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Hunger pangs 'may trigger memory - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/healt   Message List  
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Dear Docs and friends of Science,

Hunger pangs 'may trigger memory !
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4723162.stm
New research suggests it may be wise to revise for and sit exams on an empty
stomach as hunger can help with the creation and retrieval of memories.

American scientists found the hunger hormone ghrelin can increase the number of
nerve connections in the area of the brain where new memories are formed. The
study raises hopes of drugs to treat impaired learning and memory in diseases
such as Alzheimer's. The Yale University study features in the journal Nature
Neuroscience. Ghrelin is released by the empty stomach into the bloodstream, and
is known to activate receptors throughout the brain. Scientists already knew
that the hormone acts on an area of the brain called the hypothalamus to trigger
feelings of hunger. However, the hormone's effect elsewhere in the brain has
remained something of a mystery.

More connections

The Yale team has discovered that it seems to impact on the functioning of a
second area known as the hippocampus, which is known to be essential to
learning. The researchers found mice bred to lack the ghrelin gene had 25% fewer
'synaptic' connections between nerve cells in this area. They also showed that
injecting normal mice with extra ghrelin increased the number of synapses in the
hippocampus - and improved the animals' performance in several learning and
memory tests. Writing in the journal, the researchers said: "The study provides
evidence that ghrelin may control higher brain functions and may represent a
molecular link between learning capabilities and energy metabolism." The
researchers say it might be possible to use the hormone to develop new drugs to
combat impaired learning and memory, but warn that weight gain could be a side
effect.

Professor Stephen Bloom, an expert in appetite regulation at Imperial College
London, told the BBC News website: "Memory can be switched on and off, and often
it is switched on at times of stress. "The paper is pretty interesting and it is
entirely plausible that we are more alert and keyed up to both remember and
recall more readily when stressed by hunger. "If we weren't our individual
forbearers might have died out in the competition for food."


Forwarded By yours Dr.BHUDIA-Science Group Of INDIA.
http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/venustransit_2004/
President:"Kutch Science Foundation".
Founder :"Kutch Amateurs Astronomers Club - Bhuj - Kutch".
Life Member:"kutch Itihaas Parishad".
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 12:09 pm

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Dear Docs and friends of Science, Hunger pangs 'may trigger memory ! http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4723162.stm New research suggests it may be wise to...
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