• Home
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Futurism
  • Weather Extreme

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Why companies should embrace ‘Metaverse Winter’

May 30, 2023

NVIDIA MGX Gives System Makers Modular Architecture to Meet Diverse Accelerated Computing Needs of World’s Data Centers

May 30, 2023

SOEs realize STAR Market funding power

May 30, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
Futurist JournalFuturist Journal
Demo
  • Home
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Futurism
  • Weather Extreme
Futurist JournalFuturist Journal
Home » 40 Hz Vibrations Reduce Alzheimer’s Disease Symptoms
Latest Science

40 Hz Vibrations Reduce Alzheimer’s Disease Symptoms

NewsBy NewsMay 21, 2023Updated:May 21, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

An MIT study shows that 40 Hz gamma frequency brain rhythm tactile stimulation may reduce Alzheimer’s disease pathology and symptoms. This extends previous findings from light and sound stimulation studies. The research found that such tactile stimulation not only improved brain health and motor function but also reduced levels of Alzheimer’s characteristic protein and neural DNA damage. The results reinforce the potential of non-invasive sensory stimulation as a new therapeutic strategy for neurodegenerative diseases.

Tactile stimulation improved motor performance, reduced phosphorylated tau, preserved neurons and synapses, and reduced DNA damage, a new study shows.

MIT researchers have found that sensory stimulation of 40 Hz gamma frequency brain rhythms using tactile stimulation can mitigate Alzheimer’s disease pathology and symptoms. The study, which builds on earlier work involving light and sound, showed that daily exposure to 40 Hz vibrations improved brain health and motor function in mice and reduced key markers of Alzheimer’s disease. This research underlines the potential for gamma frequency stimulation as a novel therapeutic approach to Alzheimer’s disease.

Evidence that non-invasive sensory stimulation of 40 Hz gamma frequency brain rhythms can reduce Alzheimer’s disease pathology and symptoms, already shown with light and sound by multiple research groups in mice and humans, now extends to tactile stimulation. A new study by MIT scientists shows that Alzheimer’s model mice exposed to 40 Hz vibration an hour a day for several weeks showed improved brain health and motor function compared to untreated controls.

The MIT group is not the first to show that gamma frequency tactile stimulation can affect brain activity and improve motor function, but they are the first to show that the stimulation can also reduce levels of the hallmark Alzheimer’s protein phosphorylated tau, keep neurons from dying or losing their synapse circuit connections, and reduce neural DNA damage.

“This work demonstrates a third sensory modality that we can use to increase gamma power in the brain,” said Li-Huei Tsai, corresponding author of the study, director of The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory and the Aging Brain Initiative at MIT, and Picower Professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS). “We are very excited to see that 40 Hz tactile stimulation benefits motor abilities, which has not been shown with the other modalities. It would be interesting to see if tactile stimulation can benefit human subjects with impairment in motor function.”

Brain Tau Reduction

An enlarged detail from a figure in the paper highlights reductions in phosphorylated tau (magenta) in primary somatosensory cortical neurons in Tau P301S model mice treated with 40 Hz tactile stimulation (right). An image from an untreated control is on the left. Credit: Tsai Lab/MIT Picower Institute

Ho-Jun Suk, Nicole Buie, Guojie Xu and Arit Banerjee are lead authors of the study in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience and Ed Boyden, Y. Eva Tan Professor of Neurotechnology at MIT, is a co-senior author of the paper. Boyden, an affiliate member of The Picwoer Institute, is also appointed in BCS as well as the Departments of Bioengineering and Media Arts and Sciences, the McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and the K. Lisa Yang Cener for Bionics.

Feeling the vibe

In a series of papers starting in 2016, a collaboration led by Tsai’s lab has demonstrated that light flickering and/or sound clicking at 40 Hz (a technology called GENUS for Gamma Entrainment Using Sensory stimuli), reduces levels of amyloid-beta and tau proteins, prevents neuron death and preserves synapses and even sustains learning and memory in a variety of Alzheimer’s disease mouse models. Most recently in pilot clinical studies the team showed that 40 Hz light and sound stimulation was safe, successfully increased brain activity and connectivity, and appeared to produce significant clinical benefits in a small cohort of human volunteers with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Other groups have replicated and corroborated health benefits of 40 Hz sensory stimulation and an MIT spin-off company, Cognito Therapeutics, has launched stage III clinical trials of light and sound stimulation as an Alzheimer’s treatment.

The new study tested whether whole-body 40 Hz tactile stimulation produced meaningful benefits in two commonly used mouse models of Alzheimer’s neurodegeneration, the Tau P301S mouse, which recapitulates the disease’s tau pathology, and the CK-p25 mouse, which recapitulates the synapse loss and DNA damage seen in human disease. The team focused its analyses in two areas of the brain: the primary somatosensory cortex (SSp), where tactile sensations are processed, and the primary motor cortex (MOp), where the brain produces movement commands for the body.

To produce the vibration stimulation, the researchers placed mouse cages over speakers playing 40 Hz sound, which vibrated the cages. Non-stimulated control mice were in cages interspersed in the same room so that all the mice heard the same 40 Hz sound. The differences measured between the stimulated and control mice were therefore made by the addition of tactile stimulation.

First, the researchers confirmed that 40 Hz vibration made a difference in neural activity in the brains of healthy (i.e. non-Alzheimer’s) mice. As measured by expression of c-fos protein, activity increased two-fold in the SSp and more than 3-fold in the MOp, a statistically significant increase in the latter case.

Once the researchers knew that 40 Hz tactile stimulation could increase neural activity, they assessed the impact on disease in the two mouse models. To ensure both sexes were represented, the team used male P301S mice and female CK-p25 mice.

P301S mice stimulated for three weeks showed significant preservation of neurons compared to unstimulated controls in both brain regions. Stimulated mice also showed significant reductions in tau in the SSp by two measures, and exhibited similar trends in the MOp.

CK-p25 mice received six weeks of vibration stimulation. These mice showed higher levels of synaptic protein markers in both brain regions compared to unvibrated control mice. They also showed reduced levels of DNA damage.

Finally, the team assessed the motor abilities of mice exposed to the vibration vs. not exposed. They found that both mouse models were able to stay on a rotating rod significantly longer. P301S mice also hung on to a wire mesh for significantly longer than control mice while CK-p25 mice showed a positive, though non-significant trend.

“The current study, along with our previous studies using visual or auditory GENUS demonstrates the possibility of using non-invasive sensory stimulation as a novel therapeutic strategy for ameliorating pathology and improving behavioral performance in neurodegenerative diseases,” the authors concluded.

Reference: “Vibrotactile stimulation at gamma frequency mitigates pathology related to neurodegeneration and improves motor function” by Ho-Jun Suk, Nicole Buie, Guojie Xu, Arit Banerjee, Edward S. Boyden and Li-Huei Tsai, 18 May 2023, Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience.
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2023.1129510

Support for the study came from The JPB Foundation, The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, Eduardo Eurnekian, The DeGroof-VM Foundation, Halis Family Foundation, Melissa and Doug Ko Hahn, Lester Gimpelson, Eleanor Schwartz Charitable Foundation, The Dolby Family, Kathleen and Miguel Octavio, Jay and Carroll Miller, Anne Gao and Alex Hu and Charles Hieken.

Source

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
News
  • Website

Related Posts

Adventures on Mars: ‘Ingenuity’ Helicopter Survives a Communications Blackout

May 30, 2023

Mars Helicopter went silent for six sols, risked rover • The Register

May 30, 2023

DNA Reveals a New Twist in Human Origin Story

May 29, 2023

A police officer’s first words to a Black driver signal how the car stop will go : NPR

May 29, 2023

Physicists Tune In to the Cosmic Ring of Black Holes

May 29, 2023

A logjam as big as Manhattan is battling climate change — for now.

May 29, 2023

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Posts
  • Why companies should embrace ‘Metaverse Winter’
  • NVIDIA MGX Gives System Makers Modular Architecture to Meet Diverse Accelerated Computing Needs of World’s Data Centers
  • SOEs realize STAR Market funding power
  • Adventures on Mars: ‘Ingenuity’ Helicopter Survives a Communications Blackout
  • Should AI be stopped before it is too late? | Technology
Recent Comments
    Demo
    Top Posts

    Chinese granny finds online fame for depiction of elderly loneliness

    December 4, 20219 Views

    Starbucks Teases Web 3 Platform in NFT Announcement

    May 4, 20225 Views

    Pandas AI: The Generative AI Python Library

    May 16, 20234 Views
    Don't Miss

    Why companies should embrace ‘Metaverse Winter’

    May 30, 2023

    The technology industry is known for its hype cycles, and the Metaverse is no exception.…

    NVIDIA MGX Gives System Makers Modular Architecture to Meet Diverse Accelerated Computing Needs of World’s Data Centers

    May 30, 2023

    SOEs realize STAR Market funding power

    May 30, 2023

    Adventures on Mars: ‘Ingenuity’ Helicopter Survives a Communications Blackout

    May 30, 2023
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Demo
    Most Popular

    Chinese granny finds online fame for depiction of elderly loneliness

    December 4, 20219 Views

    Starbucks Teases Web 3 Platform in NFT Announcement

    May 4, 20225 Views

    Pandas AI: The Generative AI Python Library

    May 16, 20234 Views
    Our Picks

    Why companies should embrace ‘Metaverse Winter’

    May 30, 2023

    NVIDIA MGX Gives System Makers Modular Architecture to Meet Diverse Accelerated Computing Needs of World’s Data Centers

    May 30, 2023

    SOEs realize STAR Market funding power

    May 30, 2023
    Editor's Pick

    AWS and Harvard are interested in a quantum internet

    September 12, 2022

    2, 3 even 4 feet of snow possible

    November 16, 2022

    Final Fantasy 14's Notorious Balmung Server Is Being Barricaded By Catgirls

    July 7, 2022
    Futurist Journal
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2023 futuristjournal.com - All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.