Health

Building a Model of Pain: Human Sensory Circuits in a Dish



Stanford Medicine researcher Sergiu Pasca, MD, and his team have pioneered a new technique to recreate human neural circuits in the lab. These circuits replicate a sensory pathway that transmits pain signals to the brain. This advance opens the door to studying the root causes of pain-related disorders without relying on animal models, and paves the way for more precise, non-opioid pain therapies.

Stanford Medicine News Center:
By re-creating neural pathway in dish, Stanford Medicine research may speed pain treatment:

Stanford Medicine magazine:
Here come the assembloids:

#Neuroscience #PainResearch #BrainScience #MedicalBreakthrough #Organoids #Psychiatry #BehavioralSciences #BiomedicalResearch #SergiuPasca #StanfordMedicine
Stanford Medicine advances human health through world-class biomedical research, education and patient care. Bringing together the resources of Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Health Care and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, Stanford Medicine is committed to training future leaders in biomedicine and translating the latest discoveries into new ways to prevent, diagnose and treat disease.

The Stanford Medicine YouTube channel is a curated collection of contributions from our School of Medicine departments, divisions, students, and the community. Our diverse content includes coverage of events, presentations, lectures, and associated stories about the people of Stanford Medicine.

source

Related Articles

One Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button