Is your doctor familiar with this? And why is your doctor prescribing botox? It doesn't directly help recovery. It makes your doctor look like something is being done but that's all it does, 'looks'.
And why use botox for stroke anyway, it provides no functional improvement.
My botox shots did nothing to improve my arm use, because botox does nothing directly to fix the brain problem that causes spasticity.
Does Spasticity Reduction by Botulinum Toxin Type A Improve Upper Limb Functionality in Adult Post-Stroke Patients? A Systematic Review of Relevant Studies December 2022
In this study from December 2022 is this line: No improvement in global functionality of activity daily living was observed.
Study Reveals How Botox Breaches Brain Cells
Summary: Researchers have cracked the mystery behind how the Botulinum neurotoxin type-A, also known as Botox, infiltrates neurons. The toxin utilizes a small complex formed by a receptor called Synaptotagmin 1, along with two other clostridial neurotoxin receptors, to enter synaptic vesicles in neurons.
This infiltration interrupts nerve-to-muscle communication, leading to paralysis. The findings, which provide a complete picture of Botox’s method of operation, will aid in identifying new therapeutic targets for botulism treatment.
Key Facts:
- Researchers discovered that a receptor called Synaptotagmin 1, in collaboration with two other receptors, helps Botox enter neurons.
- Once inside the neurons, Botox disrupts communication between nerves and muscle cells, causing paralysis.
- The study’s insights could lead to the identification of new therapeutic targets to treat botulism.
Source: University of Queensland
Researchers from The University of Queensland have determined how Botox—a drug made from a deadly biological substance—enters brain cells.
Professor Frederic Meunier and Dr. Merja Joensuu at UQ’s Queensland Brain Institute have discovered the specific molecular mechanism by which the highly deadly Botulinum neurotoxin type-A, more widely known as Botox, enters neurons.
The research is published in The EMBO Journal.
“We used super-resolution microscopy to show that a receptor called Synaptotagmin 1 binds to two other previously known clostridial neurotoxin receptors to form a tiny complex that sits on the plasma membrane of neurons,” Professor Meunier said.
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