In 1953, when 27-year-old Henry M. (H.M.) turned to brain surgery to end his
struggles with intractable epilepsy, he unwittingly ushered in a new era in research and
understanding of memory and the brain. After determining the origin of H.M.s seizures,
neurosurgeon William Scoville removed portions of his brain containing and surrounding a
structure called the hippocampus. The operation successfully quieted H.M.s seizures but
left him with profound amnesia–an unintended consequence that fascinates neuroscientists
to this day. H.M. retained his former intelligence, his perceptual and motor abilities,
and, most notably, his memory of early life events. Yet his recall of new events since
the time of the surgery is only fleeting: he still believes he is about 30 years old
and, even after many introductions, greets people in his life as though they have never
met. Over the last 50 years, some 100 investigators have examined H.M.s case. Their
observations, as well as studies of patients with damage in similar brain regions,
including those with Alzheimers disease, have revolutionized understanding of how
memories are formed and where in the brain they are stored. Today, these insights both
guide and are extended by human brain imaging studies during learning and memory tasks
and by investigations in animals at the level of single neurons and even molecules,
leading to the development of drugs to treat memory deficits in people.
Introduction
Composed of the brain, spinal cord, and nerves of the body, the nervous system underlies
perception, movement, emotions, learning and memory, and other functions essential to
individual and societal well-being. The nervous system interacts with all other organ
systems and is affected by countless diseases, conditions, and environmental factors.
Moreover, with limited capacity for self-repair, the nervous system is particularly
vulnerable to damage due to injury or infection, and its repair mechanisms are poorly
understood. Neuroscience research seeks to understand the nervous system and its
functions in health and disease. Given its intrinsic complexity and central role in
physiology and behavior, this understanding must necessarily come from multiple
perspectives. Accordingly, neuroscience research spans many disciplines, from genetics
to physiology to psychology, and applies tools from areas such as molecular biology,
anatomy, computer science, and imaging technologies.
Neuroscience is a unifying theme in NIH research. The intramural and extramural programs
of several ICs have a major focus on the nervous system, but the full scope of
neuroscience activities extends to components of research portfolios across most of NIH,
reflecting the multidisciplinary nature of the field and the importance of the nervous
system to many aspects of human health, development, and disease. These activities often
involve collaborative efforts combining the unique strengths and expertise of individual
ICs. NIH established the Blueprint for Neuroscience Research11 to reinforce such collaboration and to accelerate neuroscience research through training initiatives and the
development of shared tools and resources.
The principal aim of NIH research in neuroscience is to reduce the burden of diseases
that affect the nervous system, including a broad range of neurological disorders;
disorders affecting cognitive, emotional, and behavioral function; diseases and
conditions that impair the primary senses; and developmental and age-related disorders.
Whether led by single investigators or conducted through centers and consortia, NIH
neuroscience research includes basic science studies of normal function and development
in both humans and animal models, translational research that develops medications or
other therapies, and clinical trials that test interventions in patients.
Nervous system disorders include common killers and major causes of disability like
stroke, multiple sclerosis, and epilepsy, as well as hundreds of less common diseases,
such as lysosomal storage disorders, spinal muscular atrophy, muscular dystrophies,
neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, and Rett and Tourette syndromes. Many
neurological disorders have genetic or developmental origins. Others result from trauma
to the nerves, spinal cord, or brain; from autoimmune, infectious, or systemic disease;
from tumor growth in nervous system tissues (see the section Cancer); or from
neurodegenerative processes as in Parkinsons disease, frontotemporal dementia, and
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). NIH research on neurological diseases, largely
supported by NINDS, seeks to uncover their causes and mechanisms and to develop drugs
and other treatments or preventive strategies. This research also aims to understand the
multiple aspects of the nervous system that disease can affect and has shared support
across NIH for basic science studies of the cerebral vasculature, electrochemical
signaling in neurons and other cells, mechanisms of development and cell death,
neuromuscular function and motor control, and behavior and cognition. In addition, NIH
works to enhance the lives of those disabled by stroke, traumatic brain injury, spinal
cord injury, and other neurological conditions through research, supported by NICHDs National Center for Medical Rehabilitation
Research and other ICs, on neuroplasticity, recovery and repair of motor and
cognitive function, and rehabilitative and assistive strategies and devices (see the
section Life Stages, Human Development, and Rehabilitation).
Brain disorders affecting cognitive, emotional, and behavioral function include
schizophrenia and psychoses; autism and other developmental disorders; mood and anxiety
disorders; and addiction to nicotine, alcohol, and other substances; as well as
posttraumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, and other behavioral disorders. These disorders have complex causes involving
genetic and environmental influences and their interactions throughout life. Through
research efforts led by NIAAA, NIDA, and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),
NIH focuses on uncovering these causes, understanding their neural and behavioral bases,
and developing therapies and interventions for treatment and prevention. NIH research
also seeks to understand the acute and long-term effects of abused substances on the
nervous system.
Sight, smell, balance and our other primary senses, as well as the ability to
communicate allow interactions with a changing external environment. The National Eye
Institute (NEI) and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
(NIDCD) sponsor most of NIHs research on basic mechanisms of sensory perception and
communication and on diseases and conditions affecting the eyes and vision, hearing and
balance, speech and language, taste and smell, and somatosensory function, including the
senses of temperature and touch. Although vital to survival, the sensation of pain is
also symptomatic of many diseases with origins in and outside the nervous system, from
migraine and other headaches to chronic pain in cancer. NIH pain research is led by
NIDCR and the NIH Pain Consortium, which coordinates research across NIH on pain and its treatment (see the section Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems).
NIH-supported research also studies the many ways the nervous system interacts with and
regulates changes in the bodys internal environment. This research, including efforts
supported by NHLBI and NIDDK, focuses on areas such as circadian rhythms and sleep
disorders; neuroendocrine processes that regulate stress responses, hormone levels, and
motivational states; and the neural basis of appetite and feeding, which is of key
relevance to slowing the increasing rates of obesity worldwide.
Nervous system disorders may arise in development, strike young adults, or emerge late
in life. NICHD and other ICs sponsor research on the development of the nervous system
and its functions. This research encompasses studies of structural birth defects,
including spina bifida and other neural tube defects and associated conditions such as
hydrocephalus. NIH also invests in research on developmental disorders like cerebral
palsy, Downs syndrome, autism, and other causes of intellectual and learning
disabilities. Nervous system development continues into early adulthood in humans, and
developmental processes and their external influences contribute to mental fitness and
disease risk later in life, including the risk for addiction, which often begins in
childhood or adolescence. At the other end of the lifespan, with key support by NIA, NIH
research on the aging nervous system includes studies of age-related disorders such as
Alzheimers disease and other dementias, as well as environmental and lifestyle factors
affecting neurological, cognitive, and emotional health in aging populations.
Across all ages, the nervous system is a common target of exposure to toxins,
pollutants, and other agents, whose effects range from acute reactions to developmental
disorders and neurodegeneration. NIH-sponsored research on the consequences of such
environmental exposures for nervous system function and disease includes a particular
focus by NIEHS. NIH also considers diseases of the nervous system from a global point of
view. Coordinated primarily by FIC, neuroscience-related research is supported by NIH in
unique populations and environments and on factors contributing to disparities in
disease vulnerability and treatment quality and access around the world, such as
socioeconomic conditions and infectious disease.
The Burden of Nervous System Disorders
Nervous system disorders take an enormous toll on human health and the economy. Even
rare disorders carry a substantial collective burden, as they often have an early onset
and long duration, and the stigma commonly attached to neurological and mental
illnesses further compounds individual and societal impact. According to 2005
estimates, neurological disorders strike more than 1 billion people worldwide, account
for 12 percent of total deaths, and result in more disability than HIV/AIDS, ischemic
heart disease, or malignant tumors.12 In the United States, stroke is the
third leading killer of adults and results in annual medical and disability costs
totaling over $60 billion.13 Another 1.4 million Americans sustain a
traumatic brain injury each year; it is the leading cause of death and long-term
disability in young adults.14 Traumatic brain injury accounted for an
estimated $60 billion in direct medical costs and indirect costs in 2000.15
Although less often cited as direct causes of mortality, mental disorders result in more
disability for U.S. adults than any other class of medical illness,16 and
mental illnesses other than drug abuse and addiction account for more than $150 billion
in costs annually.17 In a given year, approximately 12.5 million American
adults (or 1 in every 17) suffer mental illness symptoms so severe as to cause
significant disability.18, 19 In 2005, 23.2 million Americans needed
treatment for an alcohol or illicit drug use problem, and costs related to illicit drug
use alone totaled about $180 billion.20 Nervous system disorders also
severely affect the lives of children; an estimated 17 percent of U.S. children have a
developmental or behavioral disorder such as autism, intellectual disability, or
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.21
Demographic trends project an increasing burden from nervous system disorders. In
particular, the prevalence of age-related diseases of the nervous system is expected to
increase in aging populations benefiting from increased longevity. Current estimates of
the number of U.S. adults with Alzheimers disease range from 2.4 million to 4.5
million, and unless effective interventions are developed, this number is expected to
rise almost threefold by 2050.22,
23
NIH Funding for Neuroscience and Disorders of the Nervous System
In FYs 2006 and 2007, NIH funding for research in neuroscience and disorders of the
nervous system was $4.830 billion and $4.809 billion respectively. The table at the end
of this chapter indicates some of the research areas involved in this investment (see
Estimates of Funding for Various Diseases, Conditions, and Research Areas).
Summary of NIH Activities
Many common themes reflect shared biological processes found in many aspects of nervous
system function and disease. Three such themes–neurodevelopment, neuroplasticity, and
neurodegeneration–provide a useful perspective on the broad, multidisciplinary field of
neuroscience research and illustrate the dynamic nature of the nervous system across the
lifespan. In this section, these themes will serve to highlight selected examples of
activities and progress in neuroscience research enabled by NIH, as well as challenges
and future opportunities. Additional activities and initiatives exemplify how
collaborative approaches are facilitating advances in basic, translational, and clinical
neuroscience. More information, as well as more examples, may be found in the bulleted
list at the end of this chapter.
Neurodevelopment: Periods of Growth, Maturation, and Vulnerability
Complex interactions between gene expression and function, endocrine and other
physiological processes, neuronal activity, and external influences guide the
development of the nervous system. From the early differentiation of its many neuronal
and other cell types to the establishment of billions of connections, or synapses,
between neurons, each step in nervous system development is vulnerable to disruption by
disease, injury, or environmental exposures. Each also has implications for normal
neurological, mental, and behavioral function and for health and disease risk across the
lifespan.
Human brain development continues into early adulthood and proceeds at different rates
in different brain areas and pathways. Understanding normal nervous system development
is essential to identifying when, where, and how developmental processes can go wrong.
To this end, NIH-supported investigators are applying advanced brain imaging
technologies to large-scale studies of human brain development in healthy children and
adolescents. For example, in the NIH Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (MRI) Study of Normal Brain Development, extramural researchers
at seven collaborating institutions are collecting brain scans and clinical and
behavioral data from more than 500 infants, children, and adolescents over the course of
7 years. Data gathered and analytical tools developed for this longitudinal study will
be available to the broader research community in a Web-based, searchable database.
As another example, in the largest longitudinal pediatric neuroimaging study to date
(829 MRI scans from 387 subjects, ages 3 to 27 years), intramural NIH scientists have
reported different trajectories of brain development in males and females, finding that
brain volume peaks earlier in girls than in boys. Such studies of normal brain
development and maturation are providing scientists with important baseline data that
will help them identify signs of atypical development as well as factors that may be
associated with disease risk later in life. Moreover, understanding the developmental
course of different brain areas can help to explain behavioral and cognitive development
and its consequences for mental health and disease risk. For instance, previous brain
imaging studies have suggested that brain pathways that are important for
decision-making and impulse control are among the last to fully mature. This aspect of
brain development may contribute to impulsive behavior in teenagers and help explain
their increased susceptibility to drug abuse and addiction.
In a remarkable feat of nervous system development, the estimated 100 billion neurons in
the human brain are wired together into networks that underlie brain
functions, from sensory perception, to learning and memory, to motor control. Insight
into the wiring diagrams of these networks and the developmental processes that lead to
their establishment promises to unlock some of the most fundamental questions in
neuroscience research. Indeed, certain brain diseases, including schizophrenia and
autism, are hypothesized to involve aberrant development of brain connectivity. Research
in this area benefits from new technologies for manipulating and visualizing neurons in
experimental animal models, in which neuronal connections are established and organized
according to rules similar to those found in the human nervous system. In one recent
example, NIH-supported scientists developed a technique that can label thousands of
direct synaptic connections received by individual neurons in the rat brain. By enabling
neuroscientists to map neuronal networks, such experimental techniques will help show
how changes in brain function and behavior can result from changes in these networks,
whether they occur during normal development and learning or as a consequence of injury
or disease.
One salient feature of the developing nervous system is its heightened sensitivity to
external influences. Although crucial for shaping the proper development of many brain
pathways and their corresponding sensory, motor, cognitive, and emotional functions,
this heightened sensitivity also makes the developing nervous system especially
vulnerable to potentially damaging environmental factors. These factors include
exposures to toxins, viral infections, nutritional deficits, traumatic events, and
social experiences throughout life. For instance, prenatal exposure to alcohol can lead
to fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), a devastating developmental disorder characterized by
lifelong nervous system impairments that may include intellectual and learning
disabilities, and behavioral and social deficits. NIH supports a broad research
portfolio on FAS and its diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. A growing area of
neuroscience research focuses on how genetic and environmental factors interact in
nervous system development, function, and disease. The interplay between external
influences and genetic predispositions appears likely to contribute to a range of
disorders, such as depression and other mood and anxiety disorders, addiction, multiple
sclerosis, Parkinsons disease, and autism. As one example of research in this area, NIH
supports several efforts to understand how autism spectrum disorders may arise from the
combined effects of genetic vulnerabilities and exposure to harmful environmental agents
during key periods of development. Ongoing projects co-funded by NIH and the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are looking for biomarkers of these disorders and
for differences in immune system function that may increase susceptibility to potential
environmental triggers.
Neuroplasticity: Substrates for Change and Repair
Throughout development, and even once its basic structure and circuitry have been
established, the nervous system retains a remarkable capacity to adapt to or be affected
by changes in the bodys internal environment and external conditions and events. This
capacity, known as plasticity, results in changes in the electrical activity and
composition of neuronal networks. Plasticity occurs at many levels of the nervous
system, from altered signaling at synapses thought to underlie learning and memory, to
large-scale functional and neuroanatomical reorganization accompanying the loss of a
limb or sensory organ.
Neuroplasticity enables beneficial adaptations, including acquiring new knowledge,
improving performance on practiced tasks, and adjusting behavior based on positive or
rewarding consequences. A recent NIH-funded study demonstrated how such adaptive
plasticity might be exploited for therapeutic intervention. In this study, using
real-time brain imaging, patients with chronic pain learned to exert voluntary control
over activation of a particular brain region involved in pain perception and its
regulation, effectively reducing the impact of their painful sensations. Unfortunately,
plasticity can also be maladaptive. Accumulating evidence from NIH-supported research
indicates that the same brain mechanisms that mediate reward-related learning are
involved in the development of addiction and compulsive overeating. Continued research
into how plasticity contributes to addiction and other mental disorders may lead to
intervention strategies that reverse or prevent these mechanisms.
Neuroplasticity also plays a role in many aspects of epilepsy, a class of disorders
characterized by abnormal bursts of electrical activity (seizures) in networks of
neurons that can lead to odd sensations, emotions, behaviors, convulsions, muscle
spasms, and loss of consciousness. Basic neuroscience studies on the plasticity of
synaptic connections and brain circuits are showing how epileptic activity emerges and
how seizures themselves can in turn cause plasticity in affected circuits, often
increasing the probability of seizure recurrence. In addition to these basic science
studies, NIH supports translational research and clinical trials of potential
anticonvulsant therapies, including extensive efforts through the NIH Anticonvulsant Screening Program, a drug discovery program that conducts state-of-the-art evaluations
to determine both potential efficacy and toxicity of preclinical candidate compounds in
validated epilepsy model systems. NIH also works with the epilepsy community to develop
and pursue benchmarks for research to prevent and treat epilepsy and co-occurring
disorders.
Harnessing the capacity of the nervous system to adapt by activating its intrinsic
mechanisms for repair and plasticity offers great hope for restoring function in the
injured or diseased brain and spinal cord. For example, after spinal cord injury,
neurons near the site of damage sprout new nerve fibers. Although this sprouting is
limited in the absence of intervention, an understanding of the mechanisms that guide
and restrict such spinal plasticity may allow neuroscientists to design strategies that
integrate the new nerve fibers into spinal circuitry, replacing damaged connections and
promoting functional recovery. In addition, NIH has long supported a program to develop
neural prostheses, devices that restore functions that have been lost due to injury or
disease, as in deafness or paralysis from spinal cord injury. The success of neural
prostheses depends not only on their ability to bypass or replace injured components of
the nervous system, but also on their integration into remaining functional circuits,
which relies on plasticity mechanisms.
Stem cells are another promising source of plasticity and repair in the nervous system,
and although many challenges and questions remain in this young area of research, basic
and translational neuroscience studies are making progress in advancing stem cell-based
therapies toward the clinic. During early embryonic development, stem cells have the
potential to become any cell type in the body; as development proceeds, the range of
potential fates narrows, depending on the tissue generating the cells. Beyond early
development, stem cell production and neurogenesis–the generation of new neurons–occurs
only in restricted regions of the brain. One active area of basic neuroscience research
examines the role of neural stem cells in normal function and the brains response to
injury and disease, and the potential for treatments that tap into this intrinsic
renewal mechanism. Other stem cell research in neuroscience focuses on the development
of therapies in animal models that transplant stem cells into the damaged or diseased
nervous system. Transplanted cells may be embryonic stem cells or other non-neuronal
stem cells, they may be engineered to become certain desired cell types, or they may be
designed to express specific genes that could act to promote recovery or repair or
restore genetic deficits. As part of the Quantum Grants Program designed to make profound advances in health
care, NIH has recently funded research to engineer implants from neural and vascular
stem cells and innovative biomaterials to provide a source of
cells for tissue repair in an animal model of stroke.
Neurodegeneration: Fighting the Effects of Age, Exposure, and Disease
The progressive loss of neurons is a common endpoint of many diseases and insults to the
nervous system. Such degeneration presents challenges to developing strategies to slow
and prevent cell death, protect remaining neurons, and possibly replenish those that are
lost. Although recent and ongoing research continues to yield exciting insights into the
biological and environmental causes of neurodegenerative disorders, much remains
unexplained, and while some interventions alleviate disease symptoms, none currently
exists that can halt progressive degeneration.
Aging is the most consistent risk factor for developing a neurodegenerative disorder,
and many of the 50 million adults in the United States who are older than age 60 are at
substantial risk for cognitive impairment and emotional disorders from many causes as
they age. The trans-NIH Healthy Brain Project focuses on demographic, social, and biologic determinants of cognitive and emotional health in aging adults. The risk
for degenerative disorders affecting sensory systems also increases with age, leading to
hearing and visual impairments. Building on a previous demonstration that antioxidant
supplements could slow age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of
blindness in the elderly, a large-scale NIH study is assessing the benefits of other
supplements and dietary changes on AMD and cataracts.
Alzheimers disease is the most common cause of dementia in the elderly, though some
inherited forms of the disease become symptomatic in middle age, and scientists now
believe that damage to the brain begins well before symptoms appear. Basic science
studies have identified genetic factors and protein abnormalities that contribute to
neuronal dysfunction and death in Alzheimers disease. NIH also funds 29 Alzheimers Disease Centers, which
carry out clinical studies and other research on Alzheimers and related degenerative
diseases (see Chapter 4). In addition, NIH supports clinical trials for treating and
slowing Alzheimers disease, many of which are coordinated through the Alzheimers Disease Cooperative Study, which involves nearly 70 sites in the United States and Canada. Ongoing trials include the Docosahexaenoic Acid trial,
which is examining whether treatment with DHA, an omega-3 fatty acid, will slow decline
in patients with Alzheimers disease. Observational studies have shown a reduced risk of
Alzheimers disease associated with DHA consumption, and animal studies have shown that
DHA reduces brain levels of beta-amyloid, oxidative damage associated with beta-amyloid,
and neurotoxicity. Recent research has also shown that an extract from the leaf of the
Ginkgo biloba tree reduces neuronal pathology and symptoms in an animal model of the
disease, and NIH is supporting the largest clinical trial to date to test the
effectiveness of Ginkgo biloba in preventing dementia in humans. Additional research
supported through the Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative aims to identify biomarkers and develop imaging technologies
to aid early diagnosis, which may enable more targeted and timely interventions.
Neurodegenerative disorders are often associated with degeneration in specific
populations of neurons or regions of the nervous system. For example, Parkinsons
disease results in the loss of a class of dopamine-producing neurons in the substantia
nigra, a part of the brain important for motor control. NIH-funded scientists recently
described a mechanism in substantia nigra neurons that contributes to their selective
vulnerability and that, like the disease itself, becomes more prevalent with age.
Manipulations to rejuvenate the neurons by blocking this mechanism promoted their
survival, suggesting a new potential target for drug development. NIH also supports 14 Morris K. Udall Centers for Excellence in Parkinsons Disease Research and engages with the Parkinsons disease research community to identify and pursue
research opportunities.
Neurons are not unique in their vulnerability to degenerative disorders. Muscular
dystrophies are a class of neuromuscular disorders that lead to progressive muscle
weakness and degeneration. NIH support for research on muscular dystrophies includes
funding for six Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Centers (see Chapter 4), as well as
other efforts to translate basic science findings to the clinic. Multiple sclerosis is
the most common of a number of diseases that lead to the degeneration of myelin, a fatty
substance that ensheathes many nerve fibers in the brain. NIH-supported scientists
recently reported the first genetic risk factors for multiple sclerosis to be identified
in more than 20 years (see also the section Autoimmune Diseases in this chapter).
These studies benefited from new technologies in genetic research that allow
simultaneous analysis of many thousands of genetic variations, or polymorphisms, across
the entire genome. Such genome-wide studies are giving scientists unprecedented insight
into disorders that result from the combined effects of many genetic variations and
their interactions with environmental influences.
Advancing Neuroscience Research Through Collaboration
The melding of disciplines involved in the study of the nervous system and the
overarching themes linking its many functions and disorders make neuroscience a
naturally collaborative field of research. Todays fast global communication and the
power and storage capacity of modern computer systems are enabling collaborative
research on increasingly large scales. A major priority of the NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research is to facilitate
research by funding the creation of shared resources and tools for scientists. Examples
include a publicly available atlas of gene expression in the mouse brain and spinal cord
across the lifespan, a clearinghouse for informatics tools and resources for brain
imaging applications, and an effort to develop common measures of neurological and
behavioral function for use in clinical trials and epidemiological and longitudinal
studies. NIH also supports several data registries, databases, and tissue consortia for
neurological diseases and mental disorders that offer shared access to genetic and
clinical data and biological samples. Genome-wide and other genetic studies using such
materials are identifying genes that contribute to bipolar disorder, that influence the
effectiveness of antidepressant therapies, and that predispose individuals to drug abuse
and addiction (see also the section Genomics in Chapter 3).
Collaborative approaches are also transforming clinical and translational research in
neuroscience, which build on advances and knowledge gained through basic science studies
to develop treatments and interventions for disease in people. NIH supports seven
centers as part of the Specialized Program of Translational Research in Acute Stroke, a national network of research
centers established to develop acute stroke therapies from preclinical research through
early-phase clinical trials. These centers also work to improve prehospital stroke care,
participate in community education, and develop telemedicine to expand rapid access to
acute stroke care. NIH also supports the Silvio O. Conte Centers for the Neuroscience of
Mental Disorders, which integrate and translate basic and clinical neuroscience research
on severe mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia and mood disorders. As another
example, the Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) Project is a new translational approach to preclinical drug development, motivated by the recent discovery of
the gene defect that causes this degenerative disease that affects motor neurons of the
spinal cord. With expertise from NIH as well as FDA, academia, and industry, the SMA
Project has created a multisite enterprise for accelerated drug development.
Scientific research is an increasingly global endeavor, and because brain disorders are
the leading contributors to disability in almost all parts of the world, global capacity
for neuroscience research is essential. Through a program entitled Brain Disorders in the Developing
World, NIH supports innovative, collaborative programs to build sustainable
neuroscience research capacity in low- and middle-income nations. Projects focus on some
of the unique challenges facing neuroscience research in the developing world and on
topics that are relevant worldwide, including the neurological consequences of
infectious diseases and nutritional deficits. For example, one study suggests that a
form of the APOE4 gene, which is associated with an increased risk for developing
Alzheimers disease, may have a protective effect early in life against the negative
consequences of malnutrition. This finding may help elucidate mechanisms to protect the
brain and body during times of nutritional deficit.
Looking to the Future
NIH-supported neuroscience research is steadfastly advancing its mission to reduce the
burden of nervous system disorders. New technologies that allow neuroscientists to
observe and manipulate neuronal networks could provide insights into how neural activity
leads to complex brain functions. Continued innovation in neuroimaging techniques may
identify disease risk or presence early, enabling more rapid diagnosis and intervention.
With knowledge gained through large-scale genetic and epidemiological studies,
clinicians of the future may personalize preventive and therapeutic strategies according
to the genetic profile and lifestyle of individual patients. Future medications for
treating nervous system disorders may reach specific brain targets with ease, and
advances in neuroprostheses may more successfully restore motor, sensory, and cognitive
function after disease or injury. These are just a few of the possibilities to come as
NIH-supported neuroscience research continues to build on past progress and identify and
pursue new opportunities. A glimpse into the future might reveal the ability to
replenish damaged nerve cells, reprogram neuronal connections that support addiction,
and stop degenerative processes that rob millions of their thoughts and memories.
Notable Examples of NIH Activity
Key for Bulleted Items:
|
E = Supported through Extramural research
I = Supported through Intramural research
O = Other (e.g., policy, planning, or communication)
COE = Supported through a congressionally mandated Center of Excellence program
GPRA Goal = Concerns progress tracked under the Government Performance and Results Act
|
|
Neurodevelopment: Periods of Growth, Maturation, and Vulnerability
Research on Environment and Autism: NIH has several innovative research studies
aimed at understanding how autism and autism-spectrum disorders may arise from a
combination of genetic vulnerability and exposure to harmful environmental agents during
key periods of early development. The NIEHS/EPA Childrens Center for Environmental
Health at the University of California, Davis supports a highly integrated research
program spanning human-to-animal cellular models to explore the interplay of immune,
genetic, and environmental factors in autism susceptibility. In 2001, this center
launched the first and most comprehensive large-scale epidemiological investigation of
environmental exposures and susceptibility factors for autism, the Childhood Autism Risk
from Genes and Environment (CHARGE) study. Scientists are exploring how persistent
organic pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl
ethers (PBDEs) may contribute to neurological development disorders such as autism by
interacting with cellular epigenetic mechanisms that control timing and patterns of gene
expression. NIH also supports an exploratory study at Johns Hopkins University to
develop new methods to measure individual differences in the immunotoxicity of mercury.
Autism Centers of Excellence (ACE): In 2007 and 2008, NIH created the unified ACE
program in order to maximize coordination and cohesion of NIH-sponsored autism research
efforts. The ACE programs will focus on a broad range of autism-related research,
including but not limited to neuroimaging, biomarkers and susceptibility genes,
pharmacotherapy, early intervention, and risk and protective factors.
- For more information, see Chapter 4: NIH Centers of Excellence.
- (E) (NIMH, NICHD, NIDCD, NIEHS, NINDS)
- (COE)
National Database for Autism Research (NDAR): NDAR is a collaborative biomedical
informatics system being created by NIH to provide a national resource to support and
accelerate research in autism.
- For more information, see http://ndar.nih.gov
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Life Stages, Human
Development, and Rehabilitation and Chapter 3: Disease Registries, Databases,
and Biomedical Information Systems.
- (E/I) (NIMH, CIT, NICHD, NIDCD, NIEHS, NINDS)
Genomic Studies of Autism: NIH has supported a number of studies that are
pointing to potential genetic causes of autism.
New Genetics Tools Shed Light on Addiction: NIH-supported research is taking full
advantage of the massive databases and rapid technologies now available to study how
genetic variations influence disease, health, and behavior. Such genetic studies are
critical to teasing apart the molecular mechanisms and genetic predispositions
underlying diseases like addiction. Investigators studying various neurological and
psychiatric illnesses have already linked certain genes with specific diseases by using
custom screening tools known as gene chips (e.g., the neurexin gene has been found to
play a role in drug addiction). A next-generation neurochip is being developed with
24,000 gene variants related to substance use and other psychiatric disorders. Applying
this tool to addiction and other brain disorders will advance our understanding not only
of vulnerability to addiction and its frequent comorbidities, but also of ways to target
treatments based on a patients genetic profile (i.e., a pharmacogenetic approach). To
complement these efforts, NIH is investing heavily in the emerging field of epigenetics,
which focuses on the lasting modifications to the DNA structure and function that result
from exposure to various stimuli. Attention to epigenetic phenomena is crucial to
understanding the interactions between genes and the environment, including the
deleterious long-term changes to brain circuits from drug abuse. A focus on
gene-by-environment interactions has recently been expanded to incorporate developmental
processes, which are now known to also affect the outcome of these interactions. The
resulting Genes, Environment, and Development Initiative (GEDI) seeks to investigate how
interactions among these factors contribute to the etiology of substance abuse and
related phenotypes in humans.
Underage Drinking Research Initiative: In 2004, NIH launched the Underage
Drinking Research Initiative with the goal of obtaining a more complete and integrated
scientific understanding of the environmental, biobehavioral, and genetic factors that
promote initiation, maintenance, and acceleration of alcohol use among youth, as well as
factors that influence the progression to harmful use, abuse, and dependence, all framed
within the context of overall development. Activities and accomplishments in 2007
include:
- Provided the scientific foundation for The Surgeon Generals Call to Action
to Prevent and Reduce Underage Drinking (released March 6, 2007) and for the
ongoing work of the Interagency Coordinating Committee on Preventing Underage
Drinking
- Convened scientific meetings of experts, including the Underage Steering
Committee that met four times over a 2-year period, a Meeting on Diagnosis of
Alcohol Use Disorders Among Youth (April 2006), and a Meeting on Screening for Child
and Adolescent Drinking and AUDs Among Youth (June 2007)
- Issued three Requests for Applications (RFAs), including Underage Drinking:
Building Health Care System Responses (four projects awarded in FY 2006), Impact
of Adolescent Drinking on the Developing Brain (five projects awarded in FY 2007),
and Alcohol, Puberty, and Adolescent Brain Development (three projects awarded in
FY 2007).
- Published Alcohol Research & Health, Vol. 28, Number 3: Alcohol and
Development in Youth: A Multidisciplinary Overview
- Published a supplement of seven developmentally focused papers covering a broad range of underage drinking
topics (accepted for the journal Pediatrics).
Prenatal Alcohol, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, and Stillbirth (PASS) Research
Network: Following a 3-year feasibility study, the NIH established this
multidisciplinary consortium to determine the role of prenatal alcohol exposure and
other maternal risk factors in the incidence and etiology of sudden infant death
syndrome (SIDS), stillbirth, and fetal alcohol syndrome, all of which are devastating
pregnancy outcomes. The PASS study will prospectively follow 12,000 pregnant, high-risk,
American Indian and South African women and their infants until the infants are 12
months old. Maternal, fetal, and infant measures and tissues will be obtained for
analysis.
The Role of Development in Drug Abuse Vulnerability: NIH supports a number of
longitudinal studies at various stages of development, following cohorts over extended
timeframes. Information is gathered on childrens cognitive and emotional development,
as well as their vulnerability to addiction later in life. These studies have been
critical to estimate, for example, the contribution of in utero drug exposure to
emotional and cognitive development, vulnerability to substance abuse, and other mental
disorders. This knowledge, together with animal studies that provide complementary and
validating information while minimizing the confounding factors that are likely to play
a role in prenatal effects of drug exposure in humans, will help us to mitigate the
deleterious impact of substance abuse on the developing fetus. With regard to later
developmental stages, the application of modern brain imaging technologies has generated
unprecedented structural and functional views of the dynamic changes occurring in the
developing brain (from childhood to early adulthood). The discovery of these changes has
been critical to understanding the role of brain development in decision-making
processes and responses to stimuli, including early exposure to drugs. Such studies have
suggested, for example, that an unbalanced communication between volitional control and
emotional circuits may explain some of the impulsive reactions typical of adolescents,
who tend to engage in risky behaviors and are at heightened risk for developing
addictions. Collectively, these longitudinal studies, using new imaging and genetics
tools, promise a greatly enhanced ability to interpret the effects of myriad
environmental variables (e.g., quality of parenting, drug exposure, socioeconomic
status, and neighborhood characteristics) on brain development and behavior.
MRI Study of Normal Brain Development: Understanding healthy brain development is essential to finding the causes of many childhood disorders, including those related to
intellectual and developmental disabilities, mental illness, drug abuse, and pediatric
neurological diseases. NIH is creating the Nations first database of MRI measurements
and analytical tools, as well as clinical and behavioral data to understand normal brain
development in approximately 500 children across the Nation. This large-scale,
longitudinal study uses several state-of-the-art brain-imaging technologies. The data
will be disseminated as a Web-based, user-friendly resource to the scientific community.
Studies of Normal Brain Development: The NIH Intramural Research Program
is conducting studies to explore brain development in healthy children and adolescents
with MRI. Recent studies have addressed brain structure differences related to risk for
Alzheimer's disease and sex differences in brain development trajectories.
Powerful New Technique Reveals How Brain Cells Wire Together: In order to
understand how the brain processes visual information and performs other tasks,
researchers have wanted to construct a wiring diagram of the billions of neurons
connected in precise, identifiable circuits. A breakthrough technology has helped clear
this major hurdle by revealing all the connections made by a single nerve cell. The new
tool uses a modified rabies virus, which can spread indefinitely through the nervous
system by jumping between communicating nerve cells. However, scientists modified the
virus so that it jumps once and then leaves a fluorescent tag in the neurons connected
to a single cell. This permits visualization of functional processing circuits in living
brains. It can also be used in transgenic mice to deactivate targeted classes of neurons
expressing specific genes, revealing changes in brain function, including behavior.
Neuroplasticity: Substrates for Change and Repair
Promising Approaches to Treating Chronic Pain: Opioid analgesics are the most
powerful pain medications currently available; unfortunately, they can produce drug
dependence. Thus, an area of enormous need is the development of potent non-opioid
analgesics. In recognition of this, NIH has implemented an aggressive and
multidisciplinary research program. Many of these initiatives are yielding tangible
results that stand to revolutionize the field of pain management. At the molecular
level, cannabinoid (CB) research has shown that it is possible to selectively activate
the CB system to provide analgesia with minimal or no psychotropic side effects or abuse
liability. New findings in basic pharmacology reveal previously unrecognized complexity
emerging from the natural mixing of different receptors, the targeting of which could
provide a vastly expanded range of pharmacotherapeutic effects. This approach has
already ushered in the development of promising designer molecules that can block pain
more selectively and safely. At the cellular level, active research on a non-neuronal
brain cell type, glia, has led to the realization that glia activation can amplify pain.
This discovery suggests that targeting glia and their pro-inflammatory products may
provide a novel and effective therapy for controlling clinical pain syndromes and
increasing the utility of analgesic drugs. At the brain circuit level, a new approach
has been developed to harness the brains intrinsic capacity to train itself through a
strategy in which subjects learn how to regulate pain by viewing and then controlling
images of their own brains in real time.
Tools to Reveal the Mechanisms Governing Behavior: Newly acquired but rapidly
evolving tools and techniques that monitor or probe discrete brain systems have allowed
NIH-supported researchers to begin filling in the information gap between molecular or
cellular events and behavioral outcomes. A notable preclinical example of this trend is
the development of a genetically engineered method to turn the electrical impulses of
brain cells on and off with pulses of light–in sync with the split-second pace of
real-time neuronal activity. The novel technique borrows genes from light-responsive
algae and bacteria to unravel the intricate workings of brain circuits with extreme
precision. This powerful new tool could be used to assess the role of neuronal activity
in regulating normal behavior and disease processes. On the clinical side, an array of
brain imaging devices has produced much information on how neural circuits develop and
process information under normal conditions and how they become impaired by a disease
like addiction. These advances have led to the fertile concept that the transition from
abuse to addiction is not a switch but a gradual degradation of the ability of different
circuits to talk to each other as they attempt to compensate for their deficiencies.
Interestingly, these studies are also showing significant overlap in the circuits
involved in drug abuse and the circuits underlying compulsive overeating and obesity.
Moreover, in preclinical studies, compounds that interfere with food consumption in
animal models of compulsive eating also interfere with drug administration.
The Scientific Basis of Acupuncture: Ongoing research on acupuncture includes a
substantial portfolio of basic and translational studies employing state-of-the-art
neuroimaging technology. This work is beginning to provide powerful scientific insight
into the potential neurobiological mechanisms of action by which acupuncture might work.
Clinical trials of acupuncture for a number of medical conditions are also under way,
including studies examining (1) the potential role of traditional acupuncture as an
additive/alternative treatment for the prevention of acute cardiac events in patients with coronary artery disease, (2) whether manual or electro-acupuncture contributes to neurological recovery after spinal cord injury, and (3) the efficacy of acupuncture in relieving post-thoracotomy pain syndrome (severe and persistent aching or burning pain along surgical scars in the chest).
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems and Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E) (NCCAM)
Cochlear Implants: One of the more groundbreaking biomedical achievements in the
last 30 years has been the cochlear implant, an electronic device that provides a sense
of sound to individuals who are profoundly deaf or severely hard-of-hearing. Cochlear
implants process sounds from the environment and directly stimulate the auditory nerve,
bypassing damaged portions of the inner ear. Nearly 100,000 individuals worldwide have
been fitted with cochlear implants. In the United States, approximately 22,000 adults
and nearly 15,000 children have received them. Derived in part from NIH-funded research
that dates back to the early 1970s and continues today, this remarkable technology has
enabled deaf and severely hard-of-hearing individuals to enjoy an enhanced quality of
life. NIH-supported scientists showed that profoundly deaf children who receive
cochlear implants at an early age develop language skills at a rate comparable to that
of children with normal hearing. They also found that the benefits of the cochlear
implant in children far outweigh its costs. Scientists can now study the large groups
of children who were identified early for hearing loss and use this knowledge to
document how treatments such as cochlear implants can lead to improved speech and
language acquisition, academic performance, and economic outcomes for these children.
Neurobiology of Appetite Control: NIH supports research to elucidate the complex
biologic pathways that converge in the brain to regulate appetite. Examples include
research on how serotonin reduces appetite; the actions of the protein mTOR in sensing
nutrients in the body so as to modulate food intake; and a strategy to block ghrelin, a
stomach-secreted hormone that signals the brain to increase food intake. This research
has implications for new therapies for obesity.
A Multidisciplinary Approach to Nicotine Addiction: Nicotine addiction is the
number-one preventable public health threat and has enormous associated morbidity,
mortality, and economic costs. NIH-supported research has generated new knowledge to
support the development of more effective prevention messages and treatment approaches.
Several notable examples characterize NIHs multidisciplinary approach to targeting the
best treatment (or combination of treatments) for nicotine addiction. Genomic studies
have recently uncovered a series of genes that are associated with nicotine addiction
and that could provide new targets for medications development and for the optimization
of treatment selection. Pharmacologic studies, so critical to understanding the basis
of nicotines mode of action, have recently revealed that its addictiveness may hinge
upon its ability to slowly shut down or desensitize the brains response to nicotine. A
recent imaging study indicated that a part of the brain called the insula may play an
important role in regulating conscious craving. This exciting finding provides a new
target for research into the neurobiology of drug craving and for the development of
potentially more effective smoking cessation and other addiction treatments. Results of
a Phase II clinical trial strongly suggest that a nicotine vaccine, which works by
preventing nicotine from reaching the brain, may be a particularly useful tool for
cessation programs in the not-too-distant future.
Treatments to Fight Methamphetamine Addiction: The abuse of methamphetamine–a
potent and highly addictive psychostimulant–is a serious problem in the United States.
Methamphetamine abuse can have devastating medical, psychological, and social
consequences. Adverse health effects include memory loss, aggression, psychotic
behavior, heart damage, and abnormal brain function. Methamphetamine abuse also
contributes to increased transmission of hepatitis and HIV/AIDS and can spawn increased
crime, unemployment, and other social ills. The good news is that methamphetamine abuse
and addiction are treatable, and people do recover. As methamphetamine abuse has
increased, so has NIHs support of research to combat it, including research on
genetics, brain development, and translation of findings. This research has led to the
development of two effective behavioral therapies for methamphetamine addiction: (1)
the Matrix Model, consisting of a 16-week program that includes group and individual
therapy and addresses relapse prevention, behavioral changes, establishment of new
drug-free environments, and other areas, and (2) Motivational Incentives for Enhanced
Drug Abuse Recovery, a cost-effective incentive method for cocaine and methamphetamine
addiction that has been shown to sustain abstinence in twice the number of participants
engaged in treatment as usual. Increasingly, community treatment providers nationwide
are implementing motivational incentives as part of drug addiction treatment.
Quantum Program: The NIH Quantum Grants Program has been developed to make a
profound (quantum-level) advance in health care by funding research, over two phases,
on targeted projects that will develop new technologies for the diagnosis, treatment,
or prevention of a major disease or national public health problem. The first of the
Quantum Grants was to engineer stem cell-based neurovascular regenerative units in a
laboratory environment, which can then be implanted into the damaged cortex of stroke
patients to provide a source of neural and vascular cells that will continue to develop
and differentiate. This approach may lead to the first true treatment for stroke, which
is one of the most common causes of disability and severely affects the quality of life
of patients throughout the world. Another Phase I Quantum competition was completed in
September 2007, with four additional grants awarded. The Phase II Quantum competition
will begin in FY 2009.
Prevention of Trauma-Related Mental Disorders in High-Risk Occupations: NIH is
supporting a research initiative to develop and test preemptive interventions to
prevent trauma-related disorders, such as posttraumatic stress disorder, among
occupational groups at high risk for trauma exposure, such as the military,
firefighters, police, and rescue workers.
Traumatic Brain Injury Program: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) presents enormous
challenges to neuroscience because of the numbers of people affected and the range of
problems TBI can cause. The consequences of TBI may be subtle or severe, immediate or
delayed, perhaps even predisposing to problems many years later in life. TBI can
compromise virtually any human ability, depending on which parts of the brain are
damaged. NIH supports a broad program of research, from studies of how TBI causes
immediate and delayed damage to brain cells, to development of measurable diagnostic
markers of damage, through large clinical trials to test interventions. NIH clinical
studies are developing both emergency interventions to minimize damage and
rehabilitation strategies to compensate for damage or encourage the brain to adapt. The
high rate of TBI among military personnel in Afghanistan and Iraq presents a special
concern. NIH intramural scientists are working with the Departments of Defense and
Veterans Affairs to study the psychobiological consequences of TBI among military
personnel, and NIH is working with all relevant Federal agencies to coordinate research
activities on high-priority issues, including a 2006 interagency conference on TBI and
follow-up meetings in 2007 and 2008 focusing on issues such as injury classification
and potential combination therapies.
Epilepsy Research Benchmarks: In March 2000, NINDS convened a broad group of
scientists, clinicians, people impacted by epilepsy, and public policymakers for a
White House-initiated conference on the disorder. After this conference, NINDS
developed a series of epilepsy research goals in three major topic areas: (1)
interrupting and monitoring the development of epilepsy, (2) preventing epilepsy, and
(3) developing more effective therapies. The Institute worked with the epilepsy
research and patient communities to develop a series of benchmarks for tracking
progress toward these goals. Researchers have made substantial progress since this
meeting, and science has also evolved over this time. As a result, NINDS organized a
session at the most recent Curing Epilepsy 2007 conference for the participants to
discuss revisions to the first set of benchmarks. NINDS is currently collecting public
feedback on these revised goals and will work with a group of representatives from the
scientific community to refine the benchmarks for release at the 2007 American Epilepsy
Society meeting.
Neural Prosthesis Program: Neural prosthetic devices restore or supplement
nervous system functions that have been lost through disease or injury, allowing people
with disabilities to lead fuller and more productive lives. The NINDS Neural Prosthesis
program pioneered the development of this technology beginning more than 35 years ago.
The program has, directly or indirectly, catalyzed the development of cochlear implants
for the hearing impaired, respiratory and hand grasp devices for people with spinal
cord injuries, and deep brain stimulation for Parkinsons disease, among other
contributions. Current work aims to restore standing and voluntary bowel and bladder
control after spinal cord injury, to allow paralyzed persons to control devices
directly from their brains, and to control seizures. Ongoing research also seeks to
improve cochlear implants and to advance deep brain stimulation, which may be
applicable to many brain disorders. Through the years, the program has fostered the
development of a robust research community that now includes private-sector companies
and represents a cooperative effort among several NIH Institutes, which coordinate
their efforts with programs now under way in the Department of Veterans Affairs and the
Department of Defense.
Link Between Eye Movement and Reward: Dopamine is vital to motor behaviors, but
neurons that release dopamine carry signals related to rewards, not body movements. As
a solution to this puzzle, recent theories propose that the reward-related dopamine
signals are used for learning of motor behaviors. However, it is unknown how dopamine
neurons acquire the reward-related signals. NIH scientists have shown that a small
brain area called the lateral habenula controls dopamine neurons by inhibiting them and
thereby suppressing less rewarding eye movements. This discovery opens up new research
connecting emotion and motivation to motor behaviors.
Genes Involved in the Regulation of Sensitivity to Alcohol: Low doses of alcohol
are stimulating in both humans and animals while higher doses have sedating effects.
Sensitivity to alcohol, however, varies across individuals and low sensitivity to
alcohol is a risk factor for the development of alcohol dependence in humans. Recent
animal studies have identified several genes that alter sensitivity to alcohol and may
provide targets for medications development.
- Researchers have discovered a genetic mutation that disrupts the function of
the fruit fly gene RhoCAP18B, causing the flies to be much more resistant to
alcohol sedation. Other variants of the same gene, each of which has a distinctly
different effect on the response to alcohol, were subsequently identified.
- Rothenfluh A, et al. Cell 2006;127:199-211, PMID: 17018286
- Another fruit fly gene, homer, has been shown to be required for normal
sensitivity and tolerance to alcohol. This study shows that ethanol sensitivity and
tolerance co-map to the same population of neurons, suggesting that the neuronal
circuits controlling these two behaviors, known to contribute to alcohol
dependence, are shared.
Increased Endocannabinoid Signaling Increases Ethanol Consumption and Decreases
Acute Ethanol Intoxication: Endocannabinoids, the naturally occurring substances in
the brain that act on the same receptors as the active ingredients of marijuana, have
been discovered to play a role in regulating appetite for alcohol. NIH-supported
scientists discovered that mice lacking expression of fatty acid amidohydrolase (FAAH),
the main endocannabinoid-degrading enzyme, showed an increased appetite for ethanol,
decreased sensitivity to ethanol-induced sedation, and faster recovery from
ethanol-induced motor incoordination. These results show that impaired FAAH function
leads to increased voluntary alcohol intake and point to FAAH both as a potential
susceptibility factor and a therapeutic target for excessive alcohol consumption.
Re-innervation of Regenerated Hair Cells: Hair cells detect sound and are named
for the hairlike projection from their top surface. Researchers hope one day to
regenerate hair cells in the inner ears of people who have experienced damage due to
noise, drugs, or disease. However, the ability to regrow hair cells will not restore
hearing or balance without properly reconnected nerve endings. NIH-supported scientists
used drugs to destroy hair cells and corresponding nerve endings in adult pigeons.
(Unlike mammals, birds and other vertebrates are able to regenerate hair cells
naturally.) Using a high-powered microscope, the scientists examined tissue sections
and determined that the re-innervation process was similar to the pattern observed
during normal nerve cell development. Although the regenerated nerve endings were less
complex than those generated in normal development, many balance-related behaviors
nevertheless fully recovered. This finding suggests that scientists may need only to
regenerate simple nerve endings to restore the sense of balance. Further clarification
of the mechanisms involved in nerve cell regeneration is essential for the potential
recovery of balance and hearing in people with inner-ear damage.
Neurodegeneration: Fighting the Effects of Age, Exposure, and Disease
Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI): ADNI is an innovative
public-private partnership for examining the potential for serial MRI, positron
emission tomography (PET), or other biomarkers to measure earlier and with greater
sensitivity the development and progression of mild cognitive impairment and
Alzheimers disease. Early results suggest that researchers may be able to reduce the
costs associated with clinical trials by improving imaging and biomarker analysis. One
ADNI study found that a standard model can be used to monitor the performance of MRI
scanners at multiple clinical sites, ensuring the accuracy of the MRI images. In
another study, investigators compared changes over time in PET scans of brain glucose
metabolism in people with normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimers
disease and found that scans correlated with symptoms of each condition and that images
were consistent across sites. This finding suggests that PET scans may be a valid
method for monitoring the effectiveness of therapies in future clinical trials. More
than 200 researchers have already accessed a public database containing thousands of
brain images and related clinical data obtained through blood and cerebrospinal fluid
analyses.
Genome-Wide Genotyping in Parkinsons Disease: NIH researchers recently
conducted genome-wide genotyping of publicly available samples from a cohort of 267
patients with Parkinsons disease and 270 neurologically normal control subjects to
identify any common genetic variability with significant effect on the risk for
Parkinsons disease. The project has produced approximately 220 million data points in
the 537 subjects, the largest collection of publicly available genotypes in a
case-control cohort. The release of these data facilitates research on Parkinsons
disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, and the genotypes from neurologically
normal control subjects can be used as a comparison cohort for other studies,
dramatically reducing the cost of future research.
Ongoing Research on Complementary and Alternative Medical Approaches for Patients
with Alzheimers Disease or Dementia and Their Caregivers:
- A study in an animal model of Alzheimers disease, evaluating whether fish oil,
a safe and relatively inexpensive dietary supplement source of omega-3 fatty acids,
shows similar or better effects than docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in slowing the
progression of changes associated with cognitive and functional decline in humans
with Alzheimers disease
- A feasibility study of polarity therapy as an intervention for family
caregivers of people with dementia who experience high levels of stress and are at
risk for physical and mental health illness
- Preclinical investigations of the potential activity and mechanisms of effect
of (1) D-pinitol, a natural compound found in high concentrations in pine tree
components and in smaller but significant concentrations in soy, and (2) substances
derived from heat-processed ginseng and other related natural products.
Alzheimers Disease Cooperative Study (ADCS): Much of the NIH-supported clinical
research on Alzheimers disease takes place through the ADCS. The study involves a
consortium of centers in the United States and Canada where clinical trials are carried
out on promising new therapies that may preempt the onset of Alzheimers disease or
predict the diseases development in vulnerable people. To date, approximately 4,600
people have participated in the trials. In FY 2007, new studies included a trial to
demonstrate whether intravenous immunoglobulin is clinically useful for treating
Alzheimers disease and a trial to examine whether treatment with docosahexaenoic acid,
an omega-3 fatty acid, will slow cognitive decline in patients with Alzheimers
disease.
Parkinsons Disease Registry: NIEHS has begun to address the need for more
precise data on the incidence and prevalence of Parkinsons disease through support of
a Parkinsons disease registry in the State of California, where the large and diverse
population, coupled with the wide range of exposures that exist through agriculture and
other activities, provides a unique opportunity to investigate disease-environment
links. The United States does not have a national health registry to supply data on
Parkinsons disease, so estimates are based on sampling by individual studies in
specific locales. The Parkinsons registry in California will allow us to base national
estimates on a registry drawing upon a cross-section of the population in our most
populous state.
Multiple Sclerosis: Although the exact cause of multiple sclerosis is unknown,
research suggests a strong genetic component. NIH funds a number of studies to
determine the underlying genetic causes of multiple sclerosis, including a project to
identify regions of the genome containing multiple sclerosis susceptibility genes using
a large familial dataset and genomic analysis tools. NIH also funds clinical trials to
test therapies for multiple sclerosis, including the CombiRx trial, a randomized,
controlled clinical trial comparing the efficacy of treatment combining
beta-interferon and glatiramer acetate versus treatment with a single agent for
relapsing forms of MS. A study conducted in conjunction with CombiRx by NIH intramural
researchers (BioMS) is assessing multiple sclerosis biomarkers by using genomic and
proteomic technology and relating the information obtained back to clinical and MRI
data generated by the CombiRx clinical trial.
Age-Related Eye Disease Study, Part 2 (AREDS2): Age-related macular degeneration
(AMD) is the leading cause of blindness in the elderly in the United States and will be
an increasing burden in future years, based on demographics. The original AREDS, which
was completed in 2005, demonstrated that antioxidant vitamin and mineral supplements
reduced the progression to advanced AMD by 25 percent. Building on these landmark
findings, AREDS Part 2 (AREDS2) is assessing additional supplements (lutein,
zeaxanthin, and long-chain omega-3 fatty acids) as a treatment for AMD and cataracts.
AREDS2 is also evaluating effects of eliminating beta-carotene and/or reducing zinc in
the original AREDS formulation on AMD progression. AREDS2 investigators will also
explore gene-environment interactions in the development of these conditions, cognitive
function, and cardiovascular health.
- For more information, see http://www.areds2.org
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems
and Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E) (NEI, NIA)
Retinal Neurodegeneration Program: The Retinal Neurodegeneration Program is a
new multidisciplinary intramural research program that combines basic, preclinical, and
translational research to develop and test therapeutic interventions in several retinal
degenerative diseases. These interventions include gene therapy, small molecules,
neurotrophic factors, and cell-based systems, in combination with a variety of
treatment delivery technologies.
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (I) (NEI)
Alzheimers Disease Genetics Initiative and Data Storage: Only one of the four
validated Alzheimers disease genes, APOE, has been definitively linked with the more
common late-onset form of the disease. A fifth gene, SORL1, has recently been linked
with late-onset Alzheimers disease in some studies. The goal of the Alzheimers
Disease Genetics Initiative is to develop the resources necessary for identifying the
late-onset Alzheimers disease risk factor genes and the interactions of genes with the
environment. In FY 2006, NIH achieved its goal to recruit 1,000 families with two or
more siblings living with Alzheimers disease through an unprecedented alliance of
Alzheimers disease centers, researchers, and outreach with the Alzheimers
Association. To facilitate access by qualified investigators, all genetic data derived
from NIH-funded studies on late-onset Alzheimers disease genetics are deposited at a
central data storage site at Washington University in St. Louis, another NIH-approved
site, or both. Discovery of risk factor genes will help illuminate the underlying
disease processes of Alzheimers disease, open up novel areas of research, and identify
new targets for drug therapy.
- For more information, see http://www.niageneticsdata.org
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Disease Registries, Databases, and
Biomedical Information Systems.
- (E/I) (NIA)
Understanding the Mechanisms of Alcohol-Induced Tissue Injury: Heavy alcohol use
has an impact on nearly every organ system of the body (the most vulnerable being the
brain and liver), and the resulting pathological conditions contribute to increased
mortality and morbidity among all age and racial/ethnic groups and both sexes. NIH is
especially interested in elucidating mechanisms of injury common to multiple body and
organ systems. A number of Program Announcements and RFAs have been issued to support
research to increase our understanding of the underlying cellular and molecular
mechanisms of tissue injury caused by alcohol consumption, including alcohols genetic,
epigenetic, and metabolic effects. The long-term goals of these initiatives are to
identify biomarkers for alcohol exposure and for the early detection of alcohol-induced
tissue injury, as well as to develop new therapeutics that control or modify outcomes
of chronic alcohol use.
Cognitive and Emotional Health Project: The Healthy Brain: The purpose of this
initiative is to assess the state of longitudinal and epidemiological research on
determinants of cognitive and emotional health in aging adults. The project has
completed a comprehensive review of measures that have been (or could be) used in
epidemiological research. To help NIH learn what epidemiological data exist on the
cognitive and emotional health of adults in the United States, the project polled
investigators who are conducting these types of studies and created an online database.
In addition, a Critical Evaluation Study Committee conducted an analysis and published
a summary of the existing scientific literature pertaining to factors involved in the
maintenance of cognitive and emotional health in adults. NIH is discussing new
initiatives to expand this project, including promoting the use of existing datasets
and developing ancillary studies to examine how cognitive and emotional health
influence each other.
Progress in Parkinsons Disease Research: For the past 7 years, NIH has been
actively engaged in identifying gaps in Parkinsons disease research and developing
programs to address them. Examples of progress include initiation of Phase III clinical
trials of creatine and coenzyme Q10 to treat early Parkinsons disease; development of
diagnostic criteria for depression and psychosis in people with Parkinsons disease;
and support for a Parkinsons disease Gene Therapy Study Group. NIH has also begun to
formally assess the effectiveness of its programs by completing an evaluation of its
Morris K. Udall Centers of Excellence in Parkinsons Disease Research. This evaluation
included an assessment of scientific progress made by the centers and the value of
using a centers mechanism, as well as an exploration of the effectiveness of program
management and review in supporting the centers. The Working Group tasked with this
evaluation released its findings in September 2007.
Toward Better Treatment for Muscular Dystrophy: Activities funded by NIH are
pursuing multiple pathways to therapeutic development for the muscular dystrophies. NIH
funds six Senator Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Centers,
designed to accelerate the translation of fundamental scientific advances to the clinic
(see Chapter 4). NIH also recently funded two large-scale translational research
projects in muscular dystrophy: one to develop small-molecule drugs for Duchenne and
potentially other forms of muscular dystrophy and another to develop the optimal vector
for vascular delivery of genes. A new NIH Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA)
goal aims to advance two emerging strategies for treating muscular dystrophy to
clinical trial readiness by 2013. The Muscular Dystrophy Coordinating Committees
Action Plan for the Muscular Dystrophies also identified therapy development goals to
be pursued by NIH and the committees partner agencies and organizations. A recent
workshop convened by NIH reviewed the status of different therapeutic approaches for
muscular dystrophy and discussed ways to move this research forward.
Translational Research on Alzheimers Disease: To move basic research on
Alzheimer's disease and associated disorders into translational research and drug
testing in clinical trials, this initiative includes drug discovery, preclinical
development, and a program of toxicology services for academic and small business
investigators who lack the resources to perform the required toxicology studies on
promising therapeutic compounds. To closely monitor the progress of the translational
projects, provide guidance, and foster interactions among investigators involved in
translational research funded by these programs, NIH staff will hold the First Annual
Investigators Meeting for Translational Research in September 2007.
Preclinical Efficacy of Ginkgo biloba in Alzheimers Disease: NIH-supported
investigators recently published results showing that Ginkgo biloba, studied in an
animal model of Alzheimers disease, reduces both the formation of the specific brain
abnormalities seen in humans and the resulting paralysis seen in the animals. These
experiments lend additional support to the hypothesis that Ginkgo biloba may be useful
in slowing the progression of Alzheimers disease. That hypothesis is being tested in
the largest clinical trial to date of Ginkgo biloba for the prevention of dementia,
supported by NIH.
Inflammatory Factor Mediates Nerve Degeneration in Glaucoma Model: In glaucoma,
elevated eye pressure plays a role in damaging fibers in the optic nerve, which relays
visual signals to the brain. However, the link between pressure and nerve damage is not
well understood. Recent research in mice suggests a critical role for the protein tumor
necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-a) in developing glaucoma. A molecular target in the
glaucoma disease pathway opens up doors for drug therapy.
Gene Expression Changes in Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy: Results from
a genome-wide scan of skeletal muscle biopsies suggest a link between eye blood vessel
defects and muscle defects that characterize facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.
Patient participants were recruited from the National Registry for Myotonic Dystrophy
and patients with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy and their family members.
Hereditary Hearing Loss: NIH recognizes that one of the most rapidly developing
areas of research is functional genomics, which involves determining the identity,
structure, and function of genes. Hereditary or genetic causes account for
approximately 50-60 percent of the severe to profound cases of childhood hearing loss.
NIH-supported scientists are working to understand the normal function of these genes
and how they are altered in individuals with hereditary hearing loss. At present, more
than 70 genes causing nonsyndromic hereditary hearing impairment have been mapped to
intervals on particular chromosomes; many of these efforts were the result of
collaborations involving NIH-supported scientists. In collaborative efforts with
scientists in Colombia, India, Indonesia, Israel, Lebanon, Mexico, Newfoundland,
Pakistan, Tunisia, Puerto Rico, and the United States, NIH is accelerating this gene
discovery effort. These research investments to understand the genetic basis of
communication disorders will help scientists develop diagnostic tests and better
treatments for the millions of Americans with hereditary hearing impairment.
Advancing Neuroscience Research Through Collaboration
The NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research: The NIH Blueprint is a
collaborative framework that brings together 16 NIH ICs and Offices that support
neuroscience research. The Blueprint catalyzes research progress by developing tools,
resources, and training opportunities that transcend the mission of any single NIH IC
and serve the entire neuroscience community. In FY 2006, the Blueprint launched
initiatives to develop new neuroimaging technologies, a clearinghouse to distribute and
improve existing neuroimaging software, core resource centers, a neurological and
behavioral assessment tool, and new genetically modified mouse models. The Blueprint
also supported training programs in neuroimaging, computational neuroscience, and
translational research. In FY 2007, the Blueprint released funding announcements to
identify biomarkers for neurodegeneration, develop new ways to deliver therapeutics to
the nervous system, and provide interdisciplinary training in neurodegeneration
research.
- For more information, see http://www.neuroscienceblueprint.nih.gov
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Research Training and Career
Development.
- (E) (NINDS, NCCAM, NCRR, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NIBIB, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD,
NIDCR, NIEHS, NIGMS, NIMH, NINR, OBSSR)
A Clearinghouse for Neuroimaging Informatics Tools and Resources: NIH
understands that researchers seeking neuroimaging analysis software tools need a
convenient way to find and compare useful software. Indeed, the best or most suitable
neuroimaging analysis technologies for research may be hidden in someones laboratory
or some obscure corner of cyberspace. NIH is creating a Neuroimaging Informatics Tools
and Resources Clearinghouse. The 14 NIH ICs that participate in the Neuroscience
Blueprint have supported the development of sophisticated, high-quality neuroimaging
informatics tools and resources. The clearinghouse is intended to facilitate the
dissemination of those tools and resources and promote their adoption within the
extended neuroimaging community. A contract has been awarded to create the
clearinghouse infrastructure. The infrastructure will include a Web site
that will not only provide access to tools and resources but will also provide ongoing
opportunities for public comment to guide future development and enhancement of the
tools. In addition to the contract award, grant awards are being made to individual
extramural scientists to enable them to render their tools more suitable for this
initiative. The awards will fund the enhancement of tools to make them easier to use,
more broadly applicable, or more compatible with other existing tools. The
clearinghouse was released to the public in October 2007.
- For more information, see http://www.nitrc.org
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Disease Registries, Databases, and
Biomedical Information Systems.
- (E) (NIBIB, NCCAM, NCRR, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD, NIDCR, NIEHS,
NIGMS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR, OBSSR)
NIMH Genetics Repository: Over the last 9 years, NIMH has built the
infrastructure for large-scale genetics studies through the NIMH Human Genetics
Initiative. Through this Initiative, NIMH established a repository of DNA, cell
cultures, and clinical data that serve as a national resource for researchers studying
the genetics of complex mental disorders.
- For more information, see http://nimhgenetics.org.
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Genomics and Chapter 3: Disease Registries, Databases, and Biomedical Information Systems.
- (E) (NIMH)
Practical Clinical Trials: NIH has completed primary and secondary phases of
several practical clinical trials that have examined treatment effectiveness for mental
disorders such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depression. The infrastructure
developed for each of these large multisite trials–involving more than 10,000
participants at over 200 sites–has forged efficient, effective, and collaborative
relationships between scientists and clinicians throughout the country. To capitalize
on the national networks established for the trials, NIH will fund infrastructure-only
support for the platform of clinical sites and an administrative core. It is
anticipated that the platform will serve as a critical foundation for supporting
participant enrollment, facilitating communication among trial sites, maintaining
up-to-date training in diagnosis and treatment, and providing needed administrative
organization.
NINDS Human Genetics Repository: In 2003, NINDS established the Human Genetics
Repository to collect, store, characterize, and distribute DNA samples and cell lines
and standardized clinical data for the research community. By June 2007, the repository
held material from 16,683 subjects, including those with stroke (4,363), epilepsy
(1,065), Parkinsons disease (3,585), and motor neuron diseases such as ALS (2,445), as
well as control samples (4,767). The ethnically diverse collection represents
populations from the United States and several other countries. Investigators have
submitted or published more than 50 scientific articles based on data from this
resource, and technological advances allowing whole genome screening for disease
genes have also enhanced its value.
NIH Pain Consortium: The aims of the NIH Pain Consortium are to enhance pain
research and promote collaboration among researchers across the many NIH ICs that have
programs and activities addressing pain. The consortium held its second annual
symposium, Advances in Pain Research, on May 1, 2007, to feature new and exciting
advances in pain research and pain management. Topics included neuropathic pain,
visceral pain, inflammatory pain, and treatment-induced pain. Participants included NIH
and extramural scientific communities, health care providers, and the public.
Consortium ICs also issue an NIH-wide Funding Opportunity Announcement, Mechanisms,
Models, Measurement, and Management in Pain Research, to encourage pain research and
delineate cross-cutting NIH interests in pain.
- For more information, see http://videocast.nih.gov/PastEvents.asp
- For more information, see http://painconsortium.nih.gov/index.html
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems.
- (E/I) (NIDCR, CC, FIC, NCCAM, NCI, NCRR, NIA, NIAAA, NIAMS, NIBIB,
NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD, NIGMS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR, OBSSR, OD, ODP/ORD, ORWH, OTT)
Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas (GENSAT): Knowing where and when genes are
active is a key to understanding how the nervous system develops, how the normal brain
works, and what goes wrong in disease. More than half of all genes are active at some
point in the brain, yet only a small fraction of these have been well characterized. To
systematically address this issue, NIH initiated the GENSAT project. The project
prescreens the activity of many genes at four developmental time points in several
parts of the brain and spinal cord and, for genes of high interest, generates strains
of mice in which a visible marker is turned on wherever and whenever the gene of
interest is active. In addition to the value of the publicly accessible GENSAT
database, the mice are useful for research on normal development and function and
diseases. For example, researchers used GENSAT mice to discover that one of two
previously indistinguishable types of nerve cells is selectively vulnerable in
Parkinsons disease. By revealing the molecular mechanism that kills the cells, these
experiments also identified a new potential drug target. GENSAT is now a resource
within the NIH Neuroscience Blueprint and will expand to include nerve cells in the
eye, ear, and pain pathways.
- Day M, et al. Nat Neurosci 2006;9:251-9, PMID: 16415865
- For more information, see http://www.gensat.org/index.html
- For more information, see http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?cmd=search&db=gensat
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Molecular Biology and Basic
Sciences.
- (E) (NINDS, NCCAM, NCRR, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NIBIB, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD,
NIDCR, NIEHS, NIGMS, NIMH, NINR, OBSSR)
Programs to Accelerate Medications Development for Alcoholism Treatment:
Alcoholism is a complex heterogeneous disease caused by the interaction between
multiple genetic and environmental factors that differ from one drinker to another.
Therefore a diverse repertoire of medications is needed to provide effective therapy to
a broad spectrum of alcohol-dependent individuals. Although promising compounds have
been identified, developing medications is a long and costly process with a low
probability of success for any single agent. NIH has initiated collaborations with the
pharmaceutical industry to ensure their interest in taking promising compounds through
the final phase of clinical trials and subsequent FDA consideration. As part of this
approach, two new programs have been initiated:
- Laboratories have been established to screen promising compounds with animal
models, enabling faster determination of those that merit advancement to large,
multisite studies. Animal studies have already produced several targets for human
studies that are now under way, such as rimonabant, a cannabinoid CB1 receptor
blocker, and antalarmin, a corticotropin-releasing factor receptor blocker.
- A network of sites is being developed to conduct early Phase II
proof-of-concept human trials. NIH will encourage the pharmaceutical industry to
screen proprietary compounds in the preclinical models and, when results are
positive, test them in the early human trials network.
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ
Systems and Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E/I) (NIAAA) (GPRA Goal)
The Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA): In its 18th year,
COGA is a multisite, multidisciplinary family study with the overall goal of
identifying and characterizing genes that contribute to the risk for alcohol dependence
and related phenotypes. COGA investigators have collected data from more than 300
extended families (consisting of more than 3,000 individuals) who are densely affected
by alcoholism. Investigators have identified several genes, including GABRA2, ADH4,
ADH5, and CHRM2, that influence the risk for alcoholism and related
behaviors, such as anxiety, depression, and other drug dependence. In addition to
genetic data, extensive clinical neuropsychological, electrophysiological, and
biochemical data have been collected, and a repository of immortalized cell lines from
these individuals has been established to serve as a permanent source of DNA for
genetic studies. These data and biomaterials are distributed to qualified investigators
in the greater scientific community to accelerate the identification of genes that
influence vulnerability to alcoholism. COGA will continue to identify genes and
variations within the genes that are associated with an increased risk for alcohol
dependence and will perform functional studies of the identified genes to examine the
mechanisms by which the identified genetic variations influence risk.
- For more information, see http://zork.wustl.edu/niaaa
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems,
Chapter 3: Genomics, and Chapter 3: Molecular Biology and Basic
Sciences.
- (E) (NIAAA) (GPRA Goal)
Brain Disorders in the Developing World: Research Across the Lifespan: Brain
disorders are the leading contributor to years lived with disability in all regions of
the world, with the exception of sub-Saharan Africa. This program boosts research in
the developing world on childhood disorders such as cerebral palsy and epilepsy, on
mental illnesses such as depression and schizophrenia, and on degenerative disorders,
such as stroke and Alzheimers disease. Under this program, U.S. investigators and
their foreign collaborators are studying the neurocognitive consequences of HIV/AIDS,
the relationship between zinc nutrition and brain development, and the neurological
disorders stemming from treatable infectious causes, such as cerebral malaria,
cisticercosis, tuberculosis (TB), and bacterial sepsis.
- For more information, see http://www.fic.nih.gov/programs/research_grants/brain_disorder
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Life Stages, Human Development, and
Rehabilitation.
- (E) (FIC, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NICHD, NIDA, NIEHS, NIMH, NINDS, ODS)
Trans-NIH Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research: NIH coordinates chronic fatigue
syndrome research through a trans-NIH Working Group on Research on Chronic Fatigue.
This working group developed an action plan to enhance the status of chronic fatigue
syndrome research at the NIH and among the external and intramural scientific
communities. The working group held a workshop on grantsmanship in FY 2007 to provide
researchers with an overview of funding opportunities, an understanding of the NIH
funding process, and an opportunity to meet with program officials. In addition, the
Office of Research on Womens Health and a subset of the working group ICs issued an
RFA in FY 2006 to explicate how the brain, as the mediator of the various body systems
involved, fits into the schema for understanding chronic fatigue syndrome. This RFA
solicited proposals from multidisciplinary teams of scientists to develop an
interdisciplinary approach to the study of chronic fatigue syndrome in men and women
across the lifespan and resulted in seven new research projects on chronic fatigue
syndrome.
- For more information, see http://orwh.od.nih.gov/cfs.html
- For more information, see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-OD-06-002.html
- For more information, see http://orwh.od.nih.gov/cfs/2006NIHfundedCFSstudies.html
- For more information, see http://orwh.od.nih.gov/cfs/cfsFundingGMWs.html
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Chronic Diseases and Organ Systems.
- (E) (ORWH, NIAID, NIAMS, NIAAA, NIA, NICHD, NIDA, NIDDK, NINDS, NCRR,
CSR, NIEHS, NIDCR, NINR, NHLBI, NIMH, NCCAM, FIC, ODS, OBSSR)
Mechanisms of HIV Neuropathogenesis: Domestic and Global Issues: Neurological
manifestations, including HIV dementia and opportunistic infections and tumors, are
among the most threatening complications of HIV infection. Emerging data indicate that
the prevalence of HIV-related neurological disease differs across regions of the world,
suggesting that different subtypes of HIV may be more or less capable of causing
neuropathology, or that genetic variance among people in various regions of the world
could affect susceptibility to HIVs neuropathological effects. NIH sponsored a meeting
in the spring of 2007 to address these issues, resulting in the release of a funding
announcement.
National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium (NNTC): The NNTC is a repository of brain
tissue and fluids from highly characterized HIV-positive individuals. Established as a
resource for the research community, NNTC includes information from more than 2,000
individuals, including approximately 641 brains, thousands of plasma and cerebrospinal
fluid samples, and additional organs and nerves of interest.
NIH Countermeasures Against Chemical Threats (CounterACT) Research Network:
CounterACT Research Network, as reflected in an NIH GPRA goal, develops medical
countermeasures to prevent, diagnose, and treat conditions caused by chemical agents
that might be used in a terrorist attack or released by industrial accidents or natural
disaster. The network, which has collaborated with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)
from its inception in 2006, includes Research Centers of Excellence, individual
research projects, small business research grants, contracts, and other programs that
conduct basic, translational, and clinical research. One promising countermeasure,
midazolam, which DoD researchers identified as a potential countermeasure against
chemical agent-induced seizures, is entering clinical trials in epilepsy patients
through the NINDS Neurological Emergency Clinical Trials Network, and NIH is
collaborating with DoD to complete animal studies necessary for its FDA approval as a
nerve agent treatment.
Specialized Program of Translational Research in Acute Stroke (SPOTRIAS): The
objective of SPOTRIAS is to serve as an incubator for translational and early-phase
clinical research studies. SPOTRIAS sites are located at medical centers where staff
have the capacity to evaluate and treat stroke patients very rapidly after symptom
onset. NIH supports seven SPOTRIAS sites, which have made substantial progress,
including impressive increases in the use of the clot buster tPA (tissue plasminogen
activator) to treat acute stroke; the establishment of three interlinked repositories
for protein and DNA tissue samples, neuroimages, and clinical data; enrollment of more
than 640 individuals with acute stroke into treatment protocols; the management of 17
early-phase clinical trials; and the training of 25 research fellows.
- For more information, see http://www.spotrias.com
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E/I) (NINDS)
The SMA Project: A decade ago, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) was one of hundreds
of poorly understood inherited disorders that affect the nervous system, and the
outlook for developing treatments was bleak. The discovery of the gene defect that
causes SMA dramatically improved prospects, revealing a rational strategy to develop
drugs. The SMA Project is a novel approach to preclinical drug development and may
serve as a model for other disorders. The project has brought together expertise from
industry, academia, the FDA, and NIH to generate a detailed drug development plan. A
virtual pharma organization develops and applies the resources to carry out the plan
through subcontracts to companies that serve the pharmaceutical industry. The project
created a new drug through extensive modification of indoprofen, a drug with known
activity in experimental settings that was not suitable for clinical application.
Through repeated modification and evaluation cycles in laboratory tests, the project
produced hundreds of chemical compounds related to indoprofen and has made encouraging
progress. In 2007, preclinical studies began to evaluate the two best candidates for
clinical readiness. The best of these will likely be ready for early stage clinical
testing in 2008 or 2009. In early 2008, the project also began two new drug development
projects that could yield additional drug candidates for SMA.
- For more information, see http://www.smaproject.org
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E) (NINDS)
The NIH Toolbox for Assessment of Neurological and Behavioral Function: The NIH
Blueprint for Neuroscience Research supports this contract awarded to the Evanston
Northwestern Healthcare Research Institute. The project entails the development of a
set of standardized neurological and behavioral measures of cognition, emotion,
sensation, and motor function. The toolbox will foster uniformity among the basic
measures used and allow comparisons or data compilations across multiple studies. This
innovative approach to measurement will be responsive to the needs of researchers in a
variety of settings and will place particular emphasis on measuring outcomes in
clinical trials and functional status in large cohort studies, such as epidemiological
and longitudinal studies.
- For more information, see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-AG-06-008.html
- For more information, see http://www.enh.org/aboutus/press/article.aspx?id=4358.
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Molecular Biology and Basic
Sciences.
- (E) (OBSSR, NCCAM, NCRR, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NIBIB, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD,
NIDCR, NIEHS, NIGMS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR)
The NIH Rapid Access to Intervention Development (RAID) Pilot Program: The NIH-
RAID Pilot program makes available, on a competitive basis and at no cost to
investigators, certain critical resources needed to develop new small-molecule drugs,
including not only laboratory services but also expertise in the regulatory process.
The program directly addresses roadblocks to moving research findings from bench to
bedside. Among the projects approved are drugs for hepatic fibrosis, the blood diseases
beta-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia, brain tumors, and the neurological disorders
Friedreichs ataxia and Alzheimers disease. The NIH-RAID Pilot program is part of the
NIH Roadmap for Medical Research.
Gene Influences Antidepressant Response: Whether depressed patients will respond
to an antidepressant depends, in part, on which version of a gene they inherit. In an
NIH-supported study, investigators found that having two copies of one version of a
gene that codes for a component of the brains mood-regulating system increased the
odds of a favorable response to an antidepressant by up to 18 percent, compared to
having two copies of the other, more common version.
Genetic Roots of Bipolar Disorder Revealed by First Genome-Wide Study of Illness: According to NIH-funded research, the likelihood of developing bipolar disorder depends in part on the combination of small effects of variations in many different
genes in the brain, none of which is powerful enough to cause the disease by itself.
Other Notable Activities
Advances in Treatment Development: NIH continues to fund research into the
development of new, targeted medications and treatments for mental disorders.
- Drug Development for Cognitive Impairments in Schizophrenia: The
Treatment Unit for Research on Neurocognition in Schizophrenia program is a network
that is testing the safety and efficacy of new therapeutic compounds for treating
the cognitive deficits of schizophrenia.
- Studies of Fragile X Syndrome: NIH has entered into a public-private
partnership to study and test possible medications for treating fragile X syndrome,
the most common cause of inherited mental impairment. Fragile X syndrome is caused
by a single gene mutation that ultimately results in exaggerated activity of a
brain protein called mGluR5. Researchers will study, in animals, the safety of
chemical compounds known to block this mGluR5 activity. If this phase goes well,
researchers will move forward with clinical studies.
- Faster-acting depression treatments: A recent NIH-funded study found
that people with treatment-resistant depression experienced relief in as little as
2 hours after a single intravenous dose of ketamine, a medication usually used in
higher doses as an anesthetic. Used in very low doses, ketamine is important for
depression research but at higher doses could have side effects that may limit its
clinical use. Nevertheless, this research could inform the development of faster
and longer acting medications for treating depression.
Clinical Research and Trials in Neurological Disease: NINDS provides extramural
funding for more than 1,000 clinical research studies. Nearly 1 million people
participate in these projects, and it is essential to assess the return on this
investment in improving quality of life. NINDS contracted an independent evaluation of
the costs and benefits of its Phase III clinical trials. Investigators found that,
although the total cost of clinical trials in the study was $335 million, the
cumulative benefits over a 10-year period exceeded $15 billion and added 470,000
healthy years of life to people in the United States. NINDS is extending this
evaluation approach by developing a computer model that will estimate the public health
impact of any given clinical trial in neurology or neurosurgery. This model will be
publicly available for use by researchers and the Institute to facilitate
decision-making. NINDS is also assessing ways to further improve its trials. To this
end, the Institute has funded a Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials (NETT)
Network to facilitate high-quality clinical trials in acute neurological disorders and
accelerate the implementation of new therapies into practice in emergency departments.
Scientific Basis of the Placebo Effect: The placebo effect can be defined as the
measurable, observable, or felt changes that occur during, but are not directly
attributable to, a specific health intervention. It is a ubiquitous and frequently
powerful phenomenon that operates in all forms of medicine, so good clinical research
is designed to account for its effects as well as those of the intervention under
study. Because of the power of the placebo effect, it is equally important to
understand the mechanisms by which it operates and to explore how its benefits might be
maximized to enhance the quality and effectiveness of all forms of health care. An
ongoing NIH initiative is examining multiple aspects of the placebo effect through
interdisciplinary investigations employing molecular, physiological, biochemical,
immunological, genetic, behavioral, and social science approaches. This work is
beginning to shed light on many facets of the placebo effect. For example, one recently
published study showed that placebo-associated pain relief was correlated with
activation of areas of the brain that are associated with pain relief that occurs
through both innate mechanisms and with use of opioid narcotics. Other ongoing studies
are examining the role and importance of the placebo effect in the relationship between
patient and health care provider.
Reducing Disparities in Stroke: NIH is actively engaged in a number of research
projects designed to identify risk factors for stroke in minority populations and
enhance prevention and treatment in these groups. The Reasons for Geographic and Racial
Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study is an observational study to explore the role of
race and geographic differences on the prevalence of risk factors for stroke and on
stroke incidence and mortality. To date, researchers have recruited approximately
27,000 of a projected 30,000 individuals (about 50 percent African American and 50
percent White) and have already published a number of important findings on their
baseline data. NIH has also established an acute stroke research and care center at the
Washington Hospital Center, a community hospital in Washington, DC, where more than 75
percent of stroke patients are African American or Hispanic. The center will collect
data to aid in stroke prevention programs and will run two clinical trials, one on
secondary stroke prevention and another on increasing the use of tissue plasminogen
activator among minorities. The program directly addresses GPRA Goal SRO-8.9.2: By
2018, identify culturally appropriate, effective stroke prevention/intervention
programs in minority communities.
Blending Initiative: Bench to Bedside to Community: Efforts to systematically
move science-based interventions and practices into community settings are exemplified
in the testing of drug abuse treatment approaches in the community settings where they
will be used by drug treatment professionals who are trained to implement them. This
work is occurring through the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network at
NIH, which involves practitioners from community treatment programs in formulating
research protocols and provides real-world feedback on their success and feasibility.
The adoption of the addiction medication buprenorphine by a growing number of community
treatment programs that treat patients with opioid addiction is an example of real
culture change issuing from NIH clinical research. A similar approach is under way to
enhance treatment for drug-addicted individuals involved with the criminal justice
system through research supported under the Criminal Justice-Drug Abuse Treatment
Studies (CJ-DATS) initiative. CJ-DATS seeks to achieve better integration of drug abuse
treatment for criminal offenders with other public health and public safety forums and
is a collaborative effort by NIH and multiple Federal agencies and health and social
service professionals. These initiatives are helping to change the culture of how drug
abuse treatment is delivered in this country.
Hearing Aids and Directional Microphones: Approximately 32.5 million American
adults report some degree of hearing loss, according to data from the National Center
for Health Statistics 2003 National Health Interview Survey. Although almost 95 percent
of Americans with hearing loss could have their hearing treated with hearing aids, only
about 20 percent of Americans with hearing loss have hearing aids, and many who wear
them are dissatisfied with them. Hearing in noisy environments is a major unsolved
problem faced by hearing aid users, and of all available technologies, directional
microphones currently show the most promise for addressing this problem. NIH-supported
scientists have been studying the tiny fly Ormia ochracea, which has such sensitive
directional hearing that it has inspired ideas for a new generation of hearing aids.
The flys ear structure, which permits ultrasensitive time coding and localization of
sound, provides a model for scientists and engineers in developing new miniature
directional microphones for hearing aids that can focus sound amplification on speech.
To improve hearing aid technology so that users can better understand speech in a noisy
background, NIH-supported scientists successfully completed a prototype of a low-power,
highly directional microphone small enough to fit into a hearing aid. The use of
improved directional microphones in hearing aids will improve the quality of life for
individuals with hearing loss who depend on hearing aids to understand spoken language.
Visual Processing in Neuroscience Blueprint: Much of the cerebral cortex of the
brain is devoted to processing the images that flood our eyes. The visual cortex also
connects with many regions of the brain that govern memory, language, movement, and a
myriad of other cognitive abilities. NIHs visual processing research portfolio
prioritizes understanding of how the brain processes visual information, how brain
activity results in visual perception, and how the visual system interacts with other
cognitive systems.
Centers on Suicide Prevention: In response to the 2002 Institute of Medicine
Report Reducing Suicide: A National Imperative, NIH issued an RFA and funded three
centers focused on suicide intervention and prevention. Now in their third year of
support, the centers have conducted pilot intervention studies with patients suffering
from mental and substance use disorders.
- This example also appears in Chapter 3: Clinical and Translational Research.
- (E) (NIMH, NIAAA, NIDA)
Understanding How Prefrontal Cortex Affects Cognitive Function: In FY 2008, NIH
will support an RFA to stimulate research on how a brain region called the prefrontal
cortex interacts with other parts of the brain to give rise to sophisticated behavior
and cognitive function. Abnormal functioning of the prefrontal cortex is associated
with mental disorders such as schizophrenia and depression.
Brain Tumor: The NIH Brain Tumor Progress Review Group identified many
priorities for the field. Research on understanding and preventing brain tumor
dispersal was one of the groups highest scientific priorities, and NIH funds a number
of projects in this area, many of which were submitted in response to a Program
Announcement with set-aside funds issued in 2004. NIH also funds clinical studies
investigating therapy delivery to the brain and evaluating the safety and tolerability
of various therapies, including immunological therapies, vaccine therapy, monoclonal
antibodies, and combination therapies. The Surgical and Molecular Neuro-Oncology Unit
within the NIH Division of Intramural Research investigates basic mechanisms of brain
tumor development and chemotherapy resistance to find new therapeutic strategies,
particularly for malignant gliomas.
Know Stroke in the Community Educational Campaign: In 2004, NIH entered a
first-time partnership with CDC to launch a new grassroots education program called
Know Stroke in the Community. The program was designed to identify and enlist the aid
of community leaders, called Stroke Champions, who worked to educate communities
about the signs and symptoms of stroke. The program focuses on reaching African
Americans, Hispanics, and seniors in communities that have the health care systems in
place to treat stroke. In 2005-2006, the program had been implemented in 11 cities,
educating 168 Stroke Champions who have conducted more than 600 community events.
- This example also appears in Chapter 2: Minority Health and Health
Disparities and Chapter 3: Health Communication and Information Campaigns
and Clearinghouses.
- (E/I) (NINDS)
Peripheral Neuropathies: NIH funds studies focused on understanding the genetic
basis and molecular and cellular mechanisms of many peripheral neuropathies, including
diabetic neuropathy, HIV/AIDS-related and other infectious neuropathies, inherited
neuropathies such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth, inflammatory neuropathies such as chronic
inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, and rare forms of peripheral neuropathy. In
October 2006, NIH held a workshop that looked across different peripheral neuropathies
to focus on steps needed for therapy development. The workshop brought together
researchers in inherited and acquired peripheral neuropathies, representatives from
voluntary disease groups, and NIH staff.
Rare Disorders: NIH supports research to uncover the causes of and develop
treatments for the hundreds of rare disorders that affect the nervous system while also
promoting research on topics such as stem cells, gene therapy, and neuroimaging that
will impact multiple rare disorders. New NIH-funded grants in FY 2006 and 2007 focused
on rare diseases, such as Friedreichs ataxia, ALS, transmissible spongiform
encephalopathies, and Rett syndrome. NINDS also collaborates with the Office of Rare
Diseases (ORD) and patient voluntary organizations to stimulate research via workshops
or grant solicitations. For example, lysosomal storage disorders, such as Fabry,
Niemann-Pick, and Gaucher diseases, are rare genetic diseases with neurological
manifestations. NINDS, ORD, and a patient voluntary group cosponsor an initiative to
spur new research on the delivery of therapies for lysosomal storage disorders across
the blood-brain barrier.
- For more information, see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAS-06-202.html
- For more information, see http://www.ninds.nih.gov/about_ninds/plans/a-t_plan.htm
- (E) (NINDS, NCI, NCRR, NEI, NHGRI, NHLBI, NIA, NIAID, NICHD, NIDDK, NIEHS, NIGMS, ODP/ORD)
Translational Research: To meet the special needs of translational research
across neurological disorders, NINDS has developed a program to support pilot projects,
full-scale collaborative teams in academia and small businesses, and training efforts.
Investigator-initiated proposals are rigorously peer reviewed, and expertise and
criteria are tailored to translational research objectives. Funding is milestone
driven, and the program fosters collaborative research. Ongoing projects are developing
drug, stem cell, or gene therapies for ALS, Batten disease, epilepsy, Huntingtons
disease, Duchenne and other muscular dystrophies, Parkinsons disease, tuberous
sclerosis, and stroke and other disorders. In 2008 the program will expand to include
molecular diagnostics, which are critical for catching disease early, when intervention
is most likely to succeed.
Acupuncture for Osteoarthritis of the Knee: Clinical trials supported by NIH and
others suggest that acupuncture may have a useful role in treating a variety of chronic
painful conditions, hypertension, and obesity. For example, in 2006 NIH-funded
investigators reported findings from the longest, largest, randomized, controlled
clinical trial of acupuncture ever conducted. The results demonstrated that acupuncture
is an effective adjunct to conventional treatment for osteoarthritis, the most common
form of arthritis and a major cause of pain, limitation of activity, and health care
utilization among the elderly. Study participants receiving acupuncture had
significantly reduced disability and improved quality of life. The innovative trial
design resulted from an interdisciplinary collaboration of rheumatologists, licensed
acupuncturists, and biostatisticians, ensuring that the research methodology was
scientifically sound and accurately reflected acupuncture as traditionally practiced.
How We Detect Taste at the Molecular Level: Taste is critical for discriminating
between nutritious and spoiled foods. Taste disorders can lead to reduced appetite and
poor nutrition. Scientists are trying to increase their understanding by identifying
proteins that we produce to help detect taste. Taste cells are clustered in taste buds
on the tongue and palate. NIH-supported scientists have identified a new protein,
PKD1L3, found specifically in taste cells. The PKD1L3 protein forms a channel that
allows tastants, such as sodium ions or protons, to enter through taste cell membranes
so that tastes can be detected. Another group of NIH-supported scientists determined
that the protein is located in taste pores and is activated by acids (sour) but not
other tastants. A third group of NIH-supported scientists reports that mice lacking
PKD2L1-expressing cells cannot detect sour tastants, but can detect all others.
Together, these three reports suggest that PKD1L3 channels detect sour tastants in
food. Scientists can now explain how humans detect the flavors sweet, sour, bitter, and
umami, or savory, at the cellular level. This advance in understanding taste may help
scientists treat taste impairments and could also lead to the development of better
salt and sugar substitutes for the millions of Americans on restricted diets to control
high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity.
Stuttering: Stuttering is a communication disorder with notable physical and
emotional challenges to the speaker and sometimes to the listener. It is estimated that
approximately 3 million Americans stutter. Stuttering affects individuals of all ages
but occurs most frequently in young children between the ages of 2 and 6 who are
developing speech and language. Boys are three times more likely to stutter than girls.
Most children, however, outgrow their stuttering. It is estimated that less than 1
percent of adults stutter. NIH-supported scientists identified a specific location for
a gene on chromosome 12 that seems to be an important contributor to stuttering in a
series of 40 highly inbred families of Pakistani origin. Determining the underlying
molecular causes of stuttering may lead to improved diagnosis and treatment.
Discovering the Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: Nociception, the sensory component
of pain, depends in part on the intricate network of sensory transmission within our
bodies, stretching from our extremities to the spinal cord and onward to the brain. But
on its most fundamental level, nociception involves molecules and chemical mechanisms.
NIH scientists have reported progress in understanding precisely how individual
molecules in our nerve cells generate, transmit, and sustain sensory signals. They
discovered that a much-studied protein called cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) plays a
regulatory role in pain signaling between sensory nerves in the spinal cord and nerve
ganglia. Their results offer the first direct evidence of this regulatory role for
Cdk5. The authors also reported the first evidence from animal studies of the
importance of Cdk5 activity in inflammation. These findings point the way for
additional research, suggesting that new analgesic drugs that alter Cdk5 activity one
day may be beneficial in treating pain.
DNA Test for Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease: Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, one of
the most common inherited neurological disorders, affects 1 in 2,500 people in the
United States. Its symptoms start in early adulthood and include progressive arm and
leg pain that leads to difficulty walking and manipulating objects. Using a special
strain of mice, new genomic technologies, and information from the mouse and human
genome sequences, NIH-funded researchers rapidly identified a mutation that causes a
subtype of the disease. Knowledge of the specific gene defect will enable development
of a DNA test to confirm the diagnosis in patients and predict risk for family members.
NIH Strategic Plans Pertaining to Neuroscience and Disorders of the Nervous System
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
National Eye Institute (NEI)
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
- Neuroscience research at NICHD
- Branch Reports to Council with Future Research Directions:
- National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research NICHD, Report to the National Advisory Child Health and Human Development (NACHHD) Council, January 2006
- National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR), NICHD, Report to the NACHHD Council, January 2006
- Developmental Biology, Genetics, and Teratology Branch, Report to the NACHHD Council, September 2006
- Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Branch, NICHD, Report to the NACHHD Council, June 2005
Fogarty International Center (FIC)
Office of AIDS Research (OAR)
Other Trans-NIH Plans
- NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research
(NCCAM, NCRR, NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NIBIB, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD, NIDCR, NIEHS, NIGMS,
NIMH, NINDS, NINR, OBSSR)
- (NCCAM, NCRR, NHGRI, NIA, NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD, NIEHS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR)
- Research Plan for Tuberous Sclerosis
(NCI, NHLBI, NIAMS, NICHD, NIDDK, NIMH, NINDS, ORD)
- Muscular Dystrophy Research and Education Plan for the NIH
(NINDS, NIAMS, NICHD [co-leads])
- Action Plan for the Muscular Dystrophies
(NINDS, NIAMS, NICHD [co-leads])
- Report of the Brain Tumor Progress Review Group
(NCI, NINDS)
- Research Plan for Ataxia-Telangiectasia
(NCI, NCRR, NEI, NHLBI, NHGRI, NIA, NIAID, NICHD, NIEHS, NIGMS, NINDS, ORD)
- The Autism Research Matrix
(NIMH; NICHD; NIDCD; NINDS; NIEHS; CDC; ACF; HRSA; CMMS; SAMHSA; NIDDK)
- NIH Research Plan on Down Syndrome
(NICHD, NCI, NHLBI, NIA, NIAID, NIDA, NIDCD, NIDCR, NIMH, NINDS)
- Advances and Emerging Opportunities in Type 1 Diabetes Research: A Strategic Plan
(CC, CSR, NCCAM, NCI, NCMHD, NCRR, NEI, NHGRI,NHLBI, NIA, NIAAA, NIAID, NIBIB,
NICHD, NIDA, NIDCD, NIDCR, NIDDK, NIEHS, NIGMS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR, NLM)
11Institutes and Centers participating in the NIH
Blueprint for Neuroscience Research: NEI, NIA, NIAAA, NIBIB, NCCAM, NICHD, NCRR, NIDA,
NIDCD, NIDCR, NIEHS, NIGMS, NIMH, NINDS, NINR, and OBSSR.
12World Health Organization.
Neurological Disorders: Public Health Challenges. Geneva: WHO Press, 2006.
13Rosamond W, et al. Circulation 2007;115:e69-171, PMID: 17194875
14Langlois JA, Rutland-Brown W, Thomas KE. Traumatic brain injury in the United States: emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths. Atlanta: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; 2006.
15Finkelstein E, Corso P, Miller T, et al. The Incidence and Economic Burden of Injuries in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.
16World Health Organization, 2006.
17For more information, see http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/FinalReport/toc.html
18Kessler RC, et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2005;62:617-27, PMID: 15939839
19For more information, see http://www.census.gov/popest/national/asrh
20Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Results from the 2005 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: National Findings (Office of Applied Studies, NSDUH Series H-30, HHS Publication No. SMA 06-4194). Rockville, MD; 2006; For more information, see http://oas.samhsa.gov/NSDUH/2k5NSDUH/2k5results.htm
21U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, Maternal and Child Health Bureau. The National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs Chartbook 2001. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2004; For more information, see http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/child/improve.htm
22Plassman BL, et al. Neuroepidemiology 2007;29:125-32, PMID: 17975326
23Hebert LE, et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:1119-22, PMID: 12925369
|