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"St. John's University Cerebral Palsy List" <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 5 Jan 2000 07:27:07 -0500
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Trisha Cummings <[log in to unmask]>
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Forwarding a NY Times article - I found interesting!!

                          Brightest Blessings
                                 Trisha

NY Times: A Decade of Discovery Yields a Shock About the Brain
Tuesday, January 04, 2000
      [By Sandra Blakeslee in today's paper.]
       As scientists look back at all the discoveries made in the 1990's,
the so-called Decade of the Brain, one finding stands out as the most
startling and, for many scientists, the most difficult to accept: people are
not necessarily born with all the brain cells they will ever have.
      In fact, from birth through late adolescence, the brain appears to add
billions of new cells, literally constructing its circuits out of freshly
made neurons as children and teenagers interact with their environments. In
adulthood, the process of adding new cells slows down but does not stop.
Mature circuits appear to be maintained by new cell growth well into old
age.
      Although the Congressionally mandated "Decade" produced many other
discoveries, from ways to obtain images of fleeting thoughts inside a
person's head to new drugs for a wide variety of mental disorders, the
finding that the brain develops and maintains itself by adding new cells is
the most revolutionary.
      If these findings hold up to further scrutiny, the next decade of
brain research promises to generate a total revision of how scientists think
human minds are organized and constructed.
      Findings have already shed new light on mechanisms of learning, memory
and aging in normal brains and suggest daring new ways to treat strokes and
other brain disorders. Moreover, they may provide solutions to some abiding
mysteries -- including the way young children who have half their brains
surgically removed to treat severe epilepsy go on to develop normally, as if
they had whole brains in half the usual amount of space.
      Some researchers have begun isolating special cells that continue to
divide and produce new brain tissue, with the hope of implanting such cells
into areas of the brain that are damaged by disease or accidents.
      For decades, it was axiomatic that people were born with all the brain
cells they would ever have. Unlike the bones, the skin, the blood vessels
and other body parts, where cells divide throughout life to give rise to new
cells, it was believed that the brain did not renew itself.
      Though the brain did add vast amounts of new connections early in life
and could compensate somewhat for many injuries, it was thought that no one
could be expected to grow more brain cells with age. Quite the opposite.
People were told that the only thing they could look forward to was gradual
mental deterioration as cells died off and were never replenished.
      These ideas were so firmly established that many scientists have a
hard time believing the findings, reported in the last couple of years by a
number of investigators, that the human brain makes new cells after birth,
said Dr. Fred H. Gage, a neuroscientist at the Salk Institute in La Jolla,
Calif. Even when they accept the idea that such cells may exist, they argue
there is no proof that they do anything important, he said. And those
skeptical of the new developments, like Dr. Pasko Rakic, a neuroscientist at
Yale, say that if scientists expect others to change longstanding thinking
about brain development, the standard of proof must be set very high.
      Dr. Per Andersen, a neurobiologist at the University of Oslo in
Norway, said neuroscientists had responded to several of the new findings
with "resounding silence." This is probably not because of "active neglect,"
he said, but "it takes some time to let unexpected results sink down in the
mutual consciousness of neurobiologists." In short, the new findings are
simply too startling and revolutionary to digest all at once.
      Dr. Morten Raastad, also from Oslo, compared resistance to the idea of
brains' growing new cells to the way scientists once resisted the idea of
plate tectonics and continental drift.
      The theory was first proposed in 1915, but it was not until scientists
completed sea-floor magnetism studies in the 1960's that it was accepted, he
said.
      The traditional view of human brain development is based on
experiments done in the mid-1960's on macaque monkeys by Dr. Rakic.
      He said then that based on available techniques for detecting dividing
cells in brain tissue there was no evidence that new cells were being born
in the monkey brain.
      He and others inferred this must be true of all primates, including
humans.
      According this theory, brains grow as new connecting fibers, called
synapses and dendrites, proliferate around a fixed number of brain cells
after birth.
      Cells not connected into circuits through these growing fibers would
die off.
      Thus brains develop by pruning and sculpturing, not by building
networks with billions of new cells, Dr. Rakic and others theorized.
      The fact that many people do not recover the ability to speak or walk
after having strokes or other traumatic brain injury cemented the view that
adult brains did not add new cells.
      If they did, people thought, recovery would be more common.
      The first crack in this belief occurred in 1965, when scientists
reported that new nerve cells were generated in a region of the adult rat
brain called the hippocampus. This is where memories for places and things
are first formed.
      A year later, they discovered that new cells were migrating to the
olfactory bulb, where smells are decoded.
      These researchers identified a zone within two hollow cavities of the
rat brain, called ventricles, where new cells are born and then migrate to
the brain's interior.
      The zone contains so-called stem cells that give rise to many other
cell types, including neurons and glial cells that nourish neurons.
      The new cells seen in the rat brains appear at a higher rate after
challenges like intense training, injury or an infection, Dr. Raastad said.
Within a few years, researchers found the cells in adult mice, guinea pigs,
rabbits and monkeys. In the mid-1980's, other researchers found irrefutable
evidence that new cells were born in the brains of adult canaries learning
new songs and chickadees that were remembering where they had stashed their
winter seeds. But researchers still did not believe that new cells were
created in human brains, Dr. Raastad said.
      In 1997, Dr. Elizabeth Gould, an assistant professor of neuroscience
at Princeton and colleagues showed that neurogenesis, or the birth of new
cells, occurred in the hippocampuses of tree shrews and marmoset monkeys.
But Dr. Rakic and others said this was not possible in humans.
      In 1998, Dr. Gage demonstrated that the number of brain cells in the
hippocampuses of mice raised in stimulating environments increased by 15
percent -- and that the cells were born in the ventricle zone.
      "This made us go look for the same in humans," Dr. Gage said. Swedish
colleagues were using a special substance that integrates into the DNA of
dividing cells to track tumor cells in cancer patients, he said.
      Last year, this substance was found in the hippocampuses of five
cancer patients whose brains were dissected immediately after they died.
      This was a "thrilling" discovery, Dr. Gage said. It means that the
human brain makes new cells in an area already known to be involved in
short-term memory.
      Some sort of neurogenesis may be widespread in the brain and spinal
cord for maintenance, he said. Like skin, the brain may be repairing itself
all the time. But like a big gash to the skin, a large brain injury like a
stroke can overwhelm the repair system.
      As for the rest of the brain, including the cortex, where complex
functions like language and long-term memories reside, Dr. Gould injected
the same dye used in the human experiments into macaque monkey brains. By
tracing the chemical, she found that neurons had been born in the ventricles
and had migrated into the higher cortex, where they made new axons.
      They appeared to connect up to local circuitry and perhaps extend into
wider circuits, she said, adding that the same might be true for human
brains.
      But the most surprising finding about new cell growth in the human
brain has been virtually ignored by most neuroscientists.
      This part of the story began more than two decades ago when a young
doctor in training, , William Rodman Shankle, salvaged a stack of cardboard
boxes containing the largest database ever collected on the developing human
cerebral cortex.
      The data had been collected from 1939 to 1967 by Dr. Jesse L. Conel of
Boston Children's Hospital, who examined the brains of infants and children
up to age 6 who had died from accidents or diseases not affecting brain
cells. Before his death, he made more than four million measurements,
including the width, thickness and packing density of brain cells at birth
and at 1, 3, 6, 15, 24, 48 and 72 months of age.
      Dr. Conel published eight volumes of research. Several boxes of his
raw data were about to be thrown out -- tissue samples and slides already
having been discarded -- when Dr. Shankle, now a neurologist at the
University of California at Irvine, noticed them stacked in a hallway at
Boston University and rescued them.
      Dr. Conel did not have computer tools to measure exact numbers of
cells, Dr. Shankle said, but he did describe, at each age and within 35
brain areas, the appearance of vertical columns of neurons.
      It is now known that higher brain functions stem from arrays of these
columns.
      Dr. Shankle and his colleagues re-examined Dr. Conel's data using
modern mathematical and computer techniques to allow for cell shrinkage and
to distinguish neurons from other kinds of brain cells.
      They found an astonishingly dynamic pattern in all 35 areas.
      In each square millimeter of tissue, Dr. Shankle said, the number of
neurons rises by a third from birth to 3 months as new cells are added.
      Then the number plummets back to birth level between 3 and 15 months.
      After this point, the number increases rapidly, doubling by the age of
6 years. It probably continues increasing, although at a slower rate, up to
age 18 or 21, Dr. Shankle said.
      The brain enlarges by making new columns, not by making existing ones
larger, Dr. Shankle said.
      "I suspect that a single set of rules constructs all brains," he said.
"Children progress through the same stage of development at same rates
independent of their culture."
      This rapid growth and construction of brain tissue may help explain
why children whose left or right brain hemispheres are removed entirely seem
to develop more or less normally, Dr. Shankle said. The rate of growth, or
plasticity, is so large early on, they can learn to do most things with
their remaining brain tissue.
      Dr. Anderson said that Dr. Shankle's findings were "well described and
adequately analyzed," and concluded, "I see no major flaws in his handling
of the material."
      But Dr. William T. Greenough, a University of Illinois neuroscientist,
said he was not yet convinced that Dr. Shankle had proved that the growth
was from new nerve cells and not from supporting cells called glia. "He may
be right," he said, "but the work needs to be replicated."
      Meanwhile, Dr. Steven A. Goldman of Cornell Medical Center in New York
City is studying human brain tissue removed from epilepsy patients and has
found progenitor cells in the ventricles.
      About 10 percent of cells in this zone are progenitors that give rise
to other cell types, he said. This is a trivial number compared with the
brain's 100 billion cells, but it may be enough to carry out maintenance and
repair of the higher cortex, he said.
      The challenge is to make such cells useful, Dr. Goldman said. "We
still don't know where they go," he said, "but we do know they're dividing.
Some are becoming neurons." If ways could be found to induce their expansion
in the human brain, he said, new treatments for a wide variety of brain
disorders would be on the near horizon.
____________________________________________________________
editor: Lenny Schafer [log in to unmask]
eastern editor: Catherine Johnson, PhD [log in to unmask]

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