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posted by Fnord666 on Monday March 05 2018, @09:29AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-were-we-discussing? dept.

In March 2015, Li-Huei Tsai set up a tiny disco for some of the mice in her laboratory. For an hour each day, she placed them in a box lit only by a flickering strobe. The mice — which had been engineered to produce plaques of the peptide amyloid-β in the brain, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease — crawled about curiously. When Tsai later dissected them, those that had been to the mini dance parties had significantly lower levels of plaque than mice that had spent the same time in the dark.

Tsai, a neuroscientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, says she checked the result; then checked it again. “For the longest time, I didn’t believe it,” she says. Her team had managed to clear amyloid from part of the brain with a flickering light. The strobe was tuned to 40 hertz and was designed to manipulate the rodents’ brainwaves, triggering a host of biological effects that eliminated the plaque-forming proteins. Although promising findings in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease have been notoriously difficult to replicate in humans, the experiment offered some tantalizing possibilities. “The result was so mind-boggling and so robust, it took a while for the idea to sink in, but we knew we needed to work out a way of trying out the same thing in humans,” Tsai says.

Tsai’s study was the first glimpse of a cellular response to brainwave manipulation. “Her results were a really big surprise,” says Walter Koroshetz, director of the US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Maryland. “It’s a novel observation that would be really interesting to pursue.”

[...] In addition to potentially leading to treatments, these studies could break open the field of neural oscillations in general, helping to link them more firmly to behaviour and how the brain works as a whole.

[...] Whatever their role, Tsai mostly wants to discipline brainwaves and harness them against disease. Cognito Therapeutics has just received approval for a second, larger trial, which will look at whether the therapy has any effect on Alzheimer’s disease symptoms. Meanwhile, Tsai’s team is focusing on understanding more about the downstream biological effects and how to better target the hippocampus with non-invasive technologies.

For Tsai, the work is personal. Her grandmother, who raised her, was affected by dementia. “Her confused face made a deep imprint in my mind,” Tsai says. “This is the biggest challenge of our lifetime, and I will give it all I have.”

Pink noise.


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  • (Score: 2) by rts008 on Monday March 05 2018, @05:05PM (2 children)

    by rts008 (3001) on Monday March 05 2018, @05:05PM (#648041)

    Thank you. I was perplexed, but that cleared the confusion away.

    I admit that I still find it strange to describe EM spectra as pressure waves. :-)

    Is this when I can use the 'get off my lawn', and 'turn that crap down' phrases to establish my geezer cred? :-)

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  • (Score: 3, Touché) by takyon on Monday March 05 2018, @06:00PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Monday March 05 2018, @06:00PM (#648067) Journal

    The term "pink noise" has been in use for at least 40 years, so no.

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Azuma Hazuki on Monday March 05 2018, @07:31PM

    by Azuma Hazuki (5086) on Monday March 05 2018, @07:31PM (#648106) Journal

    Sound isn't EM though. However, since the application of logarithmic scales is useful in fields outside the study of sound, it's not uncommon to hear statistical distributions described using terms like that.

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