ years.

    • grvdrm 6 hours ago

      Have any sources? I’d love to read what you are thinking about.

      I haven’t used psilocybin in a clinical setting but have gone through an alternative psychedelic-assisted therapy process. Very interesting results and many positives.

  • toasty228 8 hours ago

    If you don't sleep 8+ hours a day every single day, exercise regularly, live in a place with clean air, eat clean food, don't drink alcohol, etc. you're losing your time, no amount of supplement will make up for our modern way of life, you're going to optimise the 0.1% while missing the 99.9% that matters

    • SilentM68 7 hours ago

      That is true, but keep in mind that routine is very difficult to do for someone that makes their living running the rat race, with stress, no time, responsibilities, worry, untreated health problems, etc. If you have the money, job security, then you'll have peace of mind. That will then allow one to live that kind of optimized lifestyle.

      • rexpop 7 hours ago

        This is why we cannot abide scabs.

        • SilentM68 4 hours ago

          I see your point :)

          • rexpop 3 hours ago

            Self-respect is an act of charity.

  • caycep 8 hours ago

    Of note, cautionary tale is too much neurogenesis is brain cancer...

    • dymk 7 hours ago

      No, brain cancer is brain cancer.

      • caycep 6 hours ago

        which is poorly differentiated cells undergoing unchecked neurogenesis...

        • dymk 7 minutes ago

          That’s like saying a fire on an oil rig is the same as combustion in a car engine

  • sysreq_ 7 hours ago

    Nicotine is the only psychoactive substance proven to increase intellectual function. Rote neurogenisis does not - much in the same way height isn’t a proxy for IQ. Stimulants like Adderall, Caffiene, etc are Dunning-Kruger by proxy.

    • oharapj 2 hours ago

      You mean placebo? Not sure that Dunning-Kruger is applicable here

      • sysreq_ 58 minutes ago

        Maybe a better term is “stimulant-induced metacognitive miscalibration”. An induced a state of overconfidence similar to Dunning-Kruger - even thought the underlying mechanism is different.

        You perceive the idea as great not because you suddenly understand it better or know more. You think the idea is great because of the dopamine flooding your brain. And much like Dunning-Kruger, even thought you might think you did better, real world results don’t match your expectations.

  • aeonik 7 hours ago

    Alpha-GPC and Uridine Monophosphate appear to have some effect, though minor. Also not exactly neurogenesis, but adjacent stuff. Evidence is complicated, there seems to be a signal but it's a weak effect.