Michigan State: Scientists Pinpoint Protein's Supporting Role in Kennedy's Disease
June 24, 2020
June 24, 2020
EAST LANSING, Michigan, June 24 -- Michigan State University issued the following news release:
As we open computers to connect with each other remotely, motor neurons in our spinal cord are opening synaptic pathways to connect with our muscles physically. We rarely think about these electrical signals passing back and forth between computers or our neurons and muscles, until those signals are lost.
Kennedy's disease, a neuromuscular degenerative disease, affects 1 . . .
As we open computers to connect with each other remotely, motor neurons in our spinal cord are opening synaptic pathways to connect with our muscles physically. We rarely think about these electrical signals passing back and forth between computers or our neurons and muscles, until those signals are lost.
Kennedy's disease, a neuromuscular degenerative disease, affects 1 . . .