Wednesday 25 June 2014

UAB study shows how brain tumor cells move and damage tissue, points to possible therapy

Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have shed new light on how cells called gliomas migrate in the brain and cause devastating tumors. The findings show that gliomas — malignant glial cells — disrupt normal neural connections and hijack control of blood vessels. The study provides insight into the mechanisms of how glioma cells spread throughout the brain as a devastating form of brain cancer, and potentially offers a tantalizing opportunity for therapy. Read more here.

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