Severed Optical Nerves Can Be Made To Grow Again
Anonymous Coward writes: "It is being hailed as one of the most significant advances in nerve regeneration in a decade. After severing an optic nerve in rats, neurologists have found a way to reconnect it to the brain so that it once again transmits normal electrical signals. As reported in the New Scientist this achievement is a first in mammals, and may hint at ways of reversing some types of blindness in people. Scientists also hope to use a version of the technique to treat people with spinal cord injuries.
Apparently they've been able to regenerate spinal cords in rats too. There's an article about it here. Those rats are some resilient little buggers! (So there's hope for that rat Rush Limbaugh yet ;) )
If anyone has any interest in how the brain works and the insights one can gain by looking at what happens when the brain malfunctions, I can't recommend the Oliver Sacks books highly enough. He's a neurologist who studies the brain and has a positive gift for writing about his subjects. Not to be touchy-feely, but he writes about them in a very sensitive way to where you don't feel like people are getting "exploited" for his own gain.
Other tales in his books to whet your appetite:
1) "The man who mistook his wife for a hat", which is the title of one of his books about a man who, otherwise normal, had problems with misconnecting objects to their identities,
2) A woman who could perceive things only on one side (say the left), but not on the other, even though her vision was perfect. When she ate, she would have to eat one side, then turn the plate, eat another half, etc. She was perfectly sane, but just had this wierd perceptual problem.
3) The man who could not make new memories, and lived the same moments over and over. He could remember everything up to an accident he had, but nothing further. Every day he would re-meet the same people. They have to keep mirrors away from him because it freaks him out because he looks too old for himself.
4) The "anthropologist" on mars, who is a pretty famous autistic teacher I think at Colorado. She has perfect image recall, but is entirely without emotions. She actually has her own book that she wrote about what it's like to be her, but I can't remember the name of it (anyone?).
The books are absolutely chock-full of stories like this. If this stuff fascinates you like it does me, I give these books my absolute highest recommendation.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
[repling to "Flambat", well bye bye Karma, yes I know this is a joke]
:(
<a href="http://www.texthelp.com">TextHELP</a> is the screen reader I use.
Festavial is the only one for Linux (software) I've seen, and have never got it to work
mlk
Wow, I should not post when knackered.
The man who could not make new memories, and lived the same moments over and over.
Reminds me of Memento. Pretty cool flick, worth checking out.
python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
Fischer D, Heiduschka P, Thanos S.
Lens-Injury-Stimulated Axonal Regeneration throughout the Optic Pathway of Adult Rats.
Exp Neurol. 2001 Dec;172(2):257-72. [PDF]
Apologies to those who are unable to view the pdf. (If you're not on a campus who subscribes to idea library, I don't think you can access it.)
Unfortuantly, these researchers still haven't purified the unknown factors that appear to be responsible for nerve growth. (They're in experimental opthamology... so it's not unexpected). Until these factors are purified and their functions described, nerve regrowth therapy will be difficult, if not impossible. Additionally, as some posters have pointed out, there are significant differences between rats and humans, and it remains to be seen if the same factors released by lens trauma are able to produce the same effects in humans or other model organisms. (But the posibility of non-applicability doesn't mean that rats and mice shouldn't be used, it just means that you need to test results obtained in them before applying them willy-nilly to other systems.)
http://www.donarmstrong.com
It'd be nice to see stereo again...
Best Slashdot Co
As the article points out, nerve cells themselves are only too happy to regrow... the reason you don't observe this in the case of physical injury is that, in mammals, scar tissue actually inhibits this regrowth. So if we can convince areas to be uninhibited, it could be a huge breakthrough.