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Aggression isn’t just a behavioral issue—it has deep neurobiological roots, especially when shaped by early-life trauma.
For military veterans, many of the deepest wounds of war are invisible: Traumatic brain injuries resulting from head trauma ...
A new study using direct recordings from human brains reveals how the amygdala and hippocampus coordinate to form and retrieve emotional memories.
A psychedelic drug called ibogaine can safely and effectively treat long-term symptoms of traumatic brain injury in veterans, ...
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News-Medical.Net on MSNIbogaine treatment shows major breakthrough for veterans with brain injuriesNow, Stanford Medicine researchers have discovered that the plant-based psychoactive drug ibogaine, when combined with ...
The drug, derived from the roots of an African shrub called iboga, can safely and effectively treat long-term symptoms of traumatic brain injury in veterans, according to findings from a study of 30 ...
A wound can leave a lasting imprint—even after it has healed. A new study in Current Biology finds that past injuries can ...
"No other institution works on PTSD, like the VA is," said Dr. Amin Zand Vakili, one of the many mental health researchers ...
Discover how chronic stress reshapes memory encoding and retrieval, potentially leading to memory generalization and ...
The U.S. military used open burn pits on bases in Iraq and Afghanistan to dispose of waste, including plastic, paint and ...
Sora Shin, a neuroscientist at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, received a five-year, $3.2 million grant from ...
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