PsyPost on MSN
Parental acceptance and trauma resilience are linked to faster brain development in 9-13-year-olds
An analysis of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study data showed that children accepted by their parents and more resilient to trauma tend to have an accelerated pace of cortical thinning, ...
New guidelines emphasize selective imaging, cautious surgical decision-making, and more in penetrating traumatic brain injury management.
Morning Overview on MSN
Study links physical activity to brain changes that may blunt trauma effects
Researchers have found that lifelong physical activity may moderate the structural brain changes linked to adverse childhood ...
A recent study published in Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging finds that childhood trauma can lead to disruptions in two main regions of the brain, the default mode ...
Adverse childhood experiences and traumatic events experienced or witnessed at any point during one's lifetime can sometimes ...
An increased risk of dementia among individuals exposed to brain trauma, traumatic brain injury, has been known for almost a century. Still, we know very little about the molecular causes behind this, ...
Maltreatment such as neglect and abuse are types of adverse childhood experiences, or ACEs. But they often say little about ...
A newly discovered mechanism that protects nerve cells could have important implications for understanding and treating mental illness.
Mass General Brigham researchers compared data from more than 75,000 adults with TBI to a control group of the same size. They studied the patients over 24 years and observed how many developed brain ...
Individuals who suffer head trauma from sports, accidents, or other causes often go on to develop neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's or Alzheimer's. A new study sheds light on why that might ...
Football-related injury also tied to higher risk for recurrence and substantial neurological and psychiatric sequelae.
Examining brain plasticity and its implications for development, aging, and brain injury recovery.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results