Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Immune response to injury may damage brain: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Jul, 2014 10:07 AM
    Can our immune system trigger memory impairment and cognitive dysfunction leading to chronic neurological diseases? Researchers at Cleveland Clinic in Ohio believe so.
     
    The study focuses on the role of a protein known as S100B that serves as a biomarker for brain damage.
     
    Normally, S100B is found only in the brain and spinal column.
     
    However, following a brain injury, it can leak through the blood-brain barrier into the blood.
     
    Once S100B enters the bloodstream, it is identified as an intruder by the immune system that releases antibodies to attack the protein.
     
    "Our results show an unexpected role for S100B in the regulation of a neuro-immune response, connecting the function of the brain to the immune system," said Damir Janigro, a molecular medicine researcher at Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute.
     
    Uptake of S100B was prominent in cells that are known to be involved in regulating immune responses.
     
    "Repeated increases of S100B - whether due to epileptic seizures, Alzheimer's disease or repeated hits to the head in sporting events - may thus become boosters of an auto-immune response against the brain which may slowly but inexorably result in chronic neurological disease," Janigro said.
     
    If further research confirms the findings, treatments for brain injury may include anti-inflammatory therapy to decrease the auto-immune response, the study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Time to feed your hubby: Hungry men fall for large, curvy women

    Time to feed your hubby: Hungry men fall for large, curvy women
    "If a man is hungry, he prefers a slightly larger breast size in women. He also prefers slightly larger women in general," said psychologist Viren Swami from University of Westminster in Britain.

    Time to feed your hubby: Hungry men fall for large, curvy women

    Learn how Plants have Sex

    Learn how Plants have Sex
    Plants give us life, but how do they have sex has long been a mystery. Now, biologists from the University of Leicester have undressed the genetic hierarchy in plant sperm cell formation.

    Learn how Plants have Sex

    Sleep well to Learn Well

    Sleep well to Learn Well
     You must have heard and read that sleep helps strengthen and consolidate memories. Now, researchers show how it works.

    Sleep well to Learn Well

    Eating breakfast helps burn calories: Study

    Eating breakfast helps burn calories: Study
    Breakfast is often said to be the most important meal of the day, yet many people are still shunning it in favour of fasting. But new research suggests that people who eat breakfast burn more calories and have tighter blood sugar control.

    Eating breakfast helps burn calories: Study

    Bad night's sleep? Blame it on your marriage

    Bad night's sleep? Blame it on your marriage
    Now you may know why you usually have a disturbed sleep at night - go figure out if your wife has higher marital satisfaction!

    Bad night's sleep? Blame it on your marriage

    Can diabetes be reversed?

    Can diabetes be reversed?
    In a ray of hope for diabetes patients, scientists have discovered the cellular sequence that leads to the trigger of the disease.

    Can diabetes be reversed?