Ask your doctor to ask their leaders if this is true or not. I was planning on neurogenesis to get me recovered. If not then I guess I'm screwed like 10 million yearly stroke survivors. I don't expect stem cells for centuries.
Human hippocampal neurogenesis drops sharply in children to undetectable levels in adults
- Nature
- doi:10.1038/nature25975
- Download Citation
- Received:
- Accepted:
- Published online:
Abstract
New neurons continue to be generated in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus of the adult mammalian hippocampus1,2,3,4,5. This process has been linked to learning and memory, stress and exercise, and is thought to be altered in neurological disease6,7,8,9,10. In humans, some studies have suggested that hundreds of new neurons are added to the adult dentate gyrus every day11, whereas other studies find many fewer putative new neurons12,13,14.
Despite these discrepancies, it is generally believed that the adult
human hippocampus continues to generate new neurons. Here we show that a
defined population of progenitor cells does not coalesce in the
subgranular zone during human fetal or postnatal development. We also
find that the number of proliferating progenitors and young neurons in
the dentate gyrus declines sharply during the first year of life and
only a few isolated young neurons are observed by 7 and 13 years of age.
In adult patients with epilepsy and healthy adults (18–77 years; n = 17 post-mortem samples from controls; n = 12
surgical resection samples from patients with epilepsy), young neurons
were not detected in the dentate gyrus. In the monkey (Macaca mulatta)
hippocampus, proliferation of neurons in the subgranular zone was found
in early postnatal life, but this diminished during juvenile
development as neurogenesis decreased. We conclude that recruitment of
young neurons to the primate hippocampus decreases rapidly during the
first years of life, and that neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus does not
continue, or is extremely rare, in adult humans. The early decline in
hippocampal neurogenesis raises questions about how the function of the
dentate gyrus differs between humans and other species in which adult
hippocampal neurogenesis is preserved.
References
- 1.Altman, J. & Das, G. D. Autoradiographic and histological evidence of postnatal hippocampal neurogenesis in rats. J. Comp. Neurol. 124, 319–335 (1965)
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