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Your address holds clues to your brain’s structure and function, according to new neuroscience research
A new study suggests that where a person lives can be linked to their brain health and potential risk for dementia.
The distribution of wealth between different people living in specific geographical regions has changed substantially over ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Fortress, filter, and gatekeeper: New insights into how the blood-brain barrier safeguards the brain
Researchers provide a comprehensive overview of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), detailing its cellular architecture, transport ...
Comparing a map of the neurons in a nematode worm - the connectome - with a map of how signals travel across those neurons ...
News Medical on MSN
Maternal PFAS levels can predict children's brain structural and functional outcomes
Researchers from the University of Turku and Turku University Hospital, Finland, and örebro University, Sweden, have discovered that the levels of PFAS in mothers' blood during pregnancy is associated ...
A new study published in the journal Neuroscience finds that individuals recovering from COVID-19 exhibit signs of a ...
It's estimated that anywhere from three to seven percent of school-age children may have dyslexia, a neurodevelopmental issue that affects reading, spelling, and writing. There are different ideas ...
New research reveals that child maltreatment leaves measurable biological “scars” on DNA, altering brain structure and function.
Menopause is associated with distinct structural changes in the brain. Multiple studies have documented reductions in gray matter volume in both the frontal and temporal cortices and the ...
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