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This month, signs that cancers communicate with the brain to alter mood, why antibodies are unreliable in research, evidence that social training can cut stress and boost brain volume, and agents derived from birth products that suppress inflammation and kill pain... Get the references and the transcripts for this programme from the Naked Scientists website
"Evidence for Diagnostic Blocks Prior to Radiofrequency Ablation of Innervation to the Lumbar Facet Joints—None, Once, or Twice?" by by Sireedhorn Assavanop, MD, and Anuj Bhatia, MD, PhD, FRCPC. From ASRA Pain Medicine News, May 2024. See original article at www.asra.com/may24news for figures and references. This material is copyrighted. Support the Show.
Is fascia innervated? Could fascia be a pain generator. Learn about specific nerve endings and where they are found in the body. Enjoy the most recent Systematic Review on Fascial Innervation. Reach out with questions or comments at: onmmpodcast@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/benjamin--greene/message
In dieser Folge packen´s Frank und Moritz an und reichen euch eine Menge handfester anatomischer Fakten, die sich nicht einfach an einer Hand abzählen lassen. Die beiden erklären, inwiefern die Knochen- und Gelenkstruktur des Daumens aus der Reihe tanzt, um Beweglichkeit und Grifffunktion zu gewährleisten, wie sich die Innervation der Hand unterteilen und merken lässt, und was sich hinter den Begriffen Skidaumen oder Dupuytren-Kontraktur verbirgt. Übrigens: Schickt uns eure Fragen und euer Feedback zum Podcast gerne an: podcast@doccheck.com
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.07.11.548500v1?rss=1 Authors: Sivori, M., Dempsey, B., Chettouh, Z., Boismoreau, F., Ayerdi, M., Eymael, A., Baulande, S., Lameiras, S., Coulpier, F., Delattre, O., Rohrer, H., Mirabeau, O., Brunet, J.-F. Abstract: The pelvic organs (bladder, rectum and sex organs) have been represented for a century as receiving autonomic innervation from two pathways - lumbar sympathetic and sacral parasympathetic - by way of a shared relay, the pelvic ganglion, conceived as an assemblage of sympathetic and parasympathetic neurons. Using single cell RNA sequencing, we find that the pelvic ganglion is made of four classes of neurons, distinct from both sympathetic and parasympathetic ones, albeit with a kinship to the former, but not the latter, through a complex genetic signature. We also show that spinal lumbar preganglionic neurons synapse in the pelvic ganglion onto equal numbers of noradrenergic and cholinergic cells, both of which therefore serve as sympathetic relays. Thus, the pelvic viscera receive no innervation from parasympathetic or typical sympathetic neurons, but instead from a divergent tail end of the sympathetic chains, in charge of its idiosyncratic functions. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.07.07.547791v1?rss=1 Authors: Pass, T., Ricke, K. M., Hofmann, P., Chowdhury, R., Nie, Y., Chinnery, P. F., Endepols, H., Neumaier, B., Carvalho, A., Rigoux, L., Steculorum, S., Prudent, J., Riemer, T., Aswendt, M., Brachvogel, B., Wiesner, R. J. Abstract: Degeneration of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra and their striatal axon terminals causes cardinal motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD). In idiopathic cases, high levels of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations associated with mitochondrial dysfunction are a central feature of these vulnerable neurons. Here we present a mouse model expressing the K320E-variant of the mitochondrial helicase Twinkle in dopamine neurons, leading to accelerated mtDNA ageing. K320E-TwinkleDaN mice showed normal motor function at 20 months of age, although already ~70% of nigral dopamine neurons had perished. The remaining neuron population still preserved ~75% of axon terminals in the dorsal striatum, which enabled normal dopamine release. Transcriptome analysis and viral tracing confirmed compensatory axonal sprouting of surviving nigral dopamine neurons. We conclude that a small population of substantia nigra neurons can adapt to mtDNA mutations and maintain motor control in mice, holding chances for new treatment strategies in PD patients. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Fiyin is just starting out on her own career journey, but she is already helping other women in Nigeria through a charity she started, which provides them with access to further education after secondary school. In her short career in Finance, she has already learned so much about resilience, self-belief and determination and she shares all of that with us in this conversation..
I speak to family friend that I haven't seen in decades. We cover a variety of topics, including allowing children to discover their purpose and how the educational system can be shaken up! We put the world to rights in this heavily abridged conversation, where you get to be a fly on the wall, as two Sri Lankan women catchup on old and new times!
Megan Pormer has worked hard on her education, her emotional well-being, her health and her inner contentment and connection to a power greater than herself. As a strong Iranian woman, educated in the UK and currently living and working in the USA she has finally found independence. Megan radiates beauty, not only externally but most importantly from within. She has found freedom through adversity, despite systems which tried to keep her muted for so long. Her words made me question my own inner narratives and constraints and they will do the same for you too. We all want to live with purpose and peace and Megan shares her own roadmap in finding hers.
As a woman in STEM having completed a degree in Zoology, Laura now finds herself in the middle of a debate between government, education, industry and youth on encouraging people into STEM. It's a tough task to unite everyone in this discussion and Laura is tackling this firmly, one step at a time, by asking young people what they want!
Fran Scott is a true engineer at heart. She loves making stuff and her work is highly visual and exciting at she plays with fire and makes things explode, in order to shows audiences how fun and wondrous STEM can be! Our conversation gets really honest and heartfelt as we discuss the discuss the choices and reflections we have made as women in predominantly male-industries and celebrate the fact that we are doing exactly what we love!
Grazia Vittadini is a magnificent women and completely in her power. She's smart beyond comprehension speaking five languages with a penchant for the arts as well as the sciences. Yet her most alluring quality is her emotional intelligence. She knows exactly how to maintain her superiority when others are trying to drag her down - and she does this in the most humble, kind and fairest of ways. She is also a ballet-dancing engineer and one of my favourite role models to date. This episode can't be missed.
This conversation was more of a mentoring session for me! Judith is so accomplished yet so wise and chilled. Often as intelligent women, we want to prove our intelligence to the world and get angry when not acknowledged for our brains - Judith knows exactly how to handle such circumstances, having been in many male dominated situations with her research and them with grace, power and laughs! She is truly empowered.
Becky's journey into engineering hasn't been conventional! She didn't follow the classic maths physics route. However, she caught the F1 racing bug, ever since attending the UK Grand Prix - and now she's a design engineer working on the cars themselves! Find out how she fell into her dream job, her story is inspiring for anyone wanting to follow their own career dreams, despite the odds...
In this conversation, Dawn Bonfield, MBE and I get extremely honest about the problems that still exist in engineering. We are a long way off from being diverse and inclusive in this industry and there are still many things that need to change. We discuss why change is necessary and the small steps that can be taken to breakdown the bias that exists in the development of future technologies.
Talking to Claire Rose was up-lifting. Civil engineering finally seems to be changing for the better, to be more inclusive. Companies realise the positive impact of diverse teams on their success. Homogenous groups of engineers simply cannot not effectively design infrastructure for an entire population. Women and other underrepresented groups are essential for broadening design scopes. Claire Rose talks to us about her decade-long career in the industry and why now has been a good time to balance her career with recently becoming a first time mum.
Zainab Adigun, a structural engineer and mother of twin boys can do anything she puts her mind towards. After our conversation, it was clear that very little holds us back, other than what is between our ears. She has been through trails and challenges juggling motherhood and career, and what got her through all of it was her resilient attitude and strong and supportive inner circle. Its women like her that makes you realise, it is possible to ‘have it all'.
Dr. Leanne Armitage was recognised by HM Queen Elizabeth II for her charity, The Armitage Foundation, which aims to increase the diversity and inclusivity in medicine. She is also a very inspiring young woman who owns her underprivileged background, knowing that it gave her empathy and compassion towards others. Her work is crucial and her story is uplifting.
When Whitney Udigwe (a STEM A'Level student) reached out to me via my website asking for mentorship, she got me thinking about how mentorship might help others too. In the first of its kind, I aim to answer all questions that Whitney has about her own career direction and I'm sharing this conversation with you. Around the age of 16-18 we usually have to make big decisions about our careers. In this episode of eSTEAMd people, I aim to share my experiences so that we can be a little wiser about our own life decisions!
After we have laid our HM Queen Elizabeth II to rest, time seems to be revealing what she meant to me. She was a symbol of duty, service and purpose. I edited this conversation with Computer Engineer, Sanskriti Devi with this in mind and what I have learned from our Queen and see from Sanskriti is that knowing one's purpose in life is key. Knowing what you were put on this Earth to do, allows you to focus and surrender to your role. It seems that Sanskriti is unravelling and following her true purpose in STEM and it's working out for her.
Women in Innovation and Technology share their experiences and what they have learned in order to survive and thrive in a male-dominated world. In this episode, we hear from sisters Abigail (scientists) and Donna (Engineer) about the network of STEM sisters they are trying to create. This conversation is so heart-warming because you feel the actual sisterhood between a biomedical scientist and mechanical engineer, who genuinely want to share this support and encouragement with other women in STEM. Check out this podcast by Dr. Shini Somara, a mechanical engineer and media broadcaster, who aims to have honest and raw conversations about what it's really like being an empowered woman in today's world.
5 years later and I still have weekly conversations with incredible women in STEM. why, because it keeps me humble and grateful as a human being. This conversation was no different. It took a sudden twist when I learned that she had lost her Dad. My own Dad has been such a massive influence in my own life. He has probably been at the core of all my life decisions, some positively driven and some driven by a little bit of resentment. This conversation reminded me that we all go through challenges, but you keep fighting to help others and pursue your purpose. No matter what.
I grew up watching Maggie Philbin on Tomorrow's World, the stories she covered on this iconic BBC science and tech magazine show, were the core of many family discussion at the dinner table, about pie in the eye tech that would be part of our future. All of these ideas came true and now Maggie has turned her attention to inspiring diversity into science and technology through teenagers! She offers a fresh and alternative perspective to encouraging and supporting people into STEM, and over 40 years later, she continues to push boundaries in this male-dominated field.
In this conversation we talk about striving to achieve it all and get realistic about the challenges and sacrifices involved in ticking all of the boxes as a woman in engineering and STEM. Its amazing how the first few years of our lives shape the rest of our futures too!
UNIQ+ research internships are designed to provide students from under-represented and disadvantaged backgrounds who are ordinarily resident in the UK, with the opportunity to experience postgraduate study. Dr. Tom Crawford (mathematician/fluid dynamicist), Dr. Sagida Bibi (immunologist) and I get together on a panel to talk about our experiences doing doctorates. Its a 90-min chat, where we take questions from the audience. The sound is not great on this recording, but I wanted to be able to share this experience with you all!
This conversation gets really honest about under representation in STEM and life. We open up about cultural differences and navigating being different! This conversation offers so much solution, but also gets raw about the problems. This episode is an eye-opener to mental well-being and empowerment.
It's so inspiring meeting young women who have a strong drive and ambition to build careers in STEM. Thendral Kamal is one of those women. She is so focussed on becoming the first Indian woman on Mars, that she is leaving no stone unturned in getting there. Not only is she an aerospace engineering student, but she is also so knowledgeable about NASA, that one would think that she already works there. If you are feeling a bit lack lustre about your own path in life, listen to this episode and it will give you the rocket boost you need to realise your own greatest potential.
She is an engineer through and through. She sees the world through an engineering lens. Totally head led, totally, rational and loving protocol, because it allows her to think outside of the box and solve problems - like all great engineers do. She's a mechanical engineer and more, who believes in the power of repeatability. Practice is key, which she applies to all multi-dimensions of herself. Nika is such an interesting person and is a great speaker - I highly recommend this conversation, for a boost towards your own goals and dreams in life - Nika is a truly motivating force.
Watch out boys, girls are increasing in empowerment. We want independence and don't want to have to rely or report to men. Its time to level up to what women bring to the table! Prachi Gupta was raised in India, a place where women are still assumed to have a subordinate role to men, but the young women of India are starting to find this mentality completely unacceptable to them and in this conversation, we hear what they are doing about it through STEM…
Anete Dowling is passionate about machine learning, especially when applied to social robotics. She works hard and pushes herself to be the best she can be in this field. At the same time, she has also been blessed with good looks because she is also a fashion model. I have a chat with her about doing these seemingly contrasting jobs and I find her attitude towards her work really refreshing and really current for our times. Why should any of us try and squeeze ourselves into pigeon holes, when we can enjoy all that life has to offer us instead! I'm all for the idea of being the best possible version of yourselves, however multi-dimensional that may be.
Chloe Sales is truly inspiring. Our conversation contained so many mic-drop moments because she has clearly done a lot of soul-searching. Her early 20's were hard as she muddled around figuring out what to do. However, she has surely found her groove with work as a welder, and discovered a treasure trove of confidence, resilience and strength of character. I need to listen to the episode on a regular basis, there are so many gems of wisdom her. It really is true that out of darkness comes light.
Michi Benthaus has been through a lot and that has only made her stronger and more determined to chase after the things she really wants in life. She wants a career in space and despite not feeling like the brightest mathematician and physicist, she is nevertheless fascinated by the industry. Michi knows that successful careers are determined by hardworking and persistence and using these traits that she has in abundance combined with the fact that she is unique in the field of aerospace, she will go far. It's always great to hear other people's stories because it helps us to carve out our own attitudes towards life.
Jessica Gagan could be my sister, in the way she thinks, the way she approaches life and how determined and focussed she is to live her best life. I learned so much from my conversation with her this week. She is so strong and confident about what she wants in life, and I think that is where I was truly inspired. Jessica doesn't apologise for being beautiful, as well as brainy. On top of that she is so humble. Yet, her humility keeps her grounded, whilst her education in Aerospace Engineering and fashion modelling are taking off. Thanks Jess for running with the cards you have been dealt, you are a role model for many of us, because you've worked hard for what you have. You gave me permission today to own how hard worked for my own education. Engineering is not easy, but engineers really are the best.
Shrouk is so many things as well as being a badass electronics engineer. Before even speaking a word she inspires people by just being Shrouk. She doesn't fit into a norm and that is was is so fascinating and empowering for others. We discuss being different. Multi-dimensional and determine to expand the public perception of engineer. We didn't have much time to speak, but we covered a lot of revealing ground, in my my honest conversation on eSTEAMd yet.
Kristin really is the future of engineering. She has so much enthusiasm for problem solving, but more interestingly, she has so much confidence in just being herself. She doesn't have that outdated attitude of apologising for being female, awkwardness for being multi-talented or shyness for being different from her mostly male peers. With that attitude comes success. She wants others to excel, as well as herself. She wants a world that is full of equal opportunities for all, and I believe she will be leading the way, certainly within engineering.
Dr. Samanatha Micklewright is a clinical scientist and mechanical engineer. She has spent many years studying to collect 2 Masters, and a PhD, purely to secure her dream job. In now working for the NHS she gets to exercise her engineering and clinical skills simultaneously. To me, her story is one of dedication and commitment to applying her intrinsic talents and skills. She's a multi-dimensional person, who cares about helping others and every choice and decision she has made about her career has been a string to her bow. No career is ever linear - sometimes we choose things which don't seem obvious to supporting the overall end game. But no experience is wasted, if you learn from them.
Bethany Cousins forms part of the future of manufacturing. Manufacturing is an exciting industry for young, keen intelligent people like her, because we are in the midst of an Industrial Revolution 4.0. The UK once used to be global leaders in manufacturing, but in order to stay as global leaders manufacturing has to go digital. Bethany talks about her need to stay ahead of the curve and how her work is all about flipping things on their head.
Tillie works in very extreme conditions. She is a Marine engineer on board Agulhas, the research ship that found Sir Ernest Shackleton's lost Antarctic Explorer in the Weddell Sea earlier this year. The wreck was located over 3400m down on the sea floor and temperatures were harsh and bitter at almost minus 20 degrees centigrade. Tillie speaks about her marine engineering work, love of fixing things and making them work and what it is like being so far away from home and her loved ones and how it is helped her find inner strength and hope.
Kate Todd-Davis is really smart. Not because she always got great grades at school and was very academic, but because she decided to take an apprenticeship route into aerospace engineering. She is part of the future of manufacturing and now has an engineering degree, loads of industrial work experience and no student debt. It's inspiring hearing her story and learning from someone so switched on to their future and the future of how things will be made in the UK.
Nikita is extremely transparent and open about coming from a very orthodox South East Asia family and how that coincided with her ambitions to make an impact in the field of artificial intelligence. We talk about the dilemmas faced in pursuing an education and career as a woman, who is expected to become a wife. Its not easy coming from such a patriarchal culture - we boost each other's confidence in these matters as well as talk about Nikita's significant contributions to the field of electricity and electronics.
This week we get to hear from a woman who has many talents. Originally an athlete, Pavlina Akritas, then went on to study electrical engineering specialising in lighting design. Its wonderful to hear from a polymath, i.e. someone who uses both her left brain and right brain, whilst also managing recently having a baby and wanting to stay fit. She's passionate about her work and functions at the intersection of where art meets science and she does all of this with such poise!
To micturate or not to micturate that is the question? This week let's talk about bladder function and focus on what nerves facilitate this function. Stretch receptors, the detrusor muscle, internal vs external urethral sphincters, parasympathetic vs sympathetic bladder control, and the named nerves that control all of this.
Krystina R was so refreshing to listen too, because she's achieved so much, yet isn't someone who appears to be the martyr. She is someone who seems to take life as it comes and with everything that happens to her, she tackles it head on, with vulnerability and to the best of her capabilities. It was reassuring to know that she struggled with motherhood in the beginning only to end up finding a deeper sense of confidence than she has ever had before. She learns from everything that happens to her. A lesson that could all benefit from.
Samantha M is so lovely and so switched on. From a young age, she knew that she didn't want to follow the conventional path into academia, just for the sake of getting 'qualifications'. She wanted to start working straightaway, despite achieving highly at school. Sam is a perfect example of how apprenticeships are a golden gateway into a solid career. By starting in industry early, you clock up valuable experience and there are so many advantages to this path into industry. It's not for everyone and its certainly hard work. Sam shares her perspectives on it.
Katriya Sabin works for the UK Atomic Energy Agency combining her love of art and physics into one creative profession - nuclear fusion. She lives off grid herself and her views about sexism in engineering and the pressure schools put on youngsters is very much 'off-grid' too. She is outspoken, unconventional and uniquely gifted and smart. A conversation with her and refreshingly rebellious. Why hold back on what you truly believe, it only slows progress down..Katriya, certainly speaks the truth no one else has had the confidence to say. Maybe, it because she knows she's an asset to the nuclear fusion industry..
In this episode, we review the high-yield topic of Lower Extremity Innervation from the MSK section. Follow Medbullets on social media: Facebook: www.facebook.com/medbullets Instagram: www.instagram.com/medbulletsofficial Twitter: www.twitter.com/medbullets --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/medbulletsstep1/message
Welcome to 344 of The Today's Leaders Podcast, Building Tomorrows Best Leaders, Today. We have had a strong focus on culture and leadership well being and in this episode, we head back into the innovation space, or in this case, let's call it INNERVATION, innovation from within corporationsOur guest today is Ally Muller. A leader in innovation and author of the book Corporate Innervation: Unlocking the Genius Inside Your Organisation, Ally works with CEOs, Leadership Teams, and Executives to rethink innovation to add real value to the bottom line.Ally has incredible insight on:- The Valley of death- The Innovation graveyard- On demand innovation= Dealing with the Myths of InnovationThis is a podcast not to be missedConnect with Ally:Goya consulting goyaconsulting.com.auLinkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/allisonrmuller/If you are looking to build better leadership skills, check out The Today's Leader website at todaysleader.com.auToday's Leader, Building Tomorrow's Best Leaders, Today. Being the best leader today forging greater success tomorrow. The mindset to make a difference and the ability to create an impact. It really is about your very own leadership revolution. Think & Grow Business Hosts our Today's Leader Masterminds. TAGB where we focus on personal, professional, and business growth. Book your free 30-minute discovery call at https://thinkandgrowbusiness.com.au/book-your-free-discovery-call/You are standing Stronger, Braver, and Wiser. Don't forget the golden rule – Don t be an A-HoleCheck Out our Top 10 Leadership Podcasts: https://todaysleader.com.au/the-best-leadership-podcasts-for-2021/
Best of luck! Hope this helps! Happy studying! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nicholas-giliberti3/support
Hope this helps! Happy studying! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nicholas-giliberti3/support
Hope this helps! Happy studying! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nicholas-giliberti3/support