by J Carter | Feb 28, 2026 | Uncategorized
Across conditions as different as spinal cord injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimer’s disease, a common thread keeps emerging: much of the long-term damage is driven not just by the initial insult, but by the body’s own biological response to it. Iron...
by J Carter | Feb 21, 2026 | Uncategorized
What if the key to protecting the brain isn’t found solely in neurons, but in the body’s broader metabolic landscape? A series of recent studies suggests exactly that. In aging mice, altering growth hormone signaling specifically in fat tissue reduced...
by J Carter | Feb 14, 2026 | Uncategorized
New research is adding weight to that idea from multiple angles. In advanced Alzheimer’s mouse models, scientists improved memory and reversed signs of brain damage by restoring NAD+ balance, pointing to cellular energy health as a promising target. In studies of...
by J Carter | Feb 14, 2026 | Uncategorized
Neuronal cellular cleanup and neurodegeneration are closely linked. Today, researchers recognize that neuron survival depends less on avoiding damage and more on how well cells manage stress. Inside each neuron, specialized systems clear damaged proteins and recycle...
by J Carter | Feb 14, 2026 | Uncategorized
Neuronal cellular cleanup and neurodegeneration are closely linked. Today, researchers recognize that neuron survival depends less on avoiding damage and more on how well cells manage stress. Inside each neuron, specialized systems clear damaged proteins and recycle...
by J Carter | Jan 19, 2026 | Uncategorized
Neurodegenerative diseases are often treated as isolated problems, but at the cellular level they share many of the same pressures: oxidative stress, metabolic imbalance, inflammation, and a gradual loss of the systems that keep neurons healthy. Researchers are...