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MIT scientists propose that blood may help us think, in addition to its well-
“We hypothesize that blood actively modulates how neurons process information,” explains Christopher Moore, a principle investigator in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT, in an invited review in the Journal of Neurophysiology. “Many lines of evidence suggest that blood does something more interesting than just delivering supplies. If it does modulate how neurons relay signals, that changes how we think the brain works.”
According to Moore’s Hemo-
Moore’s theory has implications for understanding brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s, schizophrenia, multiple sclerosis and epilepsy. “Many neurological and psychiatric diseases have associated changes in the vasculature,” says Moore, who is also an assistant professor in MIT’s Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences.
“Most people assume the symptoms of these diseases are a secondary consequence of damage to the neurons. But we propose that they may also be a causative factor in the disease process, and that insight suggests entirely new treatments.” For example, in epilepsy people often have abnormal blood vessels in the brain region where the seizures occur, and the hypothesis suggests this abnormal flow may induce epileptic onset. If so, drugs that affect blood flow may provide an alternative to current therapies.
The hypothesis also has important implications for functional magnetic resonance
imaging, or fMRI, a widely used brain scanning method that indicates local changes
in blood flow. “Scientists looking at fMRI currently regard blood flow and volume
changes as a secondary process that only provides read-
Again, studies in Moore’s lab support this interpretation. For example, his fMRI
studies of the sensory homunculus -
How could blood flow affect brain activity? Blood contains diffusible factors that could leak out of vessels to affect neural activity, and changes to blood volume could affect the concentration of these factors. Also, neurons and support cells called glia may react to the mechanical forces of blood vessels expanding and contracting. In addition, blood influences the temperature of brain tissue, which affects neural activity.
To Moore’s knowledge, the Hemo-
This work was funded by Thomas F. Peterson, the Mitsui Foundation and the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT.
Monday, October 29th, 2007 : Brain Health, Alzheimer's, Multiple Sclerosis : No Comments
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