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Nov 04
Omega-3 rich diet may help beating reading difficulties in dyslexic kids
A new study has revealed that a diet rich in omega-3 could help tackle children's reading difficulties.

According to the study by researchers at University of Oxford, the key to dyslexia is hearing and in order to do phonics correctly, you've got to hear the order of sounds in the word very clearly, the Guardian reported.

Professor John Stein said that many dyslexics hear the sounds, but they can't get them in the right sequence because their auditory nerve cells are not working fast enough, and we think this is because of a lack of certain omega-3 fatty acids.

One of the alleles believed to be associated with dyslexia is involved in metabolising these crucial omega-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. One of these, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), makes up 50 percent of the membranes of nerve cells in the auditory system, known as magnocells. DHA and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) are also involved in creating the myelination around nerve cells, which allows signals to pass more quickly.

When they work properly, auditory magnocells track rapid fluctuations in sound frequency and amplitude; the subtle cues that enable you to distinguish the sequence in which sounds occur. To do this, they require their membranes to be highly flexible and able to react quickly. However, Stein believes the development of these magnocells is impaired in many dyslexic people, and that this may be the result of a lack of DHA and EPA, both of which are found in fish oil.

Current recommendations suggest we should consume around 220mg of DHA a day. Our ancestors would easily have exceeded this, with fish forming one of the main components of their diets. However, since the advent of processed ready-meals, the amount we consume has fallen drastically. Last year, the British Nutrition Foundation found that around 80% of five- to 16-year-olds in the UK eat fewer than two portions of fish a week.

The study found that it was possible to improve the reading abilities of children by giving them supplements of DHA. A larger replication study is currently underway to try to confirm this finding.

Nov 03
Recreational drug use linked to birth defects
Babies born to mothers who used recreational drugs during pregnancy are more likely to have birth defects in the brain, said a study.

The study found no significant links between recreational drug use and any other type of birth defect.

"Our findings suggest a link between brain birth defects and recreational drug use in expectant mothers," said the lead author of the study, Anna David from the University College London.

The study included 213 women whose babies had a type of birth defect with potential links to recreational drug use, 143 women whose babies had a birth defect with no previously reported links to drug use and 161 women whose babies were normally formed.

The researchers found that 77 (14.9 percent) of the women who agreed to take part tested positive for at least one type of recreational drug.

Evidence of drug use was found in a significantly higher proportion of women whose babies were born with brain birth defects (35 percent), compared with women whose babies were normally formed (13 percent).

Brain birth defects included brain anomalies other than spina bifida, such as brain cysts and under-development of the brain. These could have severe consequences and lead to lifelong conditions such as cerebral palsy.

The researchers took hair samples from consenting mothers, which were then tested for evidence of recreational drug use.

The results were published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Nov 01
Young heart can heal itself faster
The heart holds its own pool of immune cells capable of helping it to heal after injury, finds research, adding that the harmful immune cells from the bone marrow disrupts this process in adults.

These immune cells are called macrophages - whether they reside in the heart or arrive from the bone marrow.

Blocking the bone marrow's macrophages from entering the heart protects the organ's beneficial pool of macrophages, allowing them to remain in the heart where they promote regeneration and recovery, research on mouse model showed.

"This may explain why the young heart can recover while the adult heart cannot," said Kory Lavine from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

"The same macrophages that promote healing after injury in the neo-natal heart also are present in the adult heart but they seem to go away with injury," Lavine explained.

The investigators found that the helpful macrophages originate in the embryonic heart and harmful macrophages originate in the bone marrow and could be distinguished by whether they express a protein on their surface called CCR2.

Macrophages without CCR2 originate in the heart; those with CCR2 come from the bone marrow, the research showed.

The researchers found that a compound that inhibits the CCR2 protein could block the bone marrow's macrophages from entering the heart.

"When we did that, we found that the macrophages from the bone marrow did not come in," Lavine said.

"And the macrophages native to the heart remained. We saw reduced inflammation in these injured adult hearts, less oxidative damage and improved repair. We also saw new blood vessel growth," Lavine added.

The study appeared in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition.

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