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Torn neck arteries may be more common than once thought

Along each side of the neck are a pair of arteries that supply blood to the brain. It's rare for one of those blood vessels to tear. But it's one of the most common causes of a stroke in younger adults, according to a new report that comes on the…

United-states
Minnesota
Rhode-island
American
Zafer-keser
Shadi-yaghi
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Alpert-medical-school
Brown-university

Torn neck arteries may be more common than once thought

Along each side of the neck are a pair of arteries that supply blood to the brain. It s rare for one of those blood vessels to tear. But it s one

Minnesota
United-states
Rhode-island
American
Shadi-yaghi
Zafer-keser
American-heart-association
Mayo-clinic-college-of-medicine
American-heart-association-inc
Mayo-clinic-college
Alpert-medical-school
Brown-university

Torn neck arteries may be more common than once thought

Along each side of the neck are a pair of arteries that supply blood to the brain. It s rare for one of those blood vessels to tear. But it s one

United-states
Minnesota
Rhode-island
American
Zafer-keser
Shadi-yaghi
American-heart-association
Mayo-clinic-college-of-medicine
Mayo-clinic-college
Alpert-medical-school
Brown-university
Cnhi-network

Robotic device powered by patients' own brains helps improve stroke rehabilitation

Stroke survivors who had ceased to benefit from conventional rehabilitation gained clinically significant arm movement and control by using an external robotic device powered by the patients' own brains.

University-of-houston
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Tapping the brain to boost stroke rehabilitation

 E-Mail IMAGE: Testing showed most patients retained the benefits for at least two months after the therapy sessions ended, suggesting the potential for long-lasting gains. view more  Credit: University of Houston Stroke survivors who had ceased to benefit from conventional rehabilitation gained clinically significant arm movement and control by using an external robotic device powered by the patients own brains. The results of the clinical trial were described in the journal Jose Luis Contreras-Vidal, director of the Non-Invasive Brain Machine Interface Systems Laboratory at the University of Houston, said testing showed most patients retained the benefits for at least two months after the therapy sessions ended, suggesting the potential for long-lasting gains. He is also Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished Professor of electrical and computer engineering.

University-of-houston
Texas
United-states
Rice-university
Jose-luis-contreras-vidal
Hugh-roy
Gerard-francisco
Nuray-yozbatiran
Rupa-paranjape
Marciak-omalley
Lillie-cranz-cullen
Zachary-hernandez

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