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Parents and children coping with isolation during shelter-in-place orders in San Mateo County – San Mateo Daily Journal

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

A world in the middle of a pandemic can be difficult to explain to children, pulled out of their daily routines of attending school and socializing with friends, but experts in the mental health field say being honest and observant is the best move for parents.

Its different with little kids. The main thing to keep in mind is they dont understand whats going on and they see whats happening as a reflection of themselves, said Dr. David Spiegel, director of the Stanford Center on Stress and Health and medical director of the Center for Integrative Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine.

Spiegel, with more than 40 years of experience studying the effects of stress on health, said that not spending time outdoors is an issue for children who struggle with managing high bouts of energy.

One of the problems is kids are full of energy that needs release and its hard to do that when theyre not outside, said Spiegel. Try to get physical exercise. Thats important, and make sure they get sleep. When we dont, were falling asleep in the middle of the day. Kids just get agitated.

Although younger children may be excited their parents are spending more time at home, Spiegel said teens who have greater independence and feelings of being invincible may find the extended isolation difficult with which to cope.

Its different with teens who miss hanging with friends. One thing that helps older children is giving them tasks to make them part of the team, not just a burden, said Spiegel.

In the short term, children may show signs of stress through outbursts of agitation and restlessness, but parents can help their children regulate those emotions by legitimizing their feelings, said Mark Cloutier, chief executive officer of Caminar.

Kids are dealing with a loss of stimulation from the loss of going to the park, to school. The presence of physical activity improves your mood and a lack of it can lead to anxiety and depression, said Cloutier. Parents with kids with special needs have even more complications and I think kids are vulnerable. This is a confusing time for them. Its a confusing time for parents to engage more deeply with them to evaluate how theyre feeling. Normalize that so they dont feel isolated.

Caminar is a nonprofit behavioral health organization founded in San Mateo serving 20,000 individuals across San Mateo, Santa Clara, San Francisco, Solano and Butte counties. During a remote program hosted by Caminar, Dr. Jess P. Shatkin, professor of child and adolescent psychiatry and pediatrics at the New York University School of Medicine said helping to structure days, empathizing with loss and validating emotions can help young children and teens manage through the uncertainty.

We want to stay close, we want to be connected and yet at the same time we recognize social distancing has to happen. So help them manage that. Thats a really difficult thing because everything about evolution is driving our kids towards being together and of course theyre going to want to break the rules and spend time together, said Shatkin.

Spiegel recommends guardians consider their childrens baseline of behavior, noting if they tend to be sad or avoidant. He said worries should arise if kids begin engaging in arguments and escalating fights that may occur due to a change in routine.

Going to school is a protection and escape for kids who are feeling disassociated or risk harming themselves. If they begin saying they dont want to be around anymore or have a history of those thoughts, take it seriously and contact health professionals, said Spiegel. The thing I worry about with teens is that they think theyre immortal and they are less likely to review social distancing. Parents need to reinforce to them how important it is. And things like vaping and smoking put you at a higher risk of lung inflammation. Whatever you did before, dont do it now.

Spiegel said it is too early to tell what the long term effect will be on children experiencing chronic stress brought on by the pandemic, but research shows an increase of the stress hormone, cortisol, can have long term effects on the expression of mental disorders like depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health disorders.

Parents can monitor their own behavior as an immediate effort to alleviate possible stress on their children, said Spiegel, adding that children are highly receptive and will pick up on emotions.

We have to watch ourselves. Our fuses can get short because were worried about infections, financial problems, all sorts of things. We all have to be extra careful, said Spiegel. As an adult youre passing stress. When youre short tempered they just see that as their family members dont love them that much. They think its them and if thats the attention theyre getting theyll do things to provoke that response.

He said maintaining a sense of normalcy can mitigate long term consequences and this moment of crisis can be an opportunity to either do damage or to pull together.

We cant do anything to the damn virus but we can do something to cope, set aside time to heal yourself, said Spiegel.

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Individualized mosaics of microbial strains transfer from the maternal to the infant gut – The Mix

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

A microbiome fingerprint method allows tracking of mothers microbial strains inherited by infants.

Casey Morrow, Ph.D.Microbial communities in the intestine also known as the gut microbiome are vital for human digestion, metabolism and resistance to colonization by pathogens. The gut microbiome composition in infants and toddlers changes extensively in the first three years of life. But where do those microbes come from in the first place?

Scientists have long been able to analyze the gut microbiome at the level of the 500 to 1,000 different bacterial species that mainly have a beneficial influence; only more recently have they been able to identify individual strains within a single species using powerful genomic tools and supercomputers that analyze massive amounts of genetic data.

Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham now have used their microbiome fingerprint method to report that an individualized mosaic of microbial strains is transmitted to the infant gut microbiome from a mother giving birth through vaginal delivery. They detailed this transmission by analyzing existing metagenomic databases of fecal samples from mother-infant pairs, as well as analyzing mouse dam and pup transmission in a germ-free, or gnotobiotic, mouse model at UAB, where the dams were inoculated with human fecal microbes.

The results of our analysis demonstrate that multiple strains of maternal microbes some that are not abundant in the maternal fecal community can be transmitted during birth to establish a diverse infant gut microbial community, said Casey Morrow, Ph.D., professor emeritus in UABs Department of Cell, Developmental and Integrative Biology. Our analysis provides new insights into the origin of microbial strains in the complex infant microbial community.

The study used a strain-tracking bioinformatics tool previously developed at UAB, called Window-based Single-nucleotide-variant Similarity, or WSS. Hyunmin Koo, Ph.D., UABDepartment of Genetics and Genomics Core, led the informatics analysis. The gnotobiotic mouse model studies were led by Braden McFarland, Ph.D., assistant professor in the UAB Department of Cell, Developmental and Integrative Biology.

Braden McFarland, Ph.D.Morrow and colleagues have used this microbe fingerprint tool in several previous strain-tracking studies. In 2017, they found that fecal donor microbes used to treat patients with recurrent Clostridium difficile infections remained in recipients for months or years after fecal transplants. In 2018, they showed that changes in the upper gastrointestinal tract through obesity surgery led to the emergence of new strains of microbes. In 2019, they analyzed the stability of new strains in individuals after antibiotic treatments, and earlier this year, they found that adult twins, ages 36 to 80 years old, shared a certain strain or strains between each pair for periods of years, and even decades, after they began living apart from each other.

In the current study, several individual-specific patterns of microbial strain-sharing were found between mothers and infants. Three mother-infant pairs showed only related strains, while a dozen other infants of mother-infant pairs contained a mosaic of maternal-related and unrelated microbes. It could be that the unrelated strains came from the mother, but they had not been the dominant strain of that species in the mother, and so had not been detected.

Indeed, in a second study using a dataset from nine women taken at different times in their pregnancies showed that strain variations in individual species occurred in seven of the women.

To further define the source of the unrelated strains, a mouse model was used to look at transmission from dam to pup in the absence of environmental microbes. Five different females were given transplants of different human fecal matter to create five unique humanized-microbiome mice, which were bred with gnotobiotic males. The researchers then analyzed the strains found in the human donors, the mouse dams and their mouse pups. They found four different patterns: 1) The pups strain of a particular species was related to the dams strain; 2) The pups strain was related to both the dams strain and the human donors strain; 3) The pups strain was related to the human donors strain, but not to the dams strain; and, importantly, 4) No related strains for a particular species were found between the pup, the dam and the human donor. Since these animals were bred and raised in germ-free conditions, the unrelated strains in the pups came from minor, undetected strains in the dams.

Hyunmin Koo, Ph.D.The results of our studies support a reconsideration of the contribution of different maternal microbes to the infant enteric microbial community, Morrow said. The constellation of microbial strains that we detected in the infants inherited from the mother was different in each mother-infant pair. Given the recognized role of the microbiome in metabolic diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, the results of our study could help to further explain the susceptibility of the infant to metabolic disease found in the mother.

Co-authors with Koo, McFarland and Morrow in the study, An individualized mosaic of maternal microbial strains is transmitted to the infant gut microbial community, published in Royal Society Open Science, are Joseph A. Hakim, UAB School of Medicine; David K. Crossman and Michael R. Crowley, UAB Department of Genetics; J. Martin Rodriguez, UAB Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases; and Etty N. Benveniste, UAB Department of Cell, Developmental and Integrative Biology.

Support came from the University of Alabama School of Medicine, National Institutes of Health grants CA194414 and NS116559, a UAB Neuro-Oncology Support Fund award, and an American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grant through the ONeal Comprehensive Cancer Center at UAB.

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CB2 Insights Announces Unaudited Profitability in April and Continued Execution of its Business Plan – GlobeNewswire

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

TORONTO, May 07, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CB2 Insights (CSE:CBII; OTCQB: CBIIF) (CB2 or the Company), has announced that it has achieved its target of reaching profitability. On an unaudited basis, the Company has seen positive EBITDA for April 2020. Amidst the ever-evolving COVID-19 pandemic, the Company continues to work hard to prioritize achieving full profitability. This will allow the Company to strengthen its cash balance and remove all reliance on external capital for activities beyond strategic initiatives. The Company will use only cash derived from operations to support current and new projects.

Further, the Company has seen a growth of 25% in patient visits during the month of April compared to the same period in the prior year. Total patient visits in April 2020 were 6,756 for the month compared to 5,366 in April 2019. The Company continues to see accelerated growth in patient volume driven through national brand exposure (30+ corporate-owned clinic locations in 12 states across the US), competitive marketing and patient acquisition strategies as well as effective patient retention programs.

Additionally, the Company expects to see further growth as a result of recent laws in the US allowing for telemedicine to be utilized for medical cannabis certifications across all the states the Company operates in. This will provide the Company the ability to access remote parts of each state where services are either limited or unavailable to patients. With a team of over 70 healthcare providers, the Company has the scale and size to support patients across the state and is focusing on expanding its marketing efforts to support this expansion.

The Company also recently announced the launch of Skylight Health Group (SHG) as part of its clinical operations in the United States. SHG, which will provide a range of integrated health services such as primary medical care, consultative specialist care and alternative health, wellness & multi-disciplinary services will operate under an insurable integrated model in accordance with the rules, regulations and requirements by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Provision of insurable services to patients at a limited or no cost will allow greater access for patients who are currently unable to afford such care as a result of growing unemployment rates due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Both initiatives in addition to other projects the Company is currently working on will be funded solely through profits generated from operations.

Achieving positive EBITDA by Q2 was a commitment made to our shareholders and other company stakeholders over the last 6 months. I am glad to announce that we continue to execute on our business plan, focused on what is relevant to our core, and ensuring successful execution by our entire team to reach this significant milestone, said Prad Sekar, CEO, CB2 Insights. Profitability at a time in todays market where leveraging external capital is highly dilutive and expensive, allows us as a Company to focus on building on and not just holding our current position; and doing so in the best interest of our shareholders and commitment to the long-term value we intend to achieve. Furthermore, it allows us a business to invest capital in growth areas such as data analytics and research to additionally boost future revenue and margins as we continue to establish ourselves in the traditional Healthcare and Technology industries.

The Company continues to see strong demand within the month of May and will provide further updates over the coming months. CB2 Insights continues to bolster its data insights business unit with two interactive dashboards available at http://www.cb2insights/insights. These dashboards are in real-time and give users immediate results. Visitors to the website can also request further, custom insights from the Company.

About CB2 Insights

CB2 Insights (CSE:CBII) is a global leader in clinical operations, technology & analytics solutions and research and development services with a mission to mainstream medical cannabis into traditional healthcare. Providing immediate market access through its wholly-owned clinical network across 12 jurisdictions, proprietary data-driven technology solutions and comprehensive contract research services designed for those in both the medical cannabis and traditional life sciences industries, CB2 Insights is able to support its partners across the entire data and research spectrum.

CB2s Clinical Operations business unit leverages extensive experience to develop clinical models with standard operating procedures, advanced workflows, training and ongoing management support. CB2 also owns and operates its own specialty clinics including the brands Canna Care Docs and Relaxed Clarity which assess nearly 100,000 patients seeking medical cannabis treatment to provide immediate market access to US-based product manufacturers for clinical trial and research programs.CB2 also owns and operates Skylight Health Group, an integrated health division providing patients access to primary care, family medicine, integrative and wellness services.

The Company has built both electronic data capture (EDC) and clinical data management software (CDMS) which work to support its partners of any size to execute their data and clinical strategies.

CB2 also offers comprehensive contract research organization (CRO) services including full scale clinical trial management, trial design, monitoring and other key research functions used by licensed producers, multi-state operators and traditional pharmaceutical companies entering the medical cannabis space.

For more information please visit http://www.cb2insights.com.

For additional information, please contact:

Investor Relations Department1.855.847.4999 ext. 212investors@cb2insights.com

Forward Looking Statements

Statements in this news release that are forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties concerning the specific factors disclosed here and elsewhere in CB2s filings with Canadian securities regulators. When used in this news release, words such as "will, could, plan, estimate, expect, intend, may, potential, believe, should," and similar expressions, are forward-looking statements.

Forward-looking statements may include, without limitation, statements regarding the opportunity to provide services and software to the U.S. cannabis industry.

Although CB2 has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements, there can be other factors that cause results, performance or achievements not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended, including, but not limited to: dependence on obtaining regulatory approvals; investing in target companies or projects which have limited or no operating history and are subject to inconsistent legislation and regulation; change in laws; reliance on management; requirements for additional financing; competition; hindering market growth and state adoption due to inconsistent public opinion and perception of the medical-use and recreational-use marijuana industry and; regulatory or political change.

There can be no assurance that such information will prove to be accurate or that management's expectations or estimates of future developments, circumstances or results will materialize. As a result of these risks and uncertainties, the results or events predicted in these forward-looking statements may differ materially from actual results or events.

Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements in this news release are made as of the date of this release. CB2 disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise such information, except as required by applicable law, and CB2 does not assume any liability for disclosure relating to any other company mentioned herein.

Financial Measures

This news release makes references to certain non-IFRS measures, including certain industry metrics. These metrics and measures are not recognized measures under IFRS do not have meanings prescribed under IFRS and are as a result unlikely to be comparable to similar measures presented by other companies. These measures are provided as information complimentary to those IFRS measures by providing a further understanding of our operating results from the perspective of management. As such, these measures should not be considered in isolation or in lieu of review of our financial information reported under IFRS. This news release uses non-IFRS measures including EBITDA. EBITDA are commonly used operating measures in the industry but may be calculated differently compared to other companies in the industry. These non-IFRS measures, including the industry measures, are used to provide investors with supplementary measures of our operating performance that may not otherwise be apparent when relying solely on IFRS metrics. These metrics are provided ahead of YE 2019 and Q1 2020 filings (expected to be filed in June 2020) and are provided for the purpose of a general corporate update at the time of this release.

No securities regulator or exchange has reviewed, approved, disapproved, or accepts responsibility for the content of this news release.

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These Are The Standard Macronutrients On A Mediterranean Diet Plate – mindbodygreen.com

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

Since vegetables make up the largest portion of a Mediterranean plate, it's important to understand which to include. While Smith says, "Any and all vegetables work," certain veggies are healthier than others.

Dark, leafy greens, for example, contain a variety of antioxidants and carotenoids that help fight free radicals and reduce inflammation. They're also generally high in vitamins and minerals. To get these benefits, add spinach, broccoli, kale, and arugula to your plate, just to name a few.

Another simple way to consume a large variety of vegetables is with a healthy side salad. In true Mediterranean fashion, integrative medicine doctor Bindiya Gandhi, M.D., suggests eating "traditional Greek salad made with tomatoes, cucumber, green peppers, onions, olives, and feta."

Other vegetables to include: carrots, Brussels sprouts, garlic, cauliflower, bell peppers, artichokes, zucchini, eggplant, squash, mushrooms, celery, fennel, cabbage, leeks, beets, potatoes, sweet potatoes, turnips, etc.

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City Lights: Stream a Documentary on a Daring Dog Doctor or Dive Into Work by D.C. Artists – Washington City Paper

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

The Dog Doc

Its hard to get good health care for humans, but what about for our four-legged friends? With The Dog Doc, director Cindy Meehl offers a feature-length defense of integrative medicine, which combines the best of conventional medicine with alternative treatments (disclosure: Ive taken one of my dogs to a holistic vet, and Id do it again). The poster child for this approach is New York veterinarian Marty Goldstein, whose flashy canine-patterned shirts are a beacon for furry patients that other vets have written off, like Scooby, a dog with bone cancer in his jaw diagnosed with just months to live. For tumors, Goldstein uses a radical procedure: He freezes the tumor, which doesnt cure it but allows the animal to heal. But Goldsteins real target is the immune system. He believes that by changing an animals diet and introducing supplements, including doses of vitamin C administered intravenously, he can add years to dogs lives. Conventional vets call Goldstein a quack. One doctor met with Goldstein intending to debunk his claims, but when he saw how much one of his treatments transformed a dog that could barely walk, he became a convert. For dogs, Goldstein and his peers just might give hope to the hopelessif they can afford it. The film was scheduled for the Environmental Film Festival in March, one of the first events to go virtual in the pandemic, but its available now through AFI Silvers virtual programming. The film is available to stream at dogdoc.vhx.tv. $12. Pat Padua

The National Museum for Women in the Arts online D.C. Women Artists card collection spotlights five artists who shared a city but had vastly different perspectives. The printable cards provide background information on each artist, along with a series of insightful questions that prompt you to reflect on the works more closely: Notice the way Elizabeth Catlett played with light to reveal unspoken emotion in Two Generations. Georgia Mills Jessup played with light in Rainy Night, Downtown, too, but with more color and geometry; the result is an energetic portrait of the old 14th Street NW Trans-Lux Theatrethough you may feel a pang as the card assumes youre in the museum and says its location was about a block from where you are standing. Even more abstract is Alma Woodsey Thomas Iris, Tulips, Jonquils, and Crocuses. Individual petals may be difficult to make out, but her spontaneous brushstrokes and vibrant colors evoke flowers in movement. She isnt the only artist to reflect what she called her communion with nature. Anne Truitts Summer Dryad gets its name from the female forest spirit of Greek mythology, and Los Mailou Jones painted the valleys of France that sheltered her from some of the racial discrimination she faced in 1930s America. Scatter the cards around the room for an impromptu exhibit or assemble them on a wall to form a collage. However you display them, the cards offer a skylight into each womans Washington that notes the effects of their time, socio-economic status, race, and gender. The cards are available online at nmwa.org. Free. Emma Francois

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Dr. Andrew Campbell selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) – Life Pulse Health

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

UNITED STATES 05-01-2020 (PRDistribution.com) Dr. Andrew W. Campbell, Medical Clinician, Director, Officer, Advisor and Medical Consultant, also Editor-in Chief of several journals and research studies, was recently selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year for 2020 by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) for his outstanding leadership, dedication and commitment to the healthcare profession.

Inclusion with the International Association of Top Professionals is an honor in itself, only a few members in each discipline are chosen for this distinction. These special honorees are distinguished based on their professional accomplishments, academic achievements, leadership abilities, longevity in the field, other affiliations and contributions to their communities. All honorees are invited to attend the IAOTPs annual award gala at the end of this year for a night to honor their achievements. http://www.iaotp.com/award-gala

With having over 45 years of professional experience as a renowned Medical Clinician, Dr. Campbell has certainly proven himself as an expert in the field of integrative health and traditional medicine. Dr. Campbell is a dynamic, results-driven leader who has demonstrated success by treating the most complex patients and having extensive experience with testing for molds and mycotoxins from environmental and toxic exposures. He is fluent in Arabic, Hungarian, French, Spanish and English.Dr. Campbell has effectively worked alongside medical professionals from other cultures in Central and South America, Western and Eastern Europe and the Middle East.Dr. Campbells impressive repertoire of roles have included Medical Director at the Medical Center for Immune and Toxic Disorders, Medical Consultant for Cyrex Laboratories, Medical Advisor to Cell Systems Corp, Medical Director at The Wellness Center, Medical Advisor BCM Direct, Medical Advisor at Natural Health and Physicians Exclusive. Currently, he serves as the Medical Director of MymycoLab, a laboratory testing mycotoxins in serum, and he is the Medical Director for Zenix Laboratory in Mexico.Dr. Campbells areas of expertise include his treatment of thousands of patients with complex medical conditions from toxic exposures, specifically molds and mycotoxins, Lyme Disease, pesticides, household solvents, silicone breast implants, industrial chemicals and more. He has aided many patients with allergies, immune disorders and immune deficiencies. Dr. Campbells clinical interests include genomics, microbiome and neurotoxicity.Before embarking on his professional career path, Dr. Campbell graduated from a Swiss Preparatory School at age 14 and first in his class. His next accomplishment, he completed his College studies in the United States within 3 years. Dr. Campbell obtained his Medical Degree in Mexico, then trained at the Orlando Regional Medical Center in Florida. He furthered his education at the Medical College of Georgia. Upon moving to Texas, he began serving as the Medical Director at the Medical Center for Immune and Toxic Disorders for over 20 years. Over the course of his professional career, Dr. Campbell has held various leadership positions in Hospitals all throughout the Houston area.Stephanie Cirami, President of IAOTP stated, Choosing Dr. Campbell for this honor was an easy decision for our panel to make. Dr. Campbell has tremendous foresight, extensive knowledge and is brilliant at what he does. His accomplishments are very impressive and his colleagues describe him as a great listener, who will find a solution. We are truly honored to have him as our Top Medical Consultant of the Year and we are looking forward to meeting him at the Annual Awards Gala.Throughout his illustrious career, Dr. Campbell has received numerous awards, accolades and has been recognized worldwide for his outstanding leadership and commitment to the profession. This year he is being considered for a Front Cover feature and article in TIP (Top Industry Professionals) Magazine and will also be considered for IAOTPs prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award. He will be honored at IAOTPs 2020 Annual Awards Gala, being held at the magnificent Plaza Hotel in New York City for his selection as Top Medical Consultant of the Year. In past years, Dr. Campbell has been recognized as one of the Top 100 Health Professionals in Clinical Immunology and Toxicology, as an International Health Professional of the Year for his Outstanding Contributions to Clinical Toxicology and was named countless times by Marquis Whos Who as an expert in Medicine and Healthcare, and Science and Engineering across America and throughout the World.Aside from his successful career, Dr. Campbell is a sought-after lecturer and speaker, nationally and internationally at medical conferences for over 25 years and for Oxford University. He has published over 90 studies of his findings in peer-reviewed medical journals and medical textbook chapters. Dr. Campbell has also served as Editor-in-Chief, Co-Editor, Associate Editor and on the Editorial Board of several Medical Journals including Integrative Medicine, A Clinicians Journal, International Journal for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine, Research in Medical and Engineering Sciences, Biomedical Journal of Scientific and Technical Research, Advances in Mind-Body Medicine and Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine.As a highly regarded medical consultant, Dr. Campbell has become well-known and been featured on a number of television shows which include 20/20, the Montel Williams Show, and 24-Hour Investigative News. He has been interviewed by ABC, CBS and NBC and its affiliates throughout the United States and can be viewed on several television programs in both Canada and Mexico.Being an active member within his community for many years, Dr. Campbell is a Founder and also the Medical Director at the St. Vianney Clinic for the Indigent. He is experienced in obtaining licenses and import permits for medical supplements and medical equipment into Mexico and Latin American Countries. In the United States, he lends his expertise in medical management and clinical program developments and also in several foreign countries. He has conducted a number of clinical trials as the principle investigator for supplement companies in the U.S. and he is conducting these in other countries to reduce costs.Looking back, Dr. Campbell attributes his success to his hard work ethic, his love for education and science, and to every skillful medical professional he has had the honor of working alongside throughout his entire career. When not working, he enjoys traveling and spending time with his family. For the future, he hopes to continue making breakthroughs in medicine and helping his patients achieve optimal health.For more information on Dr. Campbell please visit:https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-w-campbell-m-d-7983a025/About IAOTPThe International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) is an international boutique networking organization who handpicks the worlds finest, most prestigious top professionals from different industries. These top professionals are given an opportunity to collaborate, share their ideas, be keynote speakers and to help influence others in their fields. This organization is not a membership that anyone can join. You have to be asked by the President or be nominated by a distinguished honorary member after a brief interview.IAOTPs experts have given thousands of top prestigious professionals around the world, the recognition and credibility that they deserve and have helped in building their branding empires. IAOTP prides itself to be a one of a kind boutique networking organization that hand picks only the best of the best and creates a networking platform that connects and brings these top professionals to one place.For more information on IAOTP please visit: http://www.iaotp.com

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Dr. Andrew Campbell selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) - Life Pulse Health

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Introduction of Miracle COVID-19 Cure to Tanzania Could End in Catastrophe – The Organization for World Peace

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

On Saturday, Tanzanian President John Magufuli announced that his country will begin importing an untested COVID-19 cure from Madagascar. The miracle remedy is a herbal tonic known as COVID Organics. Its key ingredient is theArtemisia plant, which is commonly used to treat malaria. Madagascan President Andry Rajoelina officially endorsed COVID Organics in April, and Tanzania is one of several countries to express their interest in acquiring it. Comoros, Equatorial Guinea, the Republic of Congo and Senegal have all looked to secure their own imports of the cure.

Madagascan authorities have remained firm in their support of COVID Organics. Rajoelina has claimed that the treatment eliminates the virus in a week. He has even suggested that schoolchildren should drink it as a precautionary measure. President Magufulisown belief in the product is also clear. After all, he has been working day and night to bring the medicine to Tanzania. However, scientists have been extreme sceptical of COVID Organics. For instance, Madagascars national medical academy (Anamem) has said there is no scientific evidence that the treatment actually works. International organisations have also roundly condemned the use of herbal remedies to treat COVID-19. In response to questions posed by the BBC, the World Health Organisation (WHO) sternly warned against self-medication with any medicines. The US-based National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health released a similar statement decrying herbal remedies earlier in the year.

The adoption of COVID Organics is only the latest development in the Tanzanian governments controversial response to the coronavirus pandemic. The country is the worst hit nation in East Africa, with 480 reported cases of COVID-19 as of last Wednesday. Three Tanzanian MPs also recently died from potential infections in the span of 11 days. However, while the Tanzanian government has banned public gatherings and closed schools and universities, it has refused to introduce social isolation measures. Markets and churches have also remained open. In fact, Magufuli has even encouraged citizens to gather in places of worship since the disease cannot harm the faithful. In another twist, last week the President blamed imperialist sabotage for faults in imported COVID-19 testing kits. According to Magufuli, the government recently sent swabs from goats and pawpaws disguised as human samples for testing. Some of the results allegedly came back positive, which led Magufuli to suggest that Tanzanias COVID-19 data is unreliable. The President subsequently ordered an investigation into whether any internationalfoul play was responsible.

The Tanzanian government policies make the widespread use of an untested medicine a deeply worrying prospect. The remedy has the potential to lull citizens into a false sense of security. It could discourage citizens that display symptoms of COVID-19 from seeking medical attention or make them believe they have been cured. The official denunciation of testing kits might also lead those who are self-medicating with COVID Organics but test positive for virus to reject their diagnosis. These problems are compounded by the lack of restriction on movement and certain public gatherings.There will be little to stop infected citizens that believe they are immune or cured from spreading coronavirus amongst their community. The irresponsible actions of Magufulis administration could therefore create a perfect storm for a major COVID-19 outbreak.

It is little wonder that the Tanzanian government has been widely condemned at home and abroad. On April 30th the WHO expressed fear over Tanzanias lack of physical distancing. Their trepidation is entirely justified. The characterisation of the governments handling of the virus by Freeman Mbowe, the chairman of Tanzanias main opposition party Chadema, as incompetent and secretive also seem fair. These dissenting voices must now highlight the dangers of Magufulis support of COVID Organics. We can only hope that this miracle cure doesnt turn into a nightmare.

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Introduction of Miracle COVID-19 Cure to Tanzania Could End in Catastrophe - The Organization for World Peace

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This is the best way to prepare coffee for your heart health – Well+Good

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

There are so many different ways to enjoy coffee from whipped emulsions to fancy pour-overs. When it comes to your heart health, though, theres one way cardiologists recommend preparing your coffee over other methods.

In a new study published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, researchers looked into the coffee-drinking habits of more than 500,000 Norwegian men and women. And they found something interesting about how coffee preparation methods may impact your health. Particularly in terms of drinking your coffee filtered or unfiltered.

Among the participants, 59 percent drank filtered coffee, 20 percent drank unfiltered coffee, 9 percent drank both types, and 12 percent didnt drink coffee at all. And its clear that filtered coffee wins: Unfiltered brew was associated with higher mortality than filtered brew, and filtered brew was associated with lower mortality than no coffee consumption, wrote the study authors. The amount also made a difference. Among coffee consumers, the reference group of 1 to 4 cups a day of filtered brew had the lowest mortality, and >9 cups a day of unfiltered brew had the highest mortality.

So, whats the deal with unfiltered coffee? The study authors wrote that its been found to contain high amounts of compounds called diterpenes (like cafestol and kahweol), which can raise your LDL cholesterol levels. The types of coffee youd primarily drink unfiltered are those made with a French press where the coffee grounds steep in hot water. The good news is most of the coffee you drink is probably already filtered.

Integrative medicine expert Andrew Weil, MD, touched on the topic years ago and said filtered coffee gives you the least amount of those cholesterol-raising compounds, as most of it is left in the filter. And after speaking to a colleague, he came to the conclusion that even if your cholesterol levels are of concern, you can still have coffee. It might just be a good idea to cut back a little and save unfiltered methods for special occasions.

The benefits of coffee, explained by a dietitian:

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UWMadison announces its fourth round of cluster hires – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:46 pm

Artificial intelligence, ethics in technology, the origins of life, astrophysical data these exciting but complex subjects are the focus of the University of WisconsinMadisons fourth round of cluster hires, the Office of the Provost announced today.

The hires, which are made as a group across departments rather than individually within departments, build upon the universitys existing strengths. They foster collaborative research, education and outreach by creating new interdisciplinary areas of knowledge.

UWMadison first launched the Cluster Hiring Initiative in 1998 as an innovative partnership between the university, state and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation. In its first phase, the initiative authorized nearly 50 clusters, adding nearly 150 new faculty members through several rounds of hiring. In 2017, the Office of the Provost authorized phase two of the initiative, with a goal of supporting at least 12 clusters.

Previous clusters were announced in April 2019 andSeptemberandFebruaryof 2018. This latest round brings the total of clusters supported to 19. In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, however, each cluster will be given at least two years to complete its hiring plans. New cluster competition will be suspended for at least the next academic year.

The latest cluster hires are:

Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medical Imaging and Diagnostics

Proposal advanced by: Thomas Grist, professor of radiology, medical physics and biomedical engineering; Kristin Eschenfelder, associate director of the School of Computing, Data and Information Sciences; Rob Nowak, professor of electrical and computer engineering, computer sciences, statistics and biomedical engineering; Vallabh Sambamurthy, dean of the Wisconsin School of Business.

Through new approaches to data acquisition and analysis, advances in artificial intelligence are poised to revolutionize the way in which medical imaging affects clinical care and scientific discoveries in medicine. This cluster outlines three key faculty positions that will be foundational to an expansion of UWMadisons leadership in the field. It will also address urgent opportunities for curriculum development in areas of interest to multiple colleges and schools on campus and extramural entities.

Next-generation medical imaging uses AI techniques to improve its diagnostic accuracy and predictive power, enabling advances in basic understanding of human disease, treatment monitoring and long-term surveillance of disease.

Collaborations like those forged by the cluster hire will contribute to the realization of the full potential of AI for precision medical imaging and diagnostics.

Ethics in Computing, Data, and Information

Proposal advanced by: Alan Rubel, professor in the Information School and director of the Center for Law, Society and Justice; Michael Titelbaum, Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy; Loris DAntoni, professor of computer sciences; Aws Albarghouthi, professor of computer sciences; Noah Weeth Feinstein, director of the Holtz Center for Science, Technology and Society and a professor of curriculum and instruction and community and environmental sociology.

Computational systems, data analytics, artificial intelligence and algorithmic decision systems affect large and important facets of society, including governance, education, commerce, democracy and media. These tools can be used to advance social goods, but they can also go awry, used for bad purposes by bad actors. The tools can also reflect and engender unfair social structures.

To effectively address ethical issues in AI, data, and information systems requires collaboration between scholars working on computational systems, on the social facets of information technologies, and on conceptual and moral questions about how such systems function and how they are used.

UWMadison is well-positioned to be a world leader in these areas because of its current strengths and existing collaborations. The cluster proposes hiring three faculty members working on distinct facets of the ethics of computing, data and information.

Exploring the Origins of Life Across the Galaxy

Proposal advanced by: Sebastian Heinz, professor and chair of astronomy; David Baum, professor of botany; Judith Burstyn, professor and chair of chemistry; Greg Tripoli, professor and chair of atmospheric and oceanic sciences; Jeff Hardin, professor and chair of integrative biology; Ken Cameron, professor and chair of botany; Chuck DeMets, professor and chair of geoscience; Annie Bauer, assistant professor of geoscience; Tristan LEcuyer, professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences; Robert Mathieu, professor of astronomy; Steve Meyers, professor of geoscience; Phillip Newmark, professor of integrative biology; Andrew Vanderburg, assistant professor of astronomy; Susanna Widicus Weaver, professor of chemistry; John Yin, professor of chemical and biological engineering; Tehshik Yoon, professor of chemistry; Ke Zhang, assistant professor of astronomy.

Questions about the origins and nature of life are as old as humanity itself. Today, the search for understanding the origin of life extends to the cosmos, as recent work has uncovered countless planets orbiting stars throughout the Milky Way, each potentially bearing life of its own. But how do we detect life on planets we can never visit? And how do we know how common life might be if we dont know how it arose on Earth?

The search for evidence of life on other planets is by nature interdisciplinary. Chemistry, biology and geoscience combine to understand how life arose on our planet and how it might have done so on other worlds, while astronomy and atmospheric sciences can probe for evidence of that life from light-years away. This cluster will allow the hiring of researchers who straddle these fields and who can bridge the gaps between expertise across the participating departments. The group will also establish the Wisconsin Center for Origins Research to house new and existing faculty and encourage new collaborations in astrobiology.

Breakthrough Science with Multi-messenger Astrophysical Data

Proposal advanced by: Albrecht Karle, professor of physics; Keith Bechtol, assistant professor of physics; Francis Halzen, professor of physics; Kael Hanson, professor of physics; Sebastian Heinz, professor and chair of astronomy; Sebastian Raschka, assistant professor of statistics; Justin Vandenbroucke, associate professor of physics; Jun Zhu, professor and chair of statistics; Ellen Zweibel, professor of astronomy.

For millennia, humans learned about the night sky only from the light from distant stars. But recently, astrophysicists have gained access to signals that go beyond light. These messengers about the universe include gravitational waves and neutrinos ghostly particles that rarely interact with other matter. UWMadison is the headquarters of the worlds largest neutrino observatory, IceCube, which surveys a billion tons of Antarctic ice for signs of rare neutrino collisions.

Now, the IceCube project is preparing for a major upgrade to generation two. This cluster hire will invest in the astronomy, physics and statistics faculty necessary to continue and expand UWMadisons leadership in multi-messenger astrophysics. This data-heavy field requires collaborations between these three fields to probe the constant stream of information recorded by IceCube and to find the sources of the neutrinos that stream toward Earth. That analysis can help answer fundamental questions about the physical laws governing the universe and help us understand complex phenomena like black holes and cosmic rays.

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What Do New Neurons in the Brains of Adults Actually Do? – The Scientist

Posted: May 7, 2020 at 7:44 pm

In the spring of 2019, neuroscientist Heather Cameron set up a simple experiment. She and her colleagues put an adult rat in the middle of a plastic box with a water bottle at one end. They waited until the rat started drinking and then made a startling noise to see how the animal would respond. The team did this repeatedly with regular rats and with animals that were genetically altered so that they couldnt make new neurons in their hippocampuses, a brain region involved in learning and memory. When the animals heard the noise, those that could make new hippocampal neurons immediately stopped slurping water and looked around, but the animals lacking hippocampal neurogenesis kept drinking. When the team ran the experiment without the water bottle, both sets of rats looked around right away to figure out where the sound was coming from. Rats that couldnt make new neurons seemed to have trouble shifting their attention from one task to another, the researchers concluded.

Aging humans, in whom neurogenesis is thought to decline, often have trouble remembering details that distinguish similar experiences.

Its a very surprising result, says Cameron, who works at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in Bethesda, Maryland. Researchers studying neurogenesis in the adult hippocampus typically conduct experiments in which animals have had extensive training in a task, such as in a water maze, or have experienced repetitive foot shocks, she explains. In her experiments, the rats were just drinking water. It seemed like there would be no reason that the hippocampus should have any role, she says. Yet in animals engineered to lack hippocampal neurogenesis, the effects are pretty big.

The study joins a growing body of work that challenges the decades-old notion that the primary role of new neurons within the adult hippocampus is in learning and memory. More recently, experiments have tied neurogenesis to forgetting, one possible way to ensure the brain doesnt become overloaded with information it doesnt need, and to anxiety, depression, stress, and, as Camerons work suggests, attention. Now, neuro-scientists are rethinking the role that new neurons, and the hippocampus as a whole, play in the brain.

Most of the research into neurogenesis involves boosting or inhibiting animals generation of new neurons, then training animals on a complex memory task such as finding a treat in a maze, and later retesting the animals. Decreasing neurogenesis tends to hamper the animals ability to remember.

Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease

Training mice or rats on a memory task before manipulating neurogenesis has also been found to affect the strength of the trained memory. Boosting neurogenesis reduced the memorys strength, perhaps an extreme form of forgetting that at normal levels avoids the remembering of unnecessary details.

Alzheimers disease and other forms of dementia

Research has linked decreased neurogenesis with more anxious and depressive behaviors in mice. Stress can reduce neurogenesis, ultimately leading mice to be more anxious in future stressful situations.

PTSD, anxiety, depression

Research has linked decreased neurogenesis with trouble switching focus.

Autism

The first hint that adult animal brains may make new neurons appeared in the early 1960s, when MIT neurobiologist Joseph Altman used radioactive labeling to track the proliferation of nerve cells in adult rats brains.Other data published in the 1970s and 1980s supported the conclusion, and in the 1990s, Fred Rusty Gage and his colleagues at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, used an artificial nucleotide called bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to tag new neurons born in the brains of adult rats and humans. Around the same time, Elizabeth Gould of Princeton University and her collaborators showed that adult marmoset monkeys made new neurons in their hippocampuses, specifically in an area called the dentate gyrus. While some researchers questioned the strength of the evidence supporting the existence of adult neurogenesis, most of the field began to shift from studying whether adult animal brains make new neurons to what role those cells might play.

In 2011, Ren Hen at Columbia University and colleagues created a line of transgenic mice in which neurons generated by neuro-genesis survived longer than in wildtype mice. This boosted the overall numbers of new neurons in the animals brains. The team then tested the modified mices cognitive abilities. Boostingnumbers of newly born neurons didnt improve the mices performances in water mazes or avoidance tasks compared with control mice. But it did seem to help them distinguish between two events that were extremely similar. Mice with more new neurons didnt freeze as long as normal mice when put into a box that was similar to but not exactly the same as one in which theyd experienced a foot shock in earlier training runs.

These results dovetailed with others coming out at the time, particularly those showing that aging humans, in whom neurogenesis is thought to decline, often have trouble remembering details that distinguish similar experiences, what researchers call pattern separation. The line of thinking is that the memories that are most likely to be impacted by neurogenesis are memories that are really similar to each other, says Sarah Parylak, a staff scientist in Gages lab at the Salk Institute.

As insights into pattern separation emerged, scientists were beginning to track the integration of new rodent neurons into existing neural networks. This research showed that new neurons born in the dentate gyrus had to compete with mature neurons for connections to neurons in the entorhinal cortex (EC), a region of the brain with widespread neural networks that play roles in memory, navigation, and the perception of time. (See Memories of Time on page 32.) Based on detailed anatomical images, new dentate gyrus neurons in rodents appeared to tap into preexisting synapses between dentate gyrus neurons and EC neurons before creating their own links to EC neurons.

To continue exploring the relationship between old and new neurons, a group led by the Harvard Stem Cell Institutes Amar Sahay, who had worked with Hen on the teams 2011 study, wiped out synapses in the dentate gyruses of mice. The researchers overexpressed the cell deathinducing protein Krppel-like factor 9 in young adult, middle-aged, and old mice to destroy neuronal dendritic spines, tiny protrusions that link up to protrusions of other neurons, in the brain region. Those lost connections led to increased integration of newly made neurons, especially in the two older groups, which outperformed age-matched, untreated mice in pattern-separation tasks. Adult-born dentate gyrus neurons decrease the likelihood of reactivation of those old neurons, Sahay and colleagues concluded, preventing the memories from being confused.

Parylak compares this situation to going to the same restaurant after it has changed ownership. In her neighborhood in San Diego, theres one location where shes dined a few times when the restaurant was serving different cuisine. Its the same location, and the building retains many of the same features, so the experiences would be easy to mix up, she says, but she can tell them apart, possibly because of neurogenesiss role in pattern separation. This might even hold true for going to the same restaurant on different occasions, even if it served the same food.

Thats still speculative at this point. Researchers havent been able to watch neurogenesis in action in a living human brain, and its not at all clear if the same thing is going on there as in the mouse brains they have observed. While many scientists now agree that neurogenesis does occur in adult human brains, there is little consensus about what it actually does. In addition to the work supporting a role for new neurons in pattern separation, researchers have accumulated evidence that it may be more important for forgetting than it is for remembering.

In recent years, images and videos taken with state-of-the-art microscopy techniques have shown that new neurons in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus go through a series of changes as they link up to existing networks in the brain.

A neural stem cell divides to generate a new neuron (green).

As the new neuron grows, it rotates from a horizontal to a vertical position and connects to an interneuron (yellow) in a space called the hilus that sits within the curve of the dentate gyrus. The young neuron also starts making connections with well-established dentate gyrus neurons (blue) as well as neurons in the hippocampus (red).

Once connections are formed, mature neurons send signals into the new neuron, and the cell starts firing off more of its own signals. At around four weeks of age, the adult-born neuron gets hyperexcited, sending electrical signals much more often than its well-established neuronal neighbors do.

As the new neuron connects with still more neurons, interneurons in the hilus start to send it signals to tamp down its activity.

It seems counterintuitive for neurogenesis to play a role in both remembering and forgetting, but work by Paul Frankland of the Hospital for Sick Children Research Institute in Toronto suggests it is possible. In 2014, his team showed that when mice made more new neurons than normal, they were more forgetful. He and his colleagues had mice run on wheels to boost levels of neurogenesis, then trained the animals on a learning task. As expected, they did better than control mice who hadnt exercised. (See How Exercise Reprograms the Brain, The Scientist, October 2018.) In other animals, the researchers boosted neurogenesis after the mice learned information thought to be stored, at least in the short term, in the hippocampus. When we did that, what we found was quite surprising, Frankland says. We found a big reduction in memory strength.

His team was puzzled by the result. Adding to the confusion, the researchers had observed a larger effect in memory impairment with mice that learned, then exercised, than they had seen in memory improvement when the mice ran first and then learned. As he dug into the literature, Frankland realized the effect was what other neuroscientists had called forgetting. He found many theoretical papers based on computational modeling that argued that as new neurons integrate into a circuit, the patterns of connections in the circuit change, and if information is stored in those patterns of connections, that information may be lost. (See Memory Munchers on page 21.)

The notion surprised other neuroscientists, mainly because up to that point theyd had two assumptions related to neurogenesis and forgetting. The first was that generating new neurons in a normal animal should be good for memory. The second was that forgetting was bad. The first assumption is still true, Frankland says, but the second is not. Many people think of forgetting as some sort of failure in our memory systems, he explains. Yet in healthy brains theres tons of forgetting happening all of the time. And, in fact, its important for memory function, Frankland says. It would actually be disadvantageous to remember everything we do.

Experiments have tied neurogenesis to forgetting, anxiety, depression, stress, and attention.

Parylak says this idea of forgetting certainly has provoked a lot of discussion. Its unclear, for example, whether the mice in Franklands experiments are forgetting, or if they are identifying a repeat event as something novel. This is the point, she explains, where doing neurogenesis research in humans would be beneficial. You could ask a person if theyd actually forgotten or if they are making some kind of extreme discrimination.

Despite the questions regarding the results, Frankland and his colleagues continued their work, testing mices forgetfulness with all types of memories, and more recently they asked whether the forgetting effect jeopardized old and new memories alike. In experiments, his team gave mice a foot shock, then boosted hippocampal neurogenesis (with exercise or a genetic tweak to neural progenitor cells), and put the mice in the same container theyd been shocked in. With another group of mice, the researchers waited nearly a month after the foot shock before boosting neurogenesis and putting the mice back in the container. Boosting the number of new neurons, the team found, only weakened the newly made memory, but not one that had been around for a while. This makes a lot of sense, Frankland says. As our memories of everyday events gradually get consolidated, they become less and less dependent on the hippocampus, and more dependent on another brain region: the cortex. This suggests that remote memories are less sensitive to changes in hippocampal neurogenesis levels.

The hippocampus tracks whats happened to you, Frankland says. Much of thats forgotten because much of it is inconsequential. But every now and then something interesting seems to happen, and its these eventful memories that seem to get backed up in other areas of the brain.

Researchers think neurogenesis helps the brain distinguish between two very similar objects or events, a phenomenon called pattern separation. According to one hypothesis, new neurons excitability in response to novel objects diminishes the response of established neurons in the dentate gyrus to incoming stimuli, helping to create a separate circuit for the new, but similar, memory.

At NIMH, one of Camerons first studies looking at the effects of neurogenesis tested the relationship between new neuronal growth and stress. She uncovered the connection studying mice that couldnt make new neurons and recording how they behaved in an open environment with food at the center. Just like mice that could still make new neurons, the neuro-genesis-deficient mice were hesitant to go get the food in the open space, but eventually they did. However, when the animals that couldnt make new neurons were stressed before being put into the open space, they were extremely cautious and anxious, whereas normal mice didnt behave any differently when stressed.

Cameron realized that the generation of new neurons also plays a role in the brain separate from the learning and memory functions for which there was growing evidence. In her experiments, we were looking for memory effects and looked for quite a while without finding anything and then stumbled onto this stress effect, she says.

The cells in the hippocampus are densely packed with receptors for stress hormones. One type of hormone in particular, glucocorticoids, is thought to inhibit neurogenesis, and decreased neurogenesis has been associated with depression and anxiety behaviors in rodents. But there wasnt a direct link between the experience of stress and the development of these behaviors. So Cameron and her colleagues set up an experiment to test the connection.

When the team blocked neurogenesis in adult mice and then restrained the animals to moderately stress them, their elevated glucocorticoid levels were slow to recover compared with mice that had normal neurogenesis. The stressed mice that could not generate new neurons also acted oddly in behavioral tests: they avoided food when put in a new environment, became immobile and increasingly distressed when forced to swim, and drank less sugary water than normal mice when it was offered to them, suggesting they dont work as hard as normal mice to experience pleasure. Impaired adult neurogenesis, the experiments showed, played a direct role in developing symptoms of depression, Cameron says.

The notion that neurogenesis and stress might be tied directly to our mental states led Cameron to look back into the literature, where she found many suggestions that the hippocampus plays a role in emotion, in addition to learning and memory. Even Altman, who unexpectedly identified neurogenesis in adult rodents in the 1960s, and colleagues suggested as much in the 1970s. Yet the argument has only appeared sporadically in the literature since then. Stress is complicated, Cameron says; its hard to know exactly how stressful experiences affect neurogenesis or how the generation of new neurons will influence an animals response to stress. Some types of stress can decrease neurogenesis while others, such as certain forms of intermittent stress, can increase new neuronal growth. Last year, Cameron and colleagues found that generating new neurons helps rats used to model post-traumatic stress disorder recover from acute and prolonged periods of stress.

Neurogenesis appears to play a role in both remembering and forgetting.

Her work has also linked neurogenesis to other characteristics of rodent behavior, including attention and sociability. In 2016, with Gould at Princeton and a few other collaborators, she published work suggesting that new neurons are indeed tied to social behavior. The team created a hierarchy among rats, and then deconstructed those social ranks by removing the dominant male. When the researchers sacrificed the animals and counted new neurons in their brains, the rats from deconstructed hierarchies had fewer new neurons than those from control cages with stable ranks. Rats with uncertain hierarchies and fewer new neurons didnt show any signs of anxiety or reduced cognition, but they werent as inclined as control animals to spend time with new rats put into their quarters, preferring to stick with the animals they knew. When given a drugoxytocinto boost neurogenesis, they once again began exploring and spending time with new rats that entered their cages.

The study from Camerons lab on rats ability to shift their attention grew out of the researchers work on stress, in which they observed that rodents sometimes couldnt switch from one task to the next. Turning again to the literature, Cameron found a study from 1969 that seemed to suggest that neurogenesis might affect this task-switching behavior. Her team set up the water bottle experiments to see how well rats shifted attention. Inhibiting neurogenesis in the adult mice led to a 50 percent decrease in their ability to switch their focus from drinking to searching for the source of the sound.

This paper is very interesting, says J. Tiago Gonalves, a neuroscientist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York who studies neurogenesis but was not involved in the study. It could explain the findings seen in some behavioral tasks and the incongruences between findings from different behavioral tasks, he writes in an email to The Scientist. Of course, follow-up work is needed, he adds.

Cameron argues that shifting attention may be yet another behavior in which the hippocampus plays an essential role but that researchers have been overlooking. And there may be an unexplored link between making new neurons and autism or other attention disorders, she says. Children with autism often have trouble shifting their attention from one image to the next in behavioral tests unless the original image is removed.

Its becoming clear, Cameron continues, that neurogenesis has many functions in the adult brain, some that are very distinct from learning and memory. In tasks requiring attention, though, there is a tie to memory, she notes. If youre not paying attention to things, you will not remember them.

Many, though not all, neuroscientists agree that theres ongoing neurogenesis in the hippocampus of most mammals, including humans. In rodents and many other animals, neurogenesis has also been observed in the olfactory bulbs. Whether newly generated neurons show up anywhere else in the brain is more controversial.

There had been hints of new neurons showing up in the striatum of primates in the early 2000s. In 2005,Heather Cameronof the National Institute of Mental Health and colleagues corroborated those findings, showing evidence of newly made neurons in therat neocortex, a region of the brain involved in spatial reasoning, language, movement, and cognition, and in the striatum, a region of the brain involved in planning movements and reacting to rewards, as well as self-control and flexible thinking (J Cell Biol, 168:41527). Nearly a decade later, using nuclear-bomb-test-derivedcarbon-14 isotopesto identify when nerve cells were born,Jonas Frisnof the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and colleagues examined the brains of postmortem adult humans and confirmed thatnew neurons existed in the striatum(Cell, 156:107283, 2014).

Those results are great, Cameron says. They support her idea that there are different types of neurons being born in the brain throughout life. The problem is theyre very small cells, theyre very scattered, and therere very few of them. So theyre very tough to see and very tough to study.

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