Researchers have captured exactly what taking cocaine does to the flow of blood in the brain.
They created a laser-based method of measuring how cocaine disrupts blood flow in the brains of mice.
It shows for the first time how drug abuse affects the brain.
It was
developed by a team of researchers from Stony Brook University in New
York, USA and the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was published
today in The Optical Society's open-access journal.
The
resulting images are the first of their kind that directly and clearly
document such effects, according to co-author Yingtian Pan, associate
professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Stony Brook
University.
'We
show that quantitative flow imaging can provide a lot of useful
physiological and functional information that we haven't had access to
before,' he said.
Drugs
such as cocaine can cause aneurysm-like bleeding and strokes, but the
exact details of what happens to the brain's blood vessels have remained
elusive—partly because current imaging tools are limited in what they
can see, Pan says.
But
using their new and improved methods, the team was able to observe
exactly how cocaine affects the tiny blood vessels in a mouse's brain.



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