Well shit, this has been known by Dr. Dale Corbett since 2011
Stimulate senses and stroke rehab
The latest here:
Enriched Environments Hold Promise for Brain Injury Patients
As football players are learning, a violent blow to the head has
the potential to cause mild to severe traumatic brain injury— physical
damage to the brain that can be debilitating, even fatal. The long-term
effects run the gamut of human functioning, from trouble communicating
to extensive cognitive and behavioral deterioration. To date, there is
no effective medical or cognitive treatment for patients with traumatic
brain injuries.
But a new study from Tel Aviv University researchers points to an
"enriched environment"— specially enhanced surroundings— as a promising
path for the rehabilitation of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI)
patients. The research, published in Behavioral Brain Research, was led
by Professor Chagi Pick of TAU's Sagol School of Neuroscience and
Sackler Faculty of Medicine and conducted by a team of researchers from
both TAU and TAU-affiliated Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.
Mice move on up
The study, conducted on mice at a TAU laboratory, followed two
groups of animals with minimal traumatic brain injury. The first group
was kept in standard cages and maintained under routine conditions,
while the second enjoyed "enriched environments," replete with sensory
stimuli, open space, and plentiful opportunities to eat and exercise.
"A house may survive an earthquake, but up close you will see
cracks in the walls. This is what may happen following traumatic brain
injury," said Pick. "An MRI might determine that the brain looks normal,
but fast forward two years and the patient, who was married and
successful, is suddenly unemployed, divorced, and miserable — without
any awareness or understanding that new and lasting cognitive and
emotional difficulties (including various degrees of amnesia, difficulty
concentrating, depression, apathy, anxiety, and even a prominent
personality change) emerged due to a car accident two years earlier."
He continued" "Doctors in the emergency room harness the Glasgow
Coma Scale to assess the extent of brain trauma in incoming patients—
from a child who falls off the bed to a victim of a major accident. In
the majority of cases, doctors determine minimal damage according to the
symptoms that appear over a very short period of monitoring- just 30
minutes. In 85 percent of cases, this is accurate, but in 15 percent of
cases, a cascade of serious damage has just begun, and we don't really
know why. But this is what we are trying to figure out."
An environment of riches
According to the study, an "enriched environment" may play a
critical role in brain regulation, behavior, and physiology. Using a
model of minimal TBI in mice, the team evaluated the effect of
transition to an enriched environment on behavioral and cognitive
parameters. Using the Novel Object Recognition task, in which mice
exhibit different levels of curiosity about new objects placed in their
cages, and run different mazes to establish navigation abilities, the
researchers sought to determine the mice's level of functioning in
standard cages versus enriched environments— cages with additional
stimuli, running wheels, plenty of food, open space, and water. The mice
exposed to an enriched environment showed a marked improvement in
recovery from brain injuries.
"We have shown that just six weeks in an enriched environment can
help animals recover from cognitive dysfunctions after traumatic brain
injury," said Pick. "Possible clinical implications indicate the
importance of adapting elements of enriched environments to humans, such
as prolonged and intensive physical activity, possibly combined with
intensive cognitive stimulation. Through proper exercise, stimuli, and
diet, we can improve a patient's condition. No one is promising a cure,
but now we have evidence that this can help."
Source: Tel Aviv University
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