Toggle light / dark theme

How “mindreading” AI detects hidden suicidal thoughts in the brains of young adults

A recent study published in Human Brain Mapping provides evidence that young adults experiencing suicidal thoughts process concepts related to death differently in their brains compared to healthy individuals. The findings indicate that these individuals reflexively associate death-related ideas with their own sense of self. This research suggests that brain imaging combined with artificial intelligence could eventually help identify people at risk for suicide based on how their brains represent specific words.

If you or someone you know is experiencing suicidal thoughts or a mental health crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 to reach the free and confidential Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or chat live at 988lifeline.org.

While mental health professionals typically rely on patients to report their feelings, people at risk for suicide do not always disclose their struggles. Finding an objective physical measurement in the brain could help identify those in need of support.

Depression is linked to a genuine pessimistic bias rather than a realistic view of the world

A recent study published in the journal Behaviour Research and Therapy provides evidence that people experiencing symptoms of depression hold genuinely pessimistic biases about future positive events, rather than simply viewing the world more realistically. The research suggests that while individuals with depression can update their beliefs when desirable things happen, these hopeful shifts tend to be fragile and easily reversed.

The study was designed to test whether the negative thinking patterns seen in depression reflect a genuine bias or just an absence of normal optimism. For decades, experts have debated the idea of depressive realism, a concept suggesting that depressed individuals actually see the world more accurately than healthy individuals, who tend to be overly optimistic. To test this, the researchers wanted to see how people predict everyday life events and how they adjust those expectations when real life proves them wrong.

“We know that depression involves a generally pessimistic outlook on life. Previous research has shown that people with high depressive symptoms tend to underestimate the likelihood of positive outcomes in their lives,” said study author Joe Maffly-Kipp, a postdoctoral fellow in the Mood & Individual Differences Lab (MIND Lab) at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.

Study of 6 Million People Could Rewrite How We Understand Mental Health

From the article:

The study also identified specific brain cell types associated with the genetic patterns.

For the schizophrenia bipolar group, the strongest genetic signals appeared in genes active in excitatory neurons. These neurons transmit signals that activate other brain cells and help different parts of the brain communicate.

In contrast, genetic risk tied to internalizing disorders such as depression, anxiety, and PTSD showed stronger links to oligodendrocytes. These cells help nerve signals travel more efficiently through the brain.

“The findings suggest these ‘support cells’ might play an important role in those conditions,” said Verhulst, research assistant professor and an expert in quantitative and statistical genetics.”


A massive genetic analysis of more than 6 million people is revealing new clues about why mental health disorders frequently overlap.

Pitfalls and Potential of Dementia Prevention Trials

💬 Editorial by Holly Elser, MD, PhD, and Jonathan Graff-Radford, MD:

Recent randomized clinical trials on dementia prevention highlight several challenges in interpreting lifestyle intervention studies, including practice and Hawthorne effects, modest changes in cognitive outcomes, and heterogeneity in both trial design and participant baseline risk.

The trial by Zhang et al—evaluating aerobic exercise and intensive vascular risk reduction—showed no significant cognitive benefit over 2 years in older adults at elevated risk, underscoring the potential influence of midlife vs late-life intervention timing and the need for longer trials or biomarker-enriched cohorts to better assess dementia prevention strategies.


Dementia prevention is a global public health priority,1,2 with up to 45% of cases potentially attributable to modifiable risk factors over the life course.3 While recent landmark trials, including FINGER, SPRINT MIND, and POINTER, suggest either single-or multidomain lifestyle interventions can improve cognitive outcomes,4-6 others have shown no clear benefit,7,8 thus highlighting ongoing uncertainty in the field.

In this issue of JAMA Neurol ogy, Zhang and colleagues9 report the results of a single-blind, multicenter randomized clinical trial of the effects of exercise and intensive vascular risk reduction on cognitive function. Eligible study participants were between the ages of 60 and 85 years at baseline with a history of hypertension, family history of dementia, or self-reported cognitive decline. The study used a 2 × 2 factorial design wherein participants were randomized to aerobic exercise training alone, intensive pharmacological reduction of cardiovascular risk factors (IRVR) alone, both aerobic exercise and IRVR, or usual care for a 24-month period. The IRVR protocol lowered systolic blood pressure to less than 130 mm Hg, and participants with baseline serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) of 70 mg/dL or higher were also treated with a high-intensity statin.

High-Level Alzheimer Disease Neuropathological Change Following Iatrogenic Exposure

Patients treated with cadaveric pituitary-derived human growth hormone contaminated with amyloid-β developed early-onset AlzheimerDisease with prominent language deficits and histopathological features consistent with AD.


Question What are the clinical and postmortem findings in iatrogenic Alzheimer disease (iAD) consequent to treatment with cadaveric pituitary–derived human growth hormone (c-hGH)?

Findings This case series describes a c-hGH recipient with early-onset dementia and prominent language involvement, in whom postmortem examination showed unequivocal neuropathological features of AD, including severe tauopathy. Three additional c-hGH recipients have similar cognitive syndromes characterized by prominent language involvement.

Meaning These results demonstrate that patients with iAD can have histopathological findings classically found in sporadic AD and that prominent language involvement might be an important phenotypic feature in this AD subtype.

A long-term and scalable system to record from neural organoids

Driving liver inflammation in MASH via multiple pathways.

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) if not treated early, may lead to liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (liver cancer).

Hepatic lipotoxicity, intestinal dysbiosis, and pro-inflammatory diets have been attributed to the development of MASH. Moreover, obesity-induced adipose tissue inflammation also contributes to MASH.

The researchers in this review unravel complex, multiple parallel inflammatory mechanisms in MASH and describe how MASH drugs exert their effects. # sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/liver-inflammation-in-MASH


Intra-and extrahepatic inflammation in MASH is driven by various hits such as lipotoxicity, the gut microbiome, and proinflammatory diets. Inflammation contributes to hepatic and systemic complications, including cardiovascular diseases. Beneficial drugs in MASH might target metabolic and inflammatory pathways.

Signal, Speculation, and Standards of Proof in Iatrogenic AD

💬 Editorial: Current evidence supports iatrogenic transmission of cerebral amyloid angiopathy but not AlzheimerDisease; a definitive causal link between contaminated growth hormone exposure and AD remains speculative.


Neurodegenerative diseases caused by protein misfolding (eg, Alzheimer disease [AD], frontotemporal lobar degeneration, Parkinson disease) share many similarities with prion diseases. All demonstrate template-directed protein misfolding and propagation in vivo. However, with 1 exception, they have not exhibited interindividual or zoonotic transmission as observed in iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, respectively. An important unresolved question is whether other proteinopathies are transmissible between individuals, and if so, their potential impact on public health. To address these concerns, several prion centers have re-assessed cases of iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease due to cadaver-derived human growth hormone (c-hGH) and dura mater grafts. Although amyloid β (Aβ) plaques and cerebral amyloid angiopathy were commonly seen, tau pathology necessary for a diagnosis of AD was not.1,2 Thus, while there is adequate evidence that cerebral amyloid angiopathy may be acquired through iatrogenic mechanisms, iatrogenic transmission of AD pathology remained speculative.3

In 2024, Banerjee et al published an article entitled, “Iatrogenic Alzheimer’s Disease in Recipients of Cadaveric Pituitary-Derived Growth Hormone.”4 This assertion of iatrogenic AD (iAD) was largely predicated on the detection of Aβ seeds contaminating the c-hGH used in 8 recipients who later presented with concerns of cognitive impairment. The recipients had a variety of premorbid neurologic conditions that led to the need for hGH, many of which are themselves associated with later-life neuropathology, perhaps most notably radiotherapy and epilepsy. This report was met with some skepticism, given how the cases were diagnosed and the lack of biological evidence to confirm AD pathology in most participants.5,6

In this issue of JAMA Neurol ogy, the same group presents a report of an autopsy-confirmed case of AD in a c-hGH recipient and describes the clinical phenotype of 3 other c-hGH recipients.7 In their autopsy case, they describe cerebral amyloid angiopathy and high-level AD neuropathologic change (A3B3C3), providing the strongest confirmation of an AD diagnosis in their cohort. Additionally, this individual had limited premorbid medical conditions (complex partial seizures) and required hGH due to idiopathic growth hormone deficiency. They describe the clinical presentation as a mixed primary progressive aphasia phenotype and remark that 3 other c-hGH recipients presented similar primary progressive aphasia phenotypes. One of these was diagnosed with atypical AD due to unspecified single-photon emission computed tomography imaging findings and the other through a reduced Aβ42/40-cerebrospinal fluid ratio.

Brain Disease Decades Later? Study Links Childhood Surgery to Amyloid Build-Up

A new report describes two unusually young patients who developed cerebral amyloid angiopathy decades after childhood cardiac surgery. Researchers suspect amyloid-beta may have been inadvertently transmitted through cadaver-derived surgical material used at the time. The finding does not mean Alzheimer’s is contagious in everyday life, but it does add to evidence that rare past medical exposures may seed abnormal brain protein buildup years later.


Reference #18.45a42617.1774897640.756bc240

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.45a42617.1774897640.756bc240

Newly discovered recessive neurodevelopmental disorder may be most prevalent ever

Researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York have identified and described a previously unknown recessive neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) that appears to be the most prevalent ever discovered. The condition is caused by changes in a small noncoding gene called RNU2-2. It is estimated to affect thousands of individuals in the United States and account for about 10% of all recessive NDD cases with a known genetic cause.

The work was done in collaboration with U.S. collaborators in the Undiagnosed Diseases Network led by colleagues at Stanford University and international collaborators in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Italy. The findings, published in the March 30 issue of Nature Genetics, provide long-awaited answers for many families and may inform future drug development.

The team found that the disorder is caused by a near-complete absence of a molecule called U2-2 RNA, which is produced by the RNU2-2 gene. Children with the condition typically inherit one altered copy of the gene from each parent, although sometimes changes arise spontaneously by genetic mutation. While the parents are unaffected, the combined effect on both copies of the gene in their children leads to disrupted brain development in their child.

/* */