Belgian
doctors pin hope on large brain collection to treat
diseases
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[July 20, 2017] DUFFEL,
Belgium (Reuters) - A psychiatric hospital in Belgium is home to one of
the world's largest collections of human brains, which researchers say
could hold the key to developing new treatments for diseases such as
psychosis, schizophrenia and severe depression.
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The Duffel Psychiatric Hospital's more than 3,000 brains of diseased
psychiatric patients had been part of an even larger brain
collection started more than 40 years ago by British
neuropathologist John Corsellis.
The London hospital that stored the brains had run out of space and
needed to find a new home, eventually agreeing last year to send
them to the Duffel hospital in northern Belgium.
"We went over there and adopted most of the brains that are relevant
to psychiatric research," said Manuel Morrens, professor of
cognitive neuroscience at the University of Antwerp, who oversees
the collection.
Stored in formaldehyde and tucked away in ordinary plastic
containers in the basement of the hospital, some of the brains are
still completely intact and others have been sliced up.
Scientists say the older brains are the most interesting because
they carry diseases that have not been treated with modern
medicines.
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By using methods developed more recently, researchers can see what
molecular processes have taken place and compare them with healthy
brains.
"You can really go into which proteins are active during certain
phases of the illness," Morrens said. "This will really contribute
to our understanding of what is going on in the brain."
The first results of their research will be available later this
year.
(Reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek; Editing by Philip Blenkinsop and
David Goodman)
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