Teresa Blanchette Schumacher, CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2403 Castlegreen Dr, Greencastle, PA 17225 Phone: 717-895-3165 |
Brooke Lindsey Carlson, M.S., CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 433 S Carlisle St, Greencastle, PA 17225 Phone: 814-771-8392 |
News Archive
People with anxiety disorders, such as post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), often experience prolonged and exaggerated fearfulness. Now, an animal study suggests that this might involve disruption of a gradual shifting of brain circuitry for retrieving fear memories. Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health have discovered in rats that an old fear memory is recalled by a separate brain pathway from the one originally used to recall it when it was fresh.
A widely available drug may be effective in treating kidney disease, report scientists at the University of California, Santa Barbara. They describe the discovery in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science.
A team of researchers has studied the neural basis of intellectual disability in mice with Down syndrome and has discovered that the neural networks of brain circuits relevant to memory and learning are over-activated and that the connectivity of these circuits is poor.
How do mammals prepare themselves in utero for a radical modification to their respiration at the time of birth, when they move abruptly from an aquatic medium to air? CNRS researchers, working in collaboration with teams from the Universities of the Méditerranée, Paris-Sud 11 and Paul Cézanne have identified a gene in the mouse that is essential to respiration and consequently to survival at birth.
› Verified 8 days ago