🥳🥳CONGRATULATIONS THIRTEEN🥳🥳
(but also in all seriousness, I hope a lot of people derive hope from this!!)
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🥳🥳CONGRATULATIONS THIRTEEN🥳🥳
(but also in all seriousness, I hope a lot of people derive hope from this!!)
OH YEAH FUCK WAIT I PROBABLY HAVE HUNTINGTONS ANYWAYS LMAOOOO why am i so worried about the future, im probably not making it past 30, I FORGOT HDJDBDBBCSNBD
🧬 Tiny Molecules, Big Impact: How microRNAs Could Change the Future of Brain Disease Diagnosis
Neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s disease, and ALS are some of the most heartbreaking conditions out there. They slowly rob people of memory, movement, and independence. What makes them even harder to fight is that, by the time symptoms appear, the damage in the brain has already begun years earlier.
Click Here to Access Full Article
So how do we catch these diseases before it’s too late? That’s the question we explored in our new review article published in Neurological Sciences:
👉 “MicroRNAs in neurodegenerative diseases: from molecular mechanisms to clinical biomarkers, detection methods and therapeutic strategies — advances and challenges.” 🔗 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10072-025-08419-w
🧠 What Are microRNAs (miRNAs)?
Think of microRNAs as tiny molecular switches 🧩 short RNA strands (about 22 nucleotides long) that help cells decide which genes to turn on or off. They’re incredibly powerful: a single miRNA can regulate hundreds of genes involved in neuron health, inflammation, and stress responses.
When these miRNAs get out of balance, they can drive the processes that lead to neurodegeneration.
🧪 What Our Review Found
Our article dives into how miRNAs are being used in three major ways:
1️⃣ As Biomarkers: Because miRNAs circulate in blood and cerebrospinal fluid, they could make early detection as simple as a blood test instead of invasive brain scans.
2️⃣ For Detection Technologies: We highlight cutting-edge tools like RT-qPCR, NGS, and biosensor platforms, showing how close they are to point-of-care diagnostics 🧫💡.
3️⃣ As Therapeutics: Scientists are now designing miRNA mimics and inhibitors that can correct abnormal gene activity — like silencing harmful proteins in Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. The biggest hurdle? Delivering them safely across the blood–brain barrier 🧱.
🚀 Why It Matters
MicroRNAs could be the missing link between molecular biology and real-world medicine. If validated, miRNA-based tests could: ✅ Detect neurodegenerative diseases years before symptoms appear ✅ Monitor disease progression non-invasively ✅ Open the door to personalized RNA-based therapies
But for that to happen, we need better standardization, larger patient studies, and smarter data analysis
💬 Final Thoughts
Science is moving faster than ever. What excites me most is how tiny molecules like microRNAs are helping us see the brain’s molecular “whispers” long before it screams for help.
If you’re a neuroscientist, molecular biologist, or just curious about the future of medicine, check out our full paper here 👇
Azam H.M.H. et al. MicroRNAs in neurodegenerative diseases: from molecular mechanisms to clinical biomarkers, detection methods and therapeutic strategies—advances and challenges. Neurological Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1007/s10072-025-08419-w
2. Azam HMH, Rößling RI, Geithe C, Khan MM, Dinter F, Hanack K, Prüß H, Husse B, Roggenbuck D, Schierack P, Rödiger S. MicroRNA biomarkers as next-generation diagnostic tools for neurodegenerative diseases: a comprehensive review. Front Mol Neurosci (2024). DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2024.1386735
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My cousin has Huntingtons and is unable to move her body on her own and she can say a few words with difficulty. She recently was moved into a nursing home and I dont believe the care staff is doing enough to keep her stimulated. She's bored. Today I came in her room and all the lights were off and she was just left alone in the dark.
I want to get her some things to help her room be more visually interesting and homey. We don't have the sort of assistance devices she would need to be able to be more independent but I can at least get her some things to look at and listen to.
I would really love some suggestions because I'm really lost on what might help keep her at least a little stimulated.
Ideas so far:
-She likes the idea of a radio
- Soft pretty blankets
- Pictures of family
Huntington’s Disease
Um, hello!
I’m Shift! Just made this blog to try and, I dunno, talk about, vent, some of my feelings and experiences with Huntingtons. It’s criminally unmentioned, although it’s not common so I suppose that makes sense, but it’s brutal.
For clarification, my mother has the disease and it’s been rough. And of course since it’s my mother I have a 50/50 shot of having it too. Which is uh.. fun.
If you don’t know, Huntingtons Disease is essentially an overproduction of the protein Huntington in your brain. It sorta kicks in at a certain age (age varies but is generally similar to whenever it occurred to your parent) and from then over the next 20 ish years (once again, varies) gradually breaks down and destroys your brain.
It has no cure and is 100% fatal.
This is really just a sort of introduction. See how this goes y’know. Who knows, maybe I won’t use it that much but I feel like it could be good.
If this is a subject you relate to, or want to know more about, feel free to reach out! Sometimes I feel like I can’t talk about this subject enough, so don’t feel shy, I want to talk!
Basic Cell Health Systems Wear Down in Huntington’s Disease
Huntington's disease may progress to advanced stages as a result of degradation of the cells' health maintenance system than due to the increased disease pathology itself.