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 <title>all Ronald Desrosiers stories</title>
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 <title>Brain injury reversed in animal model of AIDS</title>
 <link>http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/medicine-health/articles/brain-injury-reversed-animal-model-aids</link>
 <description>&lt;!--paging_filter--&gt;&lt;p&gt;Depending on the circumstances, missing N-acetylaspartate  (NAA) in the brain may indicate Alzheimer&#039;s disease, ischemic  stroke, a brain tumor, or traumatic injury. And, as doctors soon  learned with the AIDS epidemic, NAA levels drop in tandem with  the neurological deterioration that further cripples people with  HIV.
&lt;p&gt;Yet Gilberto Gonzalez was unprepared for the precipitous fall  and resurgence of this marker of neuronal injury in macaques  with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) over the course of their  AIDS-like disease, before and after they were treated with a  potent antiretroviral cocktail.
&lt;p&gt;&quot;We expected a decline, but we saw a whopping decline,&quot; said  Gonzalez, Harvard Medical School professor of radiology and  chief of neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital.  &quot;When we treated them, we expected the decline to stabilize, but  the rebound was as stunning as the decline. I&#039;ve never seen  anything like it.&quot;
&lt;p&gt;The observations suggest that neuronal injury in AIDS - and  perhaps other neurodegenerative diseases - may be reversible  and that treating monocytes in the blood may ameliorate or  prevent the brain damage, Gonzalez and his colleagues reported  in the September 2005 Journal of Clinical Investigation.&lt;/p&gt;
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 <pubDate>Mon, 26 Mar 2007 05:41:11 -0400</pubDate>
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 <guid isPermaLink="false">3555 at http://harvardscience.harvard.edu</guid>
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