Last Array of Hope - COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma Therapy

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A pilot trial of convalescent plasma treatment in 10 extreme COVID-19 patients has indicated it might be a protected and promising helpful choice. M ore than fifteen Indian states and Union Territories represent over 95% of the total coronavirus cases in the nation. Amongst them, 33% of the  cases are reported in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, which are speeding up lately. Economic times surveys the information, which recommends that a portion of the 15 states/UTs need to put forth a more noteworthy attempt to flatten the curve. Source: WWW.MoHFW.gov Coronavirus disease is an infectious pneumonia-related severe respiratory illness. The official name, Coronavirus disease 2019 which is also called COVID-19 was given by the world health organization (WHO), and the first case of this disease was reported in Wuhan, China.  The scourge spread quickly all around the world within 3 months and has been declared as a pandemic by WHO on March 11, 2020. As of April 13...

Nerve cells that help control hunger -A finding

Newly identified nerve cells deep in the brains of mice compel them to eat. Similar cells exist in people, too, and may ultimately represent a new way to target eating disorders and obesity.
These neurons are not the first discovered to control appetite. But because of the mysterious brain region where they are found and the potential relevance to people, the mouse results “are worth pursuing,” says neurobiologist and physiologist Sabrina Diano of Yale University School of Medicine.
Certain nerve cells in the human brain region called the nucleus tuberalis lateralis, or NTL, are known to malfunction in neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington’s and Alzheimer’s. But “almost nothing is known about [the region],” says study coauthor Yu Fu of the Singapore Bioimaging Consortium, Agency for Science, Technology and Research.

In people, the NTL is a small bump along the bottom edge of the hypothalamus, a brain structure known to regulate eating behavior. But in mice, a similar structure wasn’t thought to exist at all, until Fu and colleagues discovered it by chance. The researchers were studying cells that produce a hormone called somatostatin — a molecular signpost of some NTL cells in people. In mice, that cluster of cells in the hypothalamus seemed to correspond to the human NTL.
Not only do these cells exist in mice, but they have a big role in eating behavior. The neurons sprang into action when the mice were hungry, or when the hunger-signaling hormone ghrelin was around, the team found. And when the researchers artificially activated the cells, using either laser light or molecular techniques, the mice ate more and gained weight faster than normal mice. Conversely, when the researchers killed the neurons, the mice didn’t eat as much and gained less weight than mice that still possessed the cells. The results suggest that, in mice, these neurons influence the impulse to eat — and subsequent changes in weight.
More experiments need to be done to study whether the cells behave similarly in people, Diano cautions.
Both Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s have been tied to metabolic problems and changes in appetite. The demise of appetite-controlling cells in the NTL might help explain why. 


If NTL cells do control appetite in humans, that brain region wouldn’t be working alone. Far from it. Neighboring nerve cells in and around the hypothalamus are also Known to play big roles in prodding the body to eat when food is available 
 “Our bodies were built to make sure we will eat whenever we have the chance,” Fu says.



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