News

Parkinson’s disease is a serious brain condition that slowly affects movement, balance, and coordination. Unfortunately, most ...
Mounting evidence suggests there might be two separate types of the world’s fastest-growing neurological condition. Can this ...
A phase I/II trial showed that transplanting dopaminergic progenitors derived from induced pluripotent stem cells was safe in Parkinson's disease, while a phase I trial of the human embryonic stem ...
In a first-of-its-kind human trial, researchers transplanted iPS-cell-derived dopaminergic progenitors into patients with ...
Two new studies suggest that Parkinson's disease can potentially be treated with stem cells placed in a patient's brain.
Precise mapping of a patient’s brain can enable a wider range of treatments, writes DR ROWLAND ILLING, chief medical officer ...
Two centuries on, most specialists still rely on physical symptoms to diagnose Parkinson’s disease. In other words ... remains invisible – even to MRI scans. Mapping changes in the 200 ...
Two new studies suggest that Parkinson's disease can potentially be treated with stem cells placed in a patient's brain.
Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disease characterised by the progressive loss of neurons that produce dopamine, a neurotransmitter. Also Read: Cancer risk from CT scan radiation at par ...
Two new studies suggest that stem cells are close to helping people with Parkinson's disease. The results are a victory for scientists who have spent decades trying to treat it with brain cells.