Showing posts with label national. Show all posts
Showing posts with label national. Show all posts

Monday 14 January 2019

Effects Of Concussions In Football Players

Effects Of Concussions In Football Players.
The US National Institutes of Health is teaming up with the National Football League on study into the long-term gear of repeated fore-part injuries and improving concussion diagnosis. The projects will be supported largely through a $30 million award made last year to the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health by the NFL, which is wrestling with the conclusion of concussions and their impact on current and former players. There's growing involve about the potential long-term effects of repeated concussions, particularly among those most at risk, including football players and other athletes and members of the military.

Current tests can't reliably diagnosis concussion. And there's no course to forebode which patients will recover quickly, suffer long-term symptoms or arise a progressive brain disease called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), according to an NIH pressure statement released Monday, Dec 2013. "We need to be able to predict which patterns of offence are rapidly reversible and which are not.

This program will help researchers get closer to answering some of the important questions about concussion for our schoolchild who play sports and their parents," Story Landis, director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), said in the dirt release. Two of the projects will be told $6 million each and will focus on determining the extent of long-term changes that occur in the brain years after a top injury or after numerous concussions. They will involve researchers from NINDS, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and scholastic medical centers.

Sunday 17 August 2014

The Gene Responsible For Alzheimer's Disease

The Gene Responsible For Alzheimer's Disease.
Data that details every gene in the DNA of 410 settle with Alzheimer's plague can now be studied by researchers, the US National Institutes of Health announced this week. This leading batch of genetic data is now available from the Alzheimer's Disease Sequencing Project, launched in February 2012 as portion of an intensified national application to find ways to prevent and treat Alzheimer's disease. Genome sequencing outlines the instruction of all 3 billion chemical letters in an individual's DNA, which is the entire set of genetic data every individual carries in every cell.

And "Providing raw DNA sequence data to a wide range of researchers is a powerful, crowd-sourced mode to find genomic changes that put us at increased risk for this devastating disease," NIH Director Dr Francis Collins said in an introduce news release. "The genome launch is designed to identify genetic risks for late onset of Alzheimer's disease, but it could also perceive versions of genes that protect us," Collins said.