Cover illustration for the Journal of Neurosurgery. Article describes errors in image-guided placement of drug infusion cannulae.
Illustration: Ethan Tyler
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Cover illustration for the Journal of Neurosurgery. Article describes errors in image-guided placement of drug infusion cannulae.
Illustration: Ethan Tyler
Cover illustration for the Journal of Neurosurgery. Article describes relationship of tumor to the venous drainage of the pituitary gland.
Illustration: Alan Hoofring
Cover illustration for Proteomics Clinical Applications. Article describes mass spectrometric phosphoproteome analysis of HIV-infected brain.
Illustration: Ethan Tyler
Researchers Get a Handle on How to Control Blood Sugar After Stroke
Researchers Get a Handle on How to Control Blood Sugar After Stroke
Hyperglycemia, or high levels of glucose, is common in patients with acute ischemic stroke and is associated with worse outcomes compared to normal blood sugar levels. Animal studies also pointed to an effect of high blood sugar in worsening stroke injury. Stroke experts have debated whether intensive glucose management after acute ischemic stroke leads to better outcomes but a new study in JAMA…
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Perhaps Dr. Judith Walters is such a good mentor because she had good mentors when she was a young scientist in the 1960s–1970s. Now that she is Chief of the Neurophysiological Pharmacology Section, NINDS, Walters encourages her staff to find a work–life balance that benefits them, which benefits science too. A neuropharmacologist — someone who studies how drugs affect the brain — Walters is known for her studies of mechanisms in the brain that mediate dysfunctions associated with neurological diseases and disorders such as Parkinson’s Disease. She became a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2018. A skilled scientist and mentor, Walters was the perfect candidate to give an Anita B. Roberts Lecture. Watch “Inside the Parkinsonian Brain: Is Too Much Rhythm a Bad Thing?” https://bit.ly/2V8DjdQ
Walters received her B.A. degree from Mt. Holyoke College and her Ph.D. from Yale University. She did postdoctoral work at the Department of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine and then moved to the Experimental Therapeutics Branch in NINDS @IRPatNIH. Read why she cares about mentoring https://bit.ly/2NiscN0
Hmmm…when and where was this photo of Dr. Ichiji Tasaki (left) taken? There’s a plethora of possibilities. The photo of Tasaki hard at work with an unknown colleague comes to us courtesy of his son, Keiji Tasaki, and daughter-in-law, Ann Rossilli. While working in his native Japan, Tasaki demonstrated that a myelin sheath insulates nerve cells and speeds the conduction of nerve impulses. Keiji and Ann believe Tasaki is in his 30s in this photo (c. 1940). We’re still trying to find out what it is he’s working on though
Tasaki came to #NIH in 1953 and worked at NINDS, NIMH, and NICHD until his death at 98. Learn more https://bit.ly/2LvTLVb
August 2018
Look at my poster that I presented today!! At the NIH Summer Poster Day!! I'm so happy!!
Illustration depicting organelle interactions in an axon.
Illustration: Erina He