Johns Hopkins Medicine: Super-Chilled Brain Cell Molecules Reveal How Epilepsy Drug Works
June 11, 2024
June 11, 2024
BALTIMORE, Maryland, June 11 (TNSres) -- Johns Hopkins Medicine issued the following news release:
By super cooling a molecule on the surface of brain cells down to about minus 180 degrees Celsius -- nearly twice as cold as the coldest places in Antarctica -- scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have determined how a widely-used epilepsy drug works to dampen the excitability of brain cells and help to control, although not cure, seizures.
The research, publishe . . .
By super cooling a molecule on the surface of brain cells down to about minus 180 degrees Celsius -- nearly twice as cold as the coldest places in Antarctica -- scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have determined how a widely-used epilepsy drug works to dampen the excitability of brain cells and help to control, although not cure, seizures.
The research, publishe . . .