First-Ever Smell Map Is a Breakthrough in Sensory Research, a Step to Help Us Tackle Loss of Smell
discovermagazine - Discover how smell receptors in our noses aren’t randomly arranged but are highly organized, offering new paths toward treating sensory impairment.
AI Summary: Scientists have produced the first high‑resolution olfactory map, charting how scent receptors and neural circuits are organized in the nose. The atlas exposes unexpected patterns in odor encoding, helps explain smell loss, and points to new diagnostic and therapeutic pathways — including potential early markers of Alzheimer’s‑related olfactory damage.
- Hidden nose atlas rewrites smell organization, flags Alzheimer links (4)
- New brain markers and tests for early Alzheimer detection (4)
- All Other Stories
Hidden nose atlas rewrites smell organization, flags Alzheimer links
New brain markers and tests for early Alzheimer detection
All Other Stories
Preeclampsia could be treated with 'blood filtering' therapy, early study hints
livescience - A blood-filtering therapy for preeclampsia is safe for pregnant patients and their babies, according to a new pilot study.
AI Summary: Early clinical work suggests removing a circulating anti‑angiogenic factor can safely extend pregnancies in severe preeclampsia. Researchers used targeted extracorporeal filtration to lower soluble Fms‑like tyrosine kinase‑1 (sFlt‑1) levels, improving maternal and fetal stability long enough to delay delivery and reduce immediate risks, meriting larger controlled trials.