Health
Early-life-trauma could affect trajectory of multiple sclerosis development and treatment – News-Medical.net
Childhood trauma could affect the trajectory of multiple sclerosis development and response to treatment in adulthood, a new study in mice found.

Childhood trauma could affect the trajectory of multiple sclerosis development and response to treatment in adulthood, a new study in mice found.
Mice that had experienced stress when young were more likely to develop the autoimmune disorder and less likely to respond to a common treatment, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found. However, treatment that activated an immune-cell receptor mitigated the effects of childhood stress in the mice.
Multiple sclerosis is a progressive…
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Young voices shape Sunshine Coast’s future
-
Business21 hours ago
2 Low Cost Active ASX ETFs to consider
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Queensland government to review greenhouse gas emission reduction targets
-
Noosa News19 hours ago
Brisbane news live: Broken-down train causes peak-hour delays