Thomas Jefferson University: Compound in Fruit Peels Halts Damage and Spurs Neuronal Repair in Multiple Sclerosis
April 08, 2020
April 08, 2020
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, April 8 -- Thomas Jefferson University issued the following news:
Multiple sclerosis (MS), characterized by increasing muscle weakness and paralysis, has a number of treatments that help stall progression of the disease when used early on in the disease. But the current treatments can hardly reverse damage that has already occurred in brain cells called neurons. New research suggests that a compound found in the peels of fruits such as apples and prunes, . . .
Multiple sclerosis (MS), characterized by increasing muscle weakness and paralysis, has a number of treatments that help stall progression of the disease when used early on in the disease. But the current treatments can hardly reverse damage that has already occurred in brain cells called neurons. New research suggests that a compound found in the peels of fruits such as apples and prunes, . . .