Spike Protein Lingers in Brain, Fuels Long COVID - Neuroscience News

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Pawan Upadhyay

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Nov 30, 2024, 10:54:16 AM11/30/24
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Spike Protein Lingers in Brain, Fuels Long COVID - Neuroscience News
 
 
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Hello Pawan,
 
Thank you for continuing to read and share Neuroscience News.
 
 

These are the latest neuroscience research articles featured on NeuroscienceNews.com.
 
 
 
2024-11-29 18:22:20 +00:00
 
This shows a line of people, depicting evolution.A new study reveals that modern humans, Neanderthals, and other relatives evolved larger brains through gradual changes within each species, overturning the idea of sudden leaps in brain size. Researchers used the largest-ever fossil dataset spanning 7 million years and advanced statistical methods to reconstruct brain size evolution.
 
2024-11-29 18:42:35 +00:00
 
This shows a brain and computer chips.A new study demonstrates that large language models (LLMs) can predict the outcomes of neuroscience studies more accurately than human experts, achieving 81% accuracy compared to 63% for neuroscientists. Using a tool called BrainBench, researchers tested LLMs and human experts on identifying real versus fabricated study abstracts, finding that the AI models excelled even when neuroscientists had domain-specific expertise.
 
2024-11-29 19:31:46 +00:00
 
This shows a head and a brain.A new study reveals that individuals with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and a family history of mental illness have a heightened risk of aggression during adulthood, particularly between ages 40 and 59. Researchers analyzed data from 845 men with histories of head injuries, finding that those with both CTE and a family history of mental illness displayed significantly more aggressive behaviors than those with only one risk factor.
 
2024-11-29 20:16:21 +00:00
 
This shows a skull and COVID.A new study reveals that the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein remains in brain-protective tissues and skull bone marrow for years after infection, potentially driving long COVID's neurological symptoms. Using advanced imaging, researchers discovered elevated spike protein levels in these regions, leading to chronic brain inflammation and increased risks of neurodegenerative conditions.
 
 
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