The severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2(commonly known as SARS-CoV-2)is a novel coronavirus(designated as 2019-nCoV),which was isolated for the first time after the Chinese health authorities reported a cl...The severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2(commonly known as SARS-CoV-2)is a novel coronavirus(designated as 2019-nCoV),which was isolated for the first time after the Chinese health authorities reported a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan,China in December 2019.Optimal management of the Coronavirus Disease-2019 disease is evolving quickly and treatment guidelines,based on scientific evidence and experts’opinions with clinical experience,are constantly being updated.On January 30,2020,the World Health Organization declared the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak as a"Public Health Emergency of International Concern".The total lack of immune protection brought about a severe spread of the contagion all over the world.For this reason,diagnostic tools,patient management and therapeutic approaches have been tested along the way,in the desperate race to break free from the widespread infection and its fatal respiratory complications.Current medical knowledge and research on severe and critical patients’management and experimental treatments are still evolving,but several protocols on minimizing risk of infection among the general population,patients and healthcare workers have been approved and diffused by International Health Authorities.展开更多
Stress is a major risk factor for the development of mental illness,such as major depression disorder (MDD)[1].Despite decades of progress,including findings that stressinduced depression corresponds with numerous mor...Stress is a major risk factor for the development of mental illness,such as major depression disorder (MDD)[1].Despite decades of progress,including findings that stressinduced depression corresponds with numerous morphological and functional neuronal changes within brain structures associated with cognition and mood,such as the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)[1-3],a thorough understanding of how stress induces the core symptoms of depression,such as hopelessness,is still lacking.In an exciting new paper in mice,Yin et al.show that astrocyteneuronal metabolic coupling in the mPFC is critically involved in the stress-induced passive coping response in mice [4].展开更多
文摘The severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2(commonly known as SARS-CoV-2)is a novel coronavirus(designated as 2019-nCoV),which was isolated for the first time after the Chinese health authorities reported a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan,China in December 2019.Optimal management of the Coronavirus Disease-2019 disease is evolving quickly and treatment guidelines,based on scientific evidence and experts’opinions with clinical experience,are constantly being updated.On January 30,2020,the World Health Organization declared the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak as a"Public Health Emergency of International Concern".The total lack of immune protection brought about a severe spread of the contagion all over the world.For this reason,diagnostic tools,patient management and therapeutic approaches have been tested along the way,in the desperate race to break free from the widespread infection and its fatal respiratory complications.Current medical knowledge and research on severe and critical patients’management and experimental treatments are still evolving,but several protocols on minimizing risk of infection among the general population,patients and healthcare workers have been approved and diffused by International Health Authorities.
文摘Stress is a major risk factor for the development of mental illness,such as major depression disorder (MDD)[1].Despite decades of progress,including findings that stressinduced depression corresponds with numerous morphological and functional neuronal changes within brain structures associated with cognition and mood,such as the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)[1-3],a thorough understanding of how stress induces the core symptoms of depression,such as hopelessness,is still lacking.In an exciting new paper in mice,Yin et al.show that astrocyteneuronal metabolic coupling in the mPFC is critically involved in the stress-induced passive coping response in mice [4].