Saturday 25 February 2012

MYSTERIOUS PLACEBO EFFECT IN HUMAN BRAIN



Continued.........from the last write........

Still talking of the MYSTERIOUS PLACEBO EFFECT on man's brain..........

I have personally experimented with people in my vicinity and life and over the period of time found again and again the brain co -operates and produces the required chemical in the brain.If it is convinced of the good effect of the given treatment or drug prescribed!

In fact I have for the past few years experimented with myself to.......


IN 2000 neurolgy professor Dr Jon Stoessl,director of CANADA'S "PARKINSON'S RESEARCH CENTRE",

PARKINSON'S DISEASE 
ONE OF THE MANY MYSTERIES OF THIS DISEASE IS THE DEGENERATIVE NEUROLOGICAL DISORDER
In which one part of the brain, stops producing enough DOPAMINE to allow for normal function of motor nerves......to have good motor control.

Coming to the point of my ward;
He had been injured at a very early age,
By falling of the ladder to a considerable height

Showing no external injury at the time of this event
His parents; father who did business in the then Ceylon .

The child then started, developing transitory clot formation ....
oft fell flat on his nose; even if her ran with his friends.

This went unnoticed and on his 16th year of growth SIVAGNANAM  ; as this child was called
fell in his class room during school final year exams.

This was then brought to parental attention and treatments were pursued and the child getting fits
in extreme times;
Was hospitalised in (Madras )CHENNAI for a period of SIX Months and intensive treatments underwent.
Epilepsy is a disorder with many possible causes.
 Anything that disturbs the normal pattern of neuron
 activity -- from illness to brain damage to 
abnormal brain development -- can lead to seizures.
Epilepsy may develop because of an abnormality in brain wiring,
 an imbalance of nerve signaling
 chemicals called neurotransmitters,
 or some combination of these factors. Researchers believe
 that some people with epilepsy have an abnormally high level 
of excitatory neurotransmitters
 that increase neuronal activity, while others have
 an abnormally low level of inhibitory
 neurotransmitters that decrease neuronal activity in the brain.
 Either situation can result in too much neuronal activity 
and cause epilepsy.
Genetic Factors
Research suggests that genetic abnormalities may be some
 of the most important factors contributing
 to epilepsy. Some types of epilepsy have been traced
 to an abnormality in a specific gene.
 Many other types of epilepsy tend to run in families,
 which suggests that genes influence epilepsy.
 Some researchers estimate that more than
 500 genes could play a role in this disorder.
 However, it is increasingly clear that,
 for many forms of epilepsy,
 genetic abnormalities play only a partial role,
 perhaps by increasing a person's susceptibility to seizures
 that are triggered by an environmental factor.








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