
Government plans to make certain prescription-only drugs for common problems available over the counter have overwhelmingly been given the thumbs down by healthcare professionals, reveals a survey of readers of the influential Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin (DTB). The prevailing view among readers, many of whom are healthcare professionals working in primary care, is that drug
Full Post: Thumbs down by experts on plans to make certain meds OTC

People who received a mild electrical current to a motor control area of the brain were significantly better able to learn and perform a complex motor task than those in control groups.
The findings could hold promise for enhancing rehabilitation for people with traumatic brain injury, stroke and other conditions.
The study is presented in the January 20, 2009 early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and was conducted by researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The research team from NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) worked in collaboration with investigators at Columbia University in New York City and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Motor skills, which are used for activities from typing and driving, to sports, require practice and learning over a prolonged period of time. During practice, the brain encodes information about how to perform the task, but even during periods of rest, the brain is still at work strengthening the memory of doing the task. This process is known as consolidation.
Subjects in this study were presented with a novel and challenging motor task, which involved squeezing a “joy stick” to play a targeting game on a computer monitor, which they practiced over five consecutive days. During practice, one group received 20 minutes of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and the other group received only a 30 second “sham” stimulation. tDCS involves mild electrical stimulation applied through surface electrodes on the head, and works by modulating the excitability, or activity, of cells in the brain’s outermost layers. In this study, Dr. Cohen and his team directed tDCS to the primary motor cortex, the part of the brain that controls movement.
Over the five-day training period, the skill of the tDCS group improved significantly more that that of the control (sham) group, apparently through an effect on consolidation. During the three month follow-up period, the two groups forgot the skill at about the same rate, but the tDCS group continued to perform better because they had learned the skill better by the end of training.
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:
Patients with advanced Parkinson disease (PD) who received deep brain stimulation treatment had more improvement in movement skills and quality of life after six months than patients who received other medical therapy, but also had a higher risk of a serious adverse events, according to a study in the January 7 issue of JAMA, the
Full Post: Deep brain stimulation helps advanced Parkinson’s disease patients
Researchers in a study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have demonstrated for the first time that a direct artificial connection from the brain to muscles can restore voluntary movement in monkeys whose arms have been temporarily anesthetized. The results may have promising implications for the quarter of a million Americans affected by
Full Post: Artificial brain-muscle connections used to restore movement to paralyzed limbs
From a young age we are taught about the five senses and how they help us to explore our world. Although each sense seems to be its own entity, recent studies have indicated that there is actually a lot of overlap and blending of the senses occurring in the brain to help us better perceive
Full Post: New insight into multisensory integration
A new study has found kids who learn how to kick, catch and throw are more likely to grow into active and fit teens. The finding carries an important message for schools and parents that it is not enough just to try to get kids more active - they need to be taught important
Full Post: Kick, catch and throw - key to obesity prevention
Electrical stimulation of the brain — a treatment in which a pacemaker-like device sends pulses to electrodes implanted in the brain — is riskier than drug therapy but may hold significant benefits for those with Parkinson’s disease who no longer respond well to medication alone. That is the conclusion of researchers from the Department of
Full Post: Electrical stimulation of the brain offers hope for Parkinson’s sufferers --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
