Brain waste disposal pathway found, signals new revolution in Alzheimer's treatment This discovery could completely change the understanding of how the brain stays healthy and why diseases like Alzheimer's develop. Scientists have discovered a new pathway for waste disposal in the human brain, which will help understand brain health and disease. Dr. Onder Albayram 's team at the Medical University of South Carolina used advanced MRI technology to detect fluid flow in the outer layer of the brain. This discovery has proven a direct connection between the brain and the body for waste disposal and could provide a new direction in the treatment of diseases like Alzheimer's. Kathmandu. Scientists have discovered a new pathway for waste disposal in the human brain. This discovery could completely change the understanding of how the brain stays healthy and why diseases like Alzheimer's develop. This study, conducted by researchers at the Medical University of South Ca...
‘Emotional Loneliness’ Among Parents With Children Abroad Kathmandu Metropolitan City has reported that emotional loneliness is beginning to be seen among senior citizens with children abroad. A survey conducted by the metropolis has found emotional loneliness among senior citizens with children. This situation has been shown by a study conducted by Prahlad Adhikari on the topic of ‘The Responsibility of the Metropolitan City for the Mental Health of Senior Citizens’ in the third edition of the Metropolitan Research Fellowship (MRF). Binita Adhikari was the supervisor of the study. According to the study, 21.7 percent of people have been found to have severe and very severe emotional loneliness. The Metropolitan City survey found that 62.3 percent had moderate loneliness. Similarly, 15 percent did not experience any kind of emotional loneliness. Similarly, from the perspective of social loneliness, 48 percent had high loneliness, 28.3 percent had moderate loneliness, and 23.7 pe...